Please select your home edition
Edition
Craftinsure 2023 LEADERBOARD

International Rolex Regatta at St. Thomas Yacht Club - Overall

by Rolex Media Centre 26 Mar 2012 07:51 BST 23-25 March 2012

Nice and close

It came down to the wire on the last day for winners in three of six classes at the International Rolex Regatta, which began Friday and hosted 68 boats and over 500 sailors representing the U.S., Great Britain, Puerto Rico, Canada, The Netherlands, Russia, Italy, Sweden, Monaco and multiple Caribbean islands. The event, in its 39th year and hosted by St. Thomas Yacht Club in the USVI, is the oldest regatta in Rolex’s portfolio of global sailing events, and is considered the “Crown Jewel” of Caribbean regattas.

Today’s tactically demanding Pillsbury Sound races, with courses that wound through the cays of St. Thomas and St. John, decided winners in one IRC and three CSA classes as well as a Beach Cat class, while one-design IC 24s completed six short-course races in Jersey Bay to determine that class’s victor. The races were sailed in picture-perfect conditions, which included plenty of sunshine and 15-knot breezes, which made the overcast skies and intermittent rain showers that prevailed over the last two days but a distant memory.

Peter Cunningham’s (George Town, CAY) 52-foot PowerPlay took overall victory in IRC, where nine boats were competing, and won a Rolex Oyster Perpetual Submariner Chronometer as a prize for its excellent performance. The team’s main competition was Willem Wester’s (Breskens, Zeeland, NED) Grand Soleil 46 Antilope (steered by Belgian Olympian Philippe Bergmans) and Ashley Wolfe’s (Alberta, Canada) IRC 52 Mayhem, which finished second and third, respectively.

“We were head-to-head with Mayhem the whole regatta, which made it exciting,” said Cunningham, noting that Mayhem’s disqualification in the second race of the series (for a pre-start infraction) and the dismasting of Lord Irvine Laidlaw of Rothiemay’s (MON) IRC 52 Highland Fling XII were unfortunate. “We lost the first race today by one second to Mayhem and Antilope (who corrected out equally and posted 1.5 points each) to finished third. The sailing is so interesting here; you can’t relax even one second or it’s the difference between first and second.”

Volvo Ocean Race veteran Bouwe Bekking (NED), tactician aboard Antilope, was pleased with second, especially since Antilope is a heavier displacement boat than the others, and he conceded that the story might have been different had Mayhem not shown a DSQ in her score line. “They would have had a second in that race, so you can count back and see that they would have done that much better,” said Bekking, “but that’s yacht racing.”

The competition today was unusually close in CSA 1, where Andrea Scarabelli’s (Cole Bay, St. Maarten) Melges 24 Budget Marine/GILL managed to maintain the lead it had established on day one and kept yesterday. It was by a mere half point in final regatta standings, however, that the team prevailed over Magnitude 400, a Farr 400 owned and skippered by Doug Baker (Long Beach, Calif.). The battle of the 40 footers, of which there were four in this class, had been billed as one to watch, but it quickly became clear that the Melges 24 came prepared to win.

The first day, Budget Marine/Gill posted two victories in the “town races” that featured plenty of downwind sailing. “This was good for us,” said the team’s tactician Christopher Marshall, “but the second day had lots of upwind sailing and that’s when it paid off for the bigger boats (Magnitude 400 won both races.). Then today was a mixed bag.”

The half-point difference in the final scores was a result of Budget Marine/GILL’s third-place finish in today’s first race with the exact same corrected time as a second Farr 400 from California, Blade, so each boat was given 3.5 points as an average for third and fourth places (per the racing rules). “In the first start we were over early, so we had to come back and lost at least 30 seconds,” said Scarabelli, who drove. “Everyone was in a bit of a bad mood after that, because if it had not been for that, we would have probably been in second (for that race). We knew we had to do our best in the next race and maybe it would be impossible to win—that we could lose the Rolex regatta because of a half a point.” The team posted a third in the second race to Magnitude 400’s fifth, and that proved to be the combination that would give Budget Marine/GILL the final say and the coveted Rolex watch as prize.

Also winning by a mere half point today in CSA 2 was Jonathan Lipuscek’s (San Juan, PR) J/105 Dark Star. Lipuscek had gone into today’s races with a half-point advantage on the merit of two bullets posted yesterday, and he posted a 2-3 today to prevail over Jaime Torres’s (also San Juan) Beneteau First 40 Smile and Wave, also winning the a Rolex watch for his performance. Making it a triumvirate of Puerto Rican teams on the podium was Sergio Sagramoso’s (San Juan) J/122 Lazy Dog, in third, also with only a half point separating it from Smile and Wave. The three teams had been locked in battle for the entire regatta.

“We simply tried to minimize errors and do everything with patience,” said Lipuscek at the Rolex Awards party, which was held on the St. Thomas Yacht Club’s beach and featured a giant stage built out over the water. (It had been used on Saturday, as well, for the regatta’s headlining Reggae Concert.) “It’s incredible that we’ve won the watch; I didn’t believe it until now.”

Puerto Rican teams also finished top-three in IC 24s, which sported the largest fleet here with 15 boats. Dominating was Puerto Rico’s Fraito Lugo (Ponce), onboard Orion, who counts this as his ninth time to win a Rolex watch here. He passed the watch on to his foredeck crew Pablo Mendez and said that a full rotation has now been made as far as his crew getting to proudly share in the spoils of victory. “It’s experience in the boat,” said Fraito when asked what his secret to success was. “Pablo has been sailing with me since 2002, and my tactician and trimmer have been with me 18 years. It feels so good to win; we lost this regatta last year, so we came back this year very aggressive.”

Defending Beach Cat class winner Jorge Ramos (Puerto Rico), aboard his Hobie 16 Universal, swapped wins for two days with John Holmberg (St. Thomas), also sailing a Hobie 16 named Time Out with 13-year-old Naomi Laing, but today he won the class’s single race to finally take overall victory. Going into today, the two were tied on point scores after eight races, and the final tally showed Ramos 19, Holmberg 21.

In CSA non-spinnaker class, the J/36 Cayennita Grande won with its crew of Central High School students led by their band teacher Stan Jones (St. Croix), who recently bought the boat from Tony Sanpere (also St. Croix), a past winner who was also aboard. “We did better with each race,” said Jones, who has had five second-place finishes here with “his kids” before. “Tony and I drove. It’s one thing to just give them a boat, have them sail and loose and another to coach them and help them be on a winning boat.”

Overall Results:

IC 24 (One Design - 14 Boats)
1. Orion, IC 24, Fraito Lugo, Ponce, PR, USA - 1, 4, 4, 1, 5, 6, 10, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 3, 4, 1, ; 48pts
2. Cachondo, IC 24, Marco Teixidor, San Juan, PUR - 5, 2, 2, 11, 6, 4, 1, 6, 10, 2, 5, 4, 4, 3, 5, ; 70pts
3. Team Coors Light, IC 24, Frits Bus/ Chuck Pessler, St. Thomas, USVI, USA - 15/OCS, 6, 8, 3, 2, 1, 3, 2, 1, 6, 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, ; 75pts

CSA 1 (CSA - 9 Boats)
1. Budget Marine/GILL, Melges 24, Andrea Scarabelli, Cole Bay, St. Maarten, AHO - 1, 1, 2, 4, 3.5, 3, ; 14.5pts
2. Magnitude 400, Farr 400, Doug Baker, Long Beach, CA, USA - 5, 2, 1, 1, 1, 5, ; 15pts
3. Fire Water, Melges 24, Henry Leonnig, Nanny Cay, Tortola, BVI - 2, 3, 5, 5, 5, 2, ; 22pts

CSA 2 (CSA - 13 Boats)
1. Dark Star, J 105, Jonathan Lipuscek, San Juan, Puerto Rico, USA - 1, 6, 1, 1, 2, 3, ; 14pts
2. Smile and Wave, Beneteau First 40, Jaime Torres, San Juan, PR, USA - 2, 1, 4.5, 2, 4, 1, ; 14.5pts
3. Lazy Dog, J 122, Sergio Sagramoso, San Juan, PR, USA - 3, 2, 2, 3, 1, 4, ; 15pts

CSA Non-Spinnaker (CSA - 7 Boats)
1. Cayennita Grande, J 36, Antonio Sanpere, Christiansted, VI, USA - 3, 1, 1, 1, 1, ; 7pts
2. Affinity, Swan 48, Jack Desmond, Marion, MA, USA - 1, 2, 3, 4, 2, ; 12pts
3. Shamrock VII, J 95, Thomas Mullen, Campton, NH, USA - 4, 3, 2, 3, 3, ; 15pts

IRC 1 (IRC - 9 Boats)
1. PowerPlay, TP 52, Peter Cunningham, George Town, CAY - 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 3, ; 11pts
2. Antilope, Grand Soleil 46, Willem Wester, Breskens, Zeeland, NED - 3, 1, 4, 4, 3, 1.5, ; 16.5pts
3. Mayhem, TP 52, Ashley Wolfe, Calgary, AB, CAN - 5, 10/DSQ, 2, 1, 1, 1.5, ; 20.5pts

Beach Cats (Portsmouth - 10 Boats)
1. Universal, Hobie 16, Jorge Ramos, San Juan, PR, USA - 2, 1, 2, 6, 1, 1, 1, 4, 1, ; 19pts
2. Time Out, Hobie 16, John Holmberg, St. Thomas, VI, USA - 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 3, 3, 3, ; 21pts
3. Island Sol, Hobie 16, Paul Stoken, St Thomas, VI, USA - 3, 5, 1, 3, 3, 4, 2, 2, 2, ; 25pts

Further information about the 2012 International Rolex Regatta, including results and nightly video, may be found at www.rolexcupregatta.com

Related Articles

International Optimist Regatta Registration Open
This week-long trio of events has been recognized throughout the Caribbean and the World Registration is open for the 32nd International Optimist Regatta (IOR). The IOR, TOTE Clinic, and the TOTE Team Race will take place June 9-15, 2025, at the St. Thomas Yacht Club. Posted on 6 Jan
Many enjoy free sailboat rides at STSC Open House
Offering free rides on IC24 sailboats and Hobie Wave catamarans Two words summed up 5-year-old Cason O'Brien's half-hour ride on an IC24 sailboat during Sunday's St. Thomas Sailing Center's (STSC) Open House. Posted on 4 Nov 2024
First Annual Women's Adventure Race Week
March 10-14, 2025 hosted at the St. Thomas Sailing Center A race clinic with drills and debriefs, adventure round-the-islands racing, and an exciting Virgin Islands sea and shore experience are what women sailors can expect at the First Annual Women's Adventure Race Week. Posted on 14 Oct 2024
St. Thomas International Regatta registration open
51st edition to be held March 28-30, 2025 Get ready to cross a ‘must-do' Caribbean regatta off your bucket list! Registration is now open for the 2025 St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR) set for March 28-30, 2025. Posted on 6 Oct 2024
Tune Up in the Tropics!
Mid-Winter Clinic & Regatta in Paradise Set for January 22-26, 2025 Fly to the tropics in January and tune up for the summer sailing season. That's the winning opportunity at the Mid-Winter Clinic & Regatta in Paradise, hosted by the St. Thomas Sailing Center (STSC). Posted on 19 Sep 2024
Announcing the VX One Caribbean Cup 2025
St. Thomas International Regatta & BVI Spring Regatta to host the event One of the hottest one-design sport boat classes returns to the Caribbean for the peak of the region's race season in the spring of 2025. Posted on 20 Aug 2024
31st International Optimist Regatta
USA's Montagu wins after a stunning week of sailing in St. Thomas Getting good starts, especially in light wind conditions, led the USA's Alexander Montagu to win the 31st International Optimist Regatta (IOR), hosted at the St. Thomas Yacht Club (STYC), June 14-16, 2024. Posted on 17 Jun 2024
2024 TOTE Team Racing Championships
Team PUR 1 wins, 104 junior sailors ready to sail in 31st International Optimist Regatta Good starts, covering competitors, and scoring a first-second-third combo finish proved a successful strategy for PUR 1, representing the Sailing Academy at Puerto Rico's Club Nautico de San Juan, to win Thursday's TOTE Team Racing Championship. Posted on 14 Jun 2024
31st International Optimist Regatta kicks off
A combination of instruction, team, and fleet racing for beginners and advanced sailors alike What makes this coming week of sailing events unique is the combination of instruction, team, and fleet racing for beginners and advanced sailors alike, all in one event. Posted on 9 Jun 2024
5th Annual Hotel and Tourism Regatta
Coral World Triumphs at St. Thomas Yacht Club The excitement was palpable across the waters of Cowpet Bay during the thrilling conclusion of the 5th Annual Hotel and Tourism Regatta. Posted on 20 May 2024