Bermuda. Renaissance Reinsurance Junior Gold Cup: Day 1 PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 22 October 2004
Image. Dennis Conner taking time out with Junior Gold Cup sailors: © Barry Pickthall PPL


International sailors held the top five places


The first racing day of the Renaissance Re Junior Gold Cup saw exciting action as the two scheduled races were sailed in an afternoon of stiff breezes that sent the Investors Guarantee King Edward VIIth Gold Cup racers back to the RBYC marina. The Optimists were not unscathed as Bermudian Mackenzie Cooper (son of past RBYC Commodore Somers Cooper) broke his tiller extension in the first race and had to retire.


The course was a large triangle with the marks 'maxed' out for this enclosed and shifty water. The starts were flawless under the management of P.R.O. H.'Ross' Spurling with no recalls or penalties. The final windward leg was a short leg that demanded concentration as many places changed after planing into the leeward mark.


International sailors held the top five places at the end of the two races. Niclas Wallin of Sweden (5 pts.) holds a slim lead over Jas Farneti of Italy (6 pts.). Other positions are close as Jas prevails over Great Britain's deBoltz only as a result of Jas having a first place finish. Vincent Berthez of France, Frankie Lardies of New Zealand and Bermuda's first sailor Ryan Saraiva are close at 9, 10 and 10 points. Frankie unfortunately hit the pin end of the finish line in the second race: without that he might well be in the lead.


The defending champion, Bermuda's Oliver Riihiluoma holds a slim lead over
Netherland's Jochem-Bart Haakman at 15 points each. Bermuda's top female sailor Eleanor Gardner and Finland's Teemu Rantanen similarly share 20 points in the next two positions. USA's Mike Russom recovered from a difficult first race to come back to 12th position. Australia's Nicholas McPharlin struggled in 28th place as a result of the high winds.


The visiting sailors are selected as 'deserving sailors' by their class associations to come to Bermuda as guests of Renaissance Re. The efforts of parents and volunteers led by Judith Gardner made the rest happen. The countries of the sailors are selected to match the seeded skippers in the Gold Cup.


In the previous days the Optimist sailors have enjoyed workshops, coaching and white board talks with Gold Cup skippers including Mason Woodworth and Russell Coutts. They have had front row seats at the Gold Cup trials and have had some time off to enjoy the pleasures of Bermuda as a world class tourist destination.


The forecast is for high winds through Sunday. Racing on Thursday will be two similar races. Saturday schedule calls for there four races on an IODA modified trapezoid. The final race will be a Windward Leeward course on the Gold Cup course in Hamilton Harbour in front of the spectators just prior to the final. The mix of venues and courses adds to the uniqueness of this event.


Hugo Farneti, father of Jas, says, "It is the experience of a lifetime".


Talbot Wilson
Last Updated ( Friday, 22 October 2004 )
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