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Three Americans Helming Volvo Extreme 40s #73709
04/28/06 11:20 AM
04/28/06 11:20 AM
Joined: Mar 2002
Posts: 984
2017 F18 Americas Site
Dan_Delave Offline OP
old hand
Dan_Delave  Offline OP
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Joined: Mar 2002
Posts: 984
2017 F18 Americas Site
Thought you all might be interested to know that three of our own will be at the helm of the Volvo Extreme 40s around Baltimore. Larry Harteck (Formula 18 Racer), will be skippering a Volvo Ocean Race. Johnny Lovell (Tornado) will be at the helm of Motorola. They will be competing against:

Randy Smyth - Team Tommy Hilfiger
Mitch Booth - Homatro
Alister Richardson (British Olympic 49er sailor) - Basilica

There are only two teams that have not been in the line up, racing these boats, until now. The first is Larry's team which includes Cam Lewis and a couple of Larry's cronnies, Doug and Greg. The other is Lovell's team which will include Charlie Ogletree (known in the referenced article as Ogilvy). They are sailing with what I will dub a Tornado campaign team rounding out that team are Hamish Oliphant and Leigh McMillan (Tornado campaigners), both who have sailed the Formula Extreme 40s before.

Randy, Mitch and Alister have raced the boats with the teams they are bringing to this venue.

If you have not seen the videos of this boat racing it is quite impressive.

Quote
The race course will be a battle of Olympians as stepping onboard Conrad Humphreys Motorola-CHR, which is currently in third place overall, will be 2004 Olympic Tornado silver medallist [color:"red"]Johnny Lovell[/color] who will be joined for one day by his Olympic team mate Charlie Ogilvy. Completing the line-up will be fellow Tornado Olympian Leigh McMillan from Great Britain and Hamish Oliphant.

Just off the podium is the Volvo Ocean Race Team who also boasts an impressive crew line-up for the Baltimore grand prix. Skippered by American [color:"red"]Larry Hartreck[/color], the team will be joined by America’s Cup winner and Rolex Yachtsman of the Year recipient fellow American Cam Lewis who will bring to the team a wealth of catamaran experience. Normally seen in catamarans of a considerable size, Lewis is a previous winner of the Trophee Jules Verne for the world’s fastest circumnavigation of the globe, something he shares in common with the Volvo Open 70 sailors. Completing the team is Doug Deaver and Greg Homann.

news of Volvo Extreme 40s

Later,
Dan

-- Have You Seen This? --
Re: Three Americans Helming Volvo Extreme 40s [Re: Dan_Delave] #73710
04/28/06 12:15 PM
04/28/06 12:15 PM

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Randy Smyth is the man.

Re: Three Americans Helming Volvo Extreme 40s [Re: Dan_Delave] #73711
04/28/06 01:16 PM
04/28/06 01:16 PM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 623
Gulf Coast
tami Offline
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tami  Offline
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Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 623
Gulf Coast
and Carolijn Brouwer is da GOIL!

Those who were in attendance at the Trimaran Nats were lucky to see Randy's excellent video and descriptions of the Extremes... so kewl, so fast...

Re: Three Americans Helming Volvo Extreme 40s [Re: tami] #73712
04/28/06 02:56 PM
04/28/06 02:56 PM
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 2,584
+31NL
Tony_F18 Offline
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(message deleted by poster)

Last edited by Tony_FX1; 04/28/06 03:08 PM.
What its like for a NEWBIE [Re: Dan_Delave] #73713
04/30/06 12:01 PM
04/30/06 12:01 PM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 3,116
Annapolis, MD
Mark Schneider Offline
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Mark Schneider  Offline
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Posts: 3,116
Annapolis, MD

http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/outdoors/bal-sp.maese30apr30,0,27809.column?coll=bal-sports-headlines
From the Baltimore Sun

1st sailing race something to flip over, almost
Rick Maese




April 30, 2006

Aday on the sailboat - knickers, a sun visor, a picnic basket. Maybe a cigar. My kind of afternoon. Women named Buffy and guys who are named Jim, but affectionately called Jimbo by their pals. A day on the sailboat.

Hardly fodder for the sports-talk shows. I mean, is sailing even a sport? (Maybe if you're willing to give a trophy to the wind?)

I kept thinking about these preconceived notions as the world splashed around me. I sat nervously still on a boat that was flying through the Inner Harbor. Four men were zigzagging across the boat as though national security was entirely dependent on them twirling some ropes and twisting cranks.

It was pandemonium. No brie. No baguettes. No glasses of wine. How did I get here? And where is Buffy?

A day earlier, I was invited aboard Tommy Hilfiger's 40-foot catamaran, one of the sailboats racing in the Extreme 40 competition, a part of the Volvo Ocean Race. The Volvo Ocean Race is similar to the America's Cup and takes place only once every four years. The Extreme 40s, I was told, are smaller boats and compete in shorter races. A good analogy might be comparing a sprinter to a marathon runner.

"A day on the sailboat? I'll bring the wine!"

"Wait," the voice on the other end of the phone said. "You do know how to swim, right?"

I barely had time to ponder the question before I found myself sitting scared stiff on Tommy's catamaran. It's not the sailboat I envisioned. In fact, it's sailing's version of an Indy car, consisting of a tall sail presiding over a pair of aerodynamic Twinkies, called hulls. The hulls are parallel to each other and connected by a fishnet that acts like a trampoline. Through the net, just a couple of feet below, you could see the water.

There'd have been no fear if this was a leisurely sail, but you should see these boats move. When they get a good gust, they fly as fast as 45 mph. Even when they're going just 10 mph, they tip on an angle, sending one of the two hulls up to 10 feet into the air.

Would we flip over? That's what I was thinking about. The race was about to start, and I locked my fingers around rope.

"We're in race mode," shouted crew member Stan Schreyer. "Get ready to go!" "Nine seconds," barked Randy Smyth, a two-time Olympic medalist and the Tommy captain. "Two lengths off ... Now bow down ... 5-4-3-2-1 ... "

It was similar to a countdown Smyth had told me about earlier, a story I wish I hadn't heard.

"They counted down for me - 5-4-3-2-1 - and I just did my thing," he said.

Smyth was Pierce Brosnan's skipper in the movie, The Thomas Crown Affair. He was sailing off the Connecticut shore, charged with performing a dangerous maneuver.

"Flipped her right over," he said with a chuckle.

I didn't laugh. He tattooed a visual on my brain that I just couldn't shake.

"Dig in!" yelled crew member Jonathan Farrar. "Dig in!"

"We should have a blast coming up," Smyth said. "Get ready for something."

I was. I was ready to scream. Ready to call for help. To empty my stomach. I was no longer wondering whether these were athletes; I was wondering whether they were sane.

Wind hit our sails and half the boat lifted off the water. I looked at Smyth and his three crew members. All smiles as we zipped through the Inner Harbor at a 30-degree angle.

Heading toward Pratt Street, we were in second place, trailing the Holmatro boat. The Tommy sailors weren't willing to let the wind do all the work. They flew across our fishnet trampoline with urgency, ducking under the swinging boom in a game of life-or-death limbo. Everything was fast-forward, and each crew member was constantly turning a crank, winding rope and shouting a foreign language only sailors seem to know.

"Chaos," said crew member Richard Feeney, "but it's organized chaos."

After the first turn, the Motorola boat moved into first, putting us in third. The wind in the harbor is confusing. The city buildings along the perimeter mean we could zip along at 20 mph and then slow to an immediate crawl. Smyth saw a wrinkle in the water. "We're out of here," he said, as we caught a puff.

Around the third turn, Motorola was in first, Holmatro second, and then us. The crew grew more frantic.

"We're going upwind," Farrar said. "Don't unroll."

"Feeney, I'm worried about ... " Schreyer couldn't finish his thought.

"I know, I know," Feeney said. "One thing at a time."

Soon, we caught a big gust. The boat was heeled over and we seemed to sail on an angle for an eternity. I could feel my lunch slide to one side of my stomach. The Tommy boat passed Motorola, inching our way into first.

"Good job!" Smyth shouted. They all continued to crank furiously. "It's not over yet, though."

We approached a final turn. "What's the possible maneuver?" Feeney asked.

"Jibe and chill," Schreyer said.

Chill? Finally, something I understood. But easier said than done. How could I chill as the boat again rolled to one side and we flew through the harbor toward the finish line?

My knuckles were white around the rope, and I couldn't recall breathing or exhaling for the previous 20 minutes. The four crew members were exchanging high-fives and shouting into the air. They'd won the race, their third of the day. "A hat trick!" Smyth bellowed.

No brie and no Buffy. But the second I got off that boat, you can bet I ran to find that glass of wine.

rick.maese@baltsun.com
Read Rick Maese's blog at baltimoresun.com/maeseblog
Copyright © 2006, The Baltimore Sun | Get Sun home delivery



crac.sailregattas.com
Re: What its like for a NEWBIE [Re: Mark Schneider] #73714
04/30/06 02:00 PM
04/30/06 02:00 PM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 12,310
South Carolina
Jake Offline
Carpal Tunnel
Jake  Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 12,310
South Carolina
Hell yeah!


Jake Kohl
Re: What its like for a NEWBIE [Re: Jake] #73715
04/30/06 02:03 PM
04/30/06 02:03 PM
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 5,582
“an island in the Pacifi...
hobie1616 Offline
Carpal Tunnel
hobie1616  Offline
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Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 5,582
“an island in the Pacifi...
Smokin"! Buffy is in real trouble.


US Sail Level 2 Instructor
US Sail Level 3 Coach
Re: What its like for a NEWBIE [Re: hobie1616] #73716
04/30/06 04:32 PM
04/30/06 04:32 PM
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 169
Upstate, South Carolina
SunnyZ Offline
member
SunnyZ  Offline
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Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 169
Upstate, South Carolina
And who wouldn't LOVE that?

Re: What its like for a NEWBIE [Re: Jake] #73717
04/30/06 04:57 PM
04/30/06 04:57 PM
Joined: May 2002
Posts: 3,114
BANNED
MauganN20 Offline
Carpal Tunnel
MauganN20  Offline
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BANNED
thats an awesome article.

I wish I could have made it home for that!



Re: What its like for a NEWBIE [Re: MauganN20] #73718
04/30/06 11:08 PM
04/30/06 11:08 PM
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 66
Fort Lauderdale, FL, USA
ReefedOne Offline
journeyman
ReefedOne  Offline
journeyman

Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 66
Fort Lauderdale, FL, USA
I guess there's a certain merit to a cat that can pull WATER SKIERS, lol.

Re: What its like for a NEWBIE [Re: ReefedOne] #73719
05/01/06 05:18 AM
05/01/06 05:18 AM
Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 5,558
Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH...
Mary Offline
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Mary  Offline
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Posts: 5,558
Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH...
Hey, we were pulling water skiers behind Shark catamarans back in the early 1960's.

Re: What its like for a NEWBIE [Re: Mary] #73720
05/01/06 06:02 AM
05/01/06 06:02 AM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 9,582
North-West Europe
Wouter Offline
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Wouter  Offline
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Posts: 9,582
North-West Europe

Hell, you can see "small" 16 foot boats pulling a waterskier in this video :

http://www.spitfiresailing.org.uk/photos.asp

(direct link : http://www.spitfiresailing.org.uk/spituba05_256.wmv )

go to time 4: 45 (4 min 45 sec into the video)

Those big cats ain't got nothing on us in this regard.

Wouter

Last edited by Wouter; 05/01/06 06:10 AM.

Wouter Hijink
Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild)
The Netherlands
Re: What its like for a NEWBIE [Re: ReefedOne] #73721
05/01/06 07:47 AM
05/01/06 07:47 AM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 12,310
South Carolina
Jake Offline
Carpal Tunnel
Jake  Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 12,310
South Carolina
Quote
I guess there's a certain merit to a cat that can pull WATER SKIERS, lol.


If you can get it to slow down enough!


Jake Kohl
Re: What its like for a NEWBIE [Re: Mark Schneider] #73722
05/01/06 10:05 AM
05/01/06 10:05 AM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 1,459
Annapolis,MD
Keith Offline
veteran
Keith  Offline
veteran

Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 1,459
Annapolis,MD
I made it up to Baltimore yesterday to watch the racing. Only one word about it:

Suh-Weeeeeeettt!

Definitely close in quarters for boats like that, but they put in a great show. Initially conditions were a bit light, but they continued to build a little bit. My daughter and I caught a great spot to watch near the upwind mark - lots of action there as the boats converged and set their hooters for the downwind leg. For Mia's part, she was utterly amazed at how the boats looked through a bag of Cheerios.

The city definitely poses challenges to the air flow, in some cases they're smokin' along and then they would just sit in the last bit to get the leeward mark. But it only takes the tiniest puff to wake these boats up, and they accelerate like mad.

In between the races the boats continued to put on shows for the all the folks at the waterfront festival. They took turns buzzing in close along the festival area flying a hull proud.

And, like a dipshi* I didn't bring any sort of camera - could've had some great video footage...

Anyhow - the boats are racing through Wednesday - if you can get a chance to call in sick to work (see previous postings on that for suggestions), by all means do it! That ultra-important briefing for the customer for a sale that gives a huge bonus and ensures the future of your company will maybe be there after you call in, but you may have to wait a couple of years before seeing these boats again! You know the proper choice...

Last edited by Keith; 05/01/06 10:28 AM.

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