Monday, December 23, 2024
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Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup: Concludes with Bella Mente victory

Final races of the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup, run by the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda in conjunction with the International Maxi Association, started but couldn’t finish due to a lack of wind. At 1300 the fleet was sent back to Porto Cervo by PRO Peter Craig.

One of the most worthy victories was in Maxi B, the most ‘grand prix’ class, comprising former Maxi 72s, the 82ft Django HF and two VO65s. American Hap Fauth is a previous three time Rolex Mini Maxi/Maxi 72 World Championship winner, a title he last won in 2016. He returned with his present boat in 2019 but it was only on his fourth attempt this year, with the latest iteration of his 74ft maxi (now with water ballast and twin rudders) that Bella Mente returned to her old form, beating George Sakellaris’ Proteus by three points, with Peter Harrison’s Pepe Cannonball third.

“Our boat had great speed – the phenomenal boat compensated for my age!” quipped a jubilant Fauth. “We come to this event every year and we work hard at it – it is the pinnacle of our season. The hospitality is fantastic and the sailing conditions are usually the best. The YCCS is fantastic and the International Maxi Association does a great coordination job. I will keep coming for as long as I am above the ground! I have a great crew including Terry Hutchinson, Moose [Mike Sanderson] and Ado [Adrian Stead] and Soapy [Ian Moore], who keep me from making too many mistakes.”

Tactician Terry Hutchinson said the result was vindication of the changes they had made to the boat since finishing third last year. “It was hard – because we felt we had sailed really well and it just wasn’t happening and we needed to figure out how to make it better. All our boat builders who got involved in the upgrades deserve credit. They delivered a nice reliable boat to us.”

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Jean-Pierre Barjon and the crew of Spirit of Lorina, winners of Maxi C. Photo: IMA / Studio Borlenghi

In Maxi A (for the former <100ft ‘Maxi Racer’ class) David M Leuschen and Chris Flowers’ 100ft Galateia won by seven points from the 100ft Leopard 3, which this morning rose to second, one point ahead of Andrea Recordati’s 93ft Bullitt after a reappraisal of the scoring. While Leopard 3 made the strongest start to the event, Andrea Recordati’s heavily refitted 93ft Bullitt won two races in lighter winds. Meanwhile Galateia simply maintained a consistent series of podium finishes.

This week Leuschen and Flowers divided their time on the helm. Leuschen said this year their starting had been the best it has ever been. Flowers was acclimatising to the white 100 footer, having only become a co-owner last year. “This is my first time here,” he said. “I am delighted with our result. I’m very impressed with the competition. What a beautiful venue and what fantastic weather. I’m pleased with the result of course. For me this is my biggest achievement in sailing. I’m thinking of retiring right now!”

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Spirit of Lorina scored straight bullets in Maxi C over the first three days. Photo: IMA / Studio Borlenghi

2023 was a landmark year for the event with the introduction of a new Maxi Multihull class. Again here Adrian Keller’s 84ft catamaran Allegra made a strong start claiming the first two races in strong winds while winning the last two in lighter conditions was Irvine Laidlaw’s Gunboat 80 Highland Fling 18. Ultimately Allegra won by two points ahead of Highland Fling 18 and the Gunboat 68 Convexity2 of Don Wilson and Suna Said.

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Allegra enjoyed the bigger conditions at the start of the week. Photo: IMA / Studio Borlenghi

Allegra won the multihull class at the 2022 Giorgio Armani Superyacht Regatta here, but the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup is a more competitive regatta with more boats, and winning its first ever Maxi Multihull class was historic. “The whole setting is difference. It is a different atmosphere. This is a much bigger event. We are happy,” said Keller. “We sailed very well for the first two days. We are not a light wind yacht, so yesterday was really painful and today would have been too. But that is sport. This boat is coming up to being 10 years old and it has withstood some pretty good beatings.”

The International Maxi Association helped with the new class’s insertion into the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup and the intention is for the IMA to help organise a circuit for the multihulls.

In the Super Maxis there has been an exciting two horse race between Claus-Peter Offen’s new 101ft y3k and Juan Ball’s Swan 115 Moat, both having scored two bullets, but with y3k prevailing by one point in her first ever event.

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Galateia’s Chris Flower and David M Leuschen with Rolex Italia’s Stefan Muller. Photo: IMA / Studio Borlenghi

“I am pleased,” said Offen, who last won his class here in 2011. “I wish we had sailed [a full race] today but we were in the leading position when they stopped. This week we had a lot of things to test. We learned a lot and we know what to improve and the technical issues. We only had three days of training before this with our brand new boat, so we have gained confidence.”

The ‘Line Honours’ prize for the yacht in Maxi A with the shortest combined elapsed time over all the coastal courses, went to the radical 60ft foiling yacht Flying Nikka. Although yet to make any impression on IRC corrected time, Roberto Lacorte and his crew have shown dramatic improvement since last year and the stability of their foiling is impressive.

The most dominant performance this year was in the Js where Niklas Zennström and Filip Engelbert’s 43.6m Svea scored straight bullets ahead of Velsheda and Topaz.

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Niklas Zennström at the helm of Svea with his afterguard including Steve Hayles and Bouwe Bekking. Photo: IMA / Studio Borlenghi

“It was amazing – a fantastic week,” said Zennström, who – as on Galateia – has been sharing the driving this week with his co-owner. Svea’s secret? “This is now the second year we’ve been sailing the boat and we have tried to be systematic about our approach, in terms of understanding and learning the boat. It is really about teamwork, then practicing and doing more manoeuvres because these are big boats and heavy so if you have a bad tack or bad gybe you lose a lot.

Svea is the only Swedish-designed J, penned in 1937 by Swede Tore Holm. Zennström and Engelbert’s campaign is distinctly Swedish too: half of her crew is Swedish, although several key players such as main sheet trimmer/project manager Tim Powell, navigator Steve Hayles and tactician Bouwe Bekking are not. This result bodes well for Svea in next year’s J Class World Championship in Barcelona which is being held under the auspices of the International Maxi Association. “We are looking forward to that. It will be amazing in Barcelona with a few more boats,” concluded Zennström, who also won the prize for the ‘highest-placed IMA member’.

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Maxi B winner Bella Mente today before the race ran out of wind and was abandoned. Photo: IMA / Studio Borlenghi

Due to the IMA’s existing class splits creating classes of awkward sizes, effectively the majority of what used to be the Mini Maxi fleet raced in Maxi C. Here Jean-Pierre Barjon’s 65ft Spirit of Lorina was run-away leader: The French maxi scored three bullets until Friday when the light wind race was won by Thomas Bscher’s brand new Baltic 68 Café Racer Open Season. Regardless, Spirit of Lorina comfortably won, finishing 11 points clear of an impressive group: five time winner Riccardo De Michele’s 78ft H2O, tied with Aldo Parisotto’s Mylius 65 Oscar 3, one point ahead of Massimiliano Florio’s Southern Wind 82 Grande Orazio and a further two ahead of IMA President Benoît de Froidmont’s 60ft Wallyño.

After he and his crew had taken a celebratory leap into Porto Cervo Marina, a delighted Barjon commented: “We have been coming here for eight years and each year we hoped to win. This year we had the best chance because we have a very good crew and boat and the weather was good, so everything worked out. It is a historic day – this is the best result of my life. As a crew we have come a long way – some like Benjamin [Enon, boat captain], have been with us since the beginning, so this is a story of friends, knowledge and a French crew. For me it is more than a dream.”

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Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup prizegiving on the Piazza Azzurra outside the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda. Photo: IMA / Studio Borlenghi

H20 won the prize for the Maxi sub-class 4 and Matteo Fossati’s Stella Maris for Maxi sub-class 5.

Of this year’s Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup, IMA Secretary General Andrew McIrvine commented: “With 45 maxis we were close to a record entry but what was noticeable was the increased quality of the fleet, with two new boats y3k and Open Season, and numerous boats heavily upgraded and doing well such as Bella Mente and Bullitt. The Maxi Multihull class has integrated well into the event and will be a welcome addition to the maxi fleet in the future. Next year we plan to reintroduce more flexibility into our class splits to benefit Maxi C. I would like to thank all of the competitors, our long term sponsor Rolex and of course the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda for their hospitality.”

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