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Maxi Yacht
Rolex Cup 2008
Porto Cervo, Sardinia, Italy
September 1 - 6, 2008. |
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The who's who and what's what of the maxi racing scene |
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by
the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup Media Team |
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Photos By Carlo Borlenghi, Kurt Arrigo and Daniel Forster for Rolex.
Edited by Peter Andrews.
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September
1, 2008. |
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The 19th Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup organized by the
Yacht Club Costa Smeralda gets underway tomorrow, with an entry
list of 40 yachts represent a broad spectrum of the maxi scene.
Once again the canting keeled, carbon-fibre, super-maxi Alfa
Romeo will brush shoulders with the polished brass and bright work of Ranger and Velsheda from the J Class era. Whilst the 144-foot Salperton and 143-foot
Esense will be casting long shadows over the relative minnows in the 60-79
foot Mini-Maxi Division, that includes a whole host of pedigree performers.
And, it is not just the yachts themselves that are catching the eye.
The crew rosters for this festival of big boat competition boast some of
the most famous names in sailing today.
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Measurements being taken in the Yacht
Club Costa Smeralda's Piazza Azzurra, ahead of the Maxi
Yacht Rolex Cup 2008.
Photo © ROLEX / Kurt Arrigo.
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The who's who of yachting is headed by three-time
Olympic gold medallist Ben Ainslie. Fresh from his exploits in
China, he will be offering some strategic tips to Neville Crichton
on the 98-foot Alfa Romeo.
Another multi gold medallist is Torben Grael, who will skipper the
new 69-foot Alfa Romeo 3, that was launched
in August. Grael has a longer-term sight set on another Holy Grail
of sailing - the Volvo Ocean Race. Grael's here to sharpen up his team's
inshore racing skills, ahead of the first in port race in Alicante
in October.
Mentioning around the world racing takes us neatly to Paul Cayard,
part of the burgeoning brains trust on the back of Jim Swartz’s
STP 65 Moneypenny. Cayard is also a former Games competitor, but is
best known for his efforts in the America's Cup as well as a winner
of the Whitbread Round the World Race in 1997.
Many of Cayard's America's Cup friends and foes are here too. Ernesto
Bertarelli, founder of the Alinghi syndicate and current holder of
the Cup has chartered Dan Meyer's Numbers in the Mini Maxi Division
and is racing with three-time America's Cup winning uber-tactician
Brad Butterworth. Butterworth is incidentally another Whitbread Race
winner from 1990, with Peter Blake and the then mighty Steinlager
II.
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Francesco
de Angelis and Paul Cayard of Moneypenny,
during dockside preparations at the Yacht
Club Costa Smeralda before the start of the Maxi
Yacht Rolex Cup 2008.
Photo © ROLEX / Daniel Forster.
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Principal Race Officer for the week is Peter Craig,
a man with the required broad shoulders and tasked with managing
the racing for a diverse fleet in terms of size, age and crew experience.
For someone in such a position, Craig seems remarkably calm.
"We're in for a great week. We've forty excellent boats in
four classes comprising the full range from flat out racers, to
cruiser-racers, to cruising boats. A terrific fleet."
And, whilst Craig predicts some of the best racing will be seen in
the Mini Maxi Division (the biggest class here), he is clear in his
goal to provide the best racing for all competitors.
"The format that we know the owners are looking for is for coastal
and island racing and providing Mother Nature cooperates, that's
what we will do."
Mother Nature, indeed, has her part to play. The weather forecast
for the week looks decidedly difficult. The Mistral - a wind of Homeric
reputation amongst the Maxi yacht participants - is not predicted
and despite the prospect of some light wind days, Craig has considerable
experience in regatta management and plans to take one day at a time
rather than get hooked on mixed five-day outlook.
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Training
onboard Jim Swartz's Moneypenny,
ahead of the start of the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup 2008.
Photo © ROLEX / Kurt Arrigo.
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The Mini Maxi Division comprises eighteen yachts
ranging in size from the 60-foot (18 metre) entries of Massimo
Violati's OPS 5, Enrico Gorziglia's Good
Job Guys and Guido Miani's
Ads Glen.
At the longer end of entries comes the 78-foot (24 metre) Allsmoke of Gunther Herz. Despite being a division winner here in 2005 and
being well-sailed, they will have their work cut out to repeat
past glory.
In the middle are a number of other serious contenders for boat
of the week. Rolex Sydney Hobart winner, Roger Sturgeon's DYT
/ Rosebud with another high credential pro with America's Cup and
Games pedigree, Tommasso Chieffi providing local knowledge will
be a team to watch.
Jim Swartz's Moneypenny and Meyers / Bertarelli’s Numbers will be renewing a rivalry that has seen them already compete together
this year in the Newport Bermuda Race.
Elsewhere in the Division, Lars Grael (brother of Torben and also
an Olympic medallist) is skippering Carlo Puri Negri's Atalanta
II and racing under the Argo Challenge banner.
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Neville Crichton's Alfa Romeo in
the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup 2007.
Photo © ROLEX / Carlo Borlenghi.
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The eleven-boat
Cruising Division has the greatest range in size. The bottom
of the pile is Dreamland. At 85-feet she is a fraction too long
to fit in the Mini Maxi bracket and will find herself on the
start line next to some of the biggest yachts competing.
Contrasting size is not everything in this Division. Style is
in stark contrast too. Place Hetairos alongside Arne Glimcher’s
Ghost and whilst you may have two yachts within a hair's breadth
of the same length overall, that is where the similarities end.
Hetairos may have been built in 1993, but she is absolutely classic
in appearance. With her 40-foot of overhang, she is the epitome
of the renaissance in building traditional looking sailing yachts.
Ghost on the other hand is the epitome of modernity. Carbon fibre
abounds, sleek lines, an acreage of open deck area and a minimum
of fuss in the sail-handling department.
Ronald de Wahl's Velsheda renews her rivalry of last year with
the other J Class competing yacht, John Williams' Ranger. Ranger came out on top of this almost private duel, but also the Cruising
Division as a whole.
Making a first appearance at the event, Charles Dunstone (CEO,
Carphone Warehouse) and Hamilton II will be hoping to have a
say in the shape of the division this year, as will Marco Vogele's
Gliss, another newcomer. |
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Bowmen
on Ranger during a spinnaker
drop in the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup 2007.
Photo © ROLEX / Kurt Arrigo.
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The Wally Division
has a familiar ring to it with Claus Peter Offen's Y3K, Tomas
Bscher's Open Season and Lindsay Owen Jones' Magic
Carpet 2.
All three are hoping to take revenge on Jean Charles Decaux'
J One, once again the smallest boat in this part of the fleet,
but one which had the temerity to win last year's battle in this
close fought class.
J One is another one of the competing yachts that will experience
the dwarfing feeling if she comes too close to the biggest yacht
in her division, the leviathan Esense. |
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R.S.V.
LTD's Ranger in the Maxi Yacht
Rolex Cup 2007.
Photo © ROLEX / Kurt Arrigo.
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The Racing Division
may be small on numbers, but it is not small on yacht pedigree
or crew credentials. Alfa Romeo will be expected to take on a
showboating role by leading the fleet around the course each
day. She is one of the leading exponents of the monohull arms
race on the water today.
Alfa Romeo recently captured the course record in the Giraglia
Rolex Cup, formerly held by Crichton's prior steed now named
Rambler and owned by George David. Rambler is no slouch either.
Despite being arguably last-year's model with her fixed keel,
she has proved twice in the past twelve months that cometh the
conditions cometh the boat. Rambler tore-up the previous Rolex
Middle Sea Race record by some 16 hours and the Rolex Buenos
Airies Offshore Race record by 9 hours.
Whatever the week holds in weather terms, we are in for another
spectacular contest between some of the finest yachts afloat
and some of the finest sailors of their and possibly any generation. |
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Onboard
Jim Swartz's Moneypenny, ahead
of the start of the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup 2008.
Photo © ROLEX / Kurt Arrigo.
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The Yacht Club
Costa Smeralda will officially greet the competitors tonight
with a welcome cocktail at the stunning clubhouse that overlooks
Porto Cervo Marina. At the end of each racing day, Yacht Club
Costa Smeralda along with title sponsor Rolex will provide a
lush array of top class social events.
Highlights include the YCCS Dinner on Tuesday, the Rolex Crew Party
in the Piazza Azzurra on Thursday and the Rolex Dinner at the world
renowned Cala di Volpe luxury resort on Friday. The week ends with
Saturday's final prize giving ceremony and closing cocktail, where
the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cups and Rolex timepieces will be awarded
to the overall winner of each Division.
The Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup, organized by the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda
in conjunction with the International Maxi Association (IMA),
will run from September 1st to September 7th 2008. Racing commences
tomorrow, Tuesday September 2 and with racing scheduled for each
following day, the prize giving on Saturday will be the culmination
of an intense week of big boat racing. From the most luxurious,
through the most traditional, to the most advanced monohulls
afloat today, the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup is nothing if not an astonishing
line up of sailing power.
For further information on the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup and the entire
YCCS sporting season please visit www.yccsmaxi.com. |
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Dockside
at the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda before the start of the
2008 Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup.
Photo © ROLEX / Kurt Arrigo.
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Outimage
and Rolex © 2008 |
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For more information
about the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup 2008, including the entry list and
results, please visit: |
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