Full range for 48th St Thomas International Regatta

Published on March 27th, 2022

St. Thomas, USVI (March 27, 2022) – The 48th St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR) delivered a little something for everyone, from gusts to 25- to 30- knots during the warm-up Round the Rocks race on March 24 to a light 8- to 10- knot breeze today.

In the end, five teams – Fox, Blitz, Chili Pepper, Bill T, and Total Recall – showed their prowess in handing these conditions to top their respective classes – in two classes by a tiebreaker. Each class winner received a precision, Virgin Islands-designed timepiece, The Pirate, from Cardow Jewelers.

“Congratulations to the winners of this year’s St. Thomas International Regatta. We are grateful to all the competitors who continue to choose the U.S. Virgin Islands as the premier destination for sailing,” says Commissioner Joseph Boschulte of the U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Tourism.

In the CSA 1 Class, it was the USA’s Victor Wild’s Botin 52, Fox, that won with all first-place finishes.

“We came for the wind. It was breezy at the start of the regatta, then it progressively dropped,” said Andy Horton, Fox’s tactician. “It opened my eyes to the variety of conditions that are possible here. The light winds today meant it was shiftier and puffier. Still, it was great sailing.”

The USVI’s Peter Corr’s Summit 40, Blitz, and Puerto Rico’s Jaime Torres’ Melges 32, Smile and Wave, tied on points after three days and six races. The tiebreaker, Blitz’s two first-place finishes for the regatta compared to Torres’ one, handed Blitz the prize.

“Our strategy is to always sail the best that we can and to work as a team,” said Corr. “Key is to sail to the wind; the wind decides. High winds, low winds, we were constantly tweaking the boat to keep it going fast. Sometimes it’s all the little things that count.”

Puerto Rico’s Bastian Sarh won the CSA 3 Class on his Beneteau 10m, Chili Pepper.

“We were overpowered the first day and underpowered the last day,” said Sarh. “We finished first in every race until today when we got a 4th and 6th. So, today was difficult, but it didn’t stop us from sailing and having a great time.”

One of the most incredible sailing feats happened in the one-design IC24 class. Puerto Rico’s Marco Teixidor and his team on Cachondo led the uber-competitive 18-boat fleet from Day 1 and started today 12 points in front of the second-place boat, Bill T, driven by the USVI’s Cy Thompson. The ultimate win for Bill T came down to the last race and literally at the finish line.

“We went out today knowing we had to chip away at Cachondo’s lead,” explained Chris Rosenberg, tactician aboard Bill T. “In the last race, we needed to put five boats between us to win. At the last second, two boats passed Cachondo, and literally at the finish line the entire outcome of the regatta changed for us.”

Thompson, a two-time Olympian in the Laser Class adds, “The wind was oscillating a lot today, but the team did a good job and kept the boat moving.”

St. Thomas Taylor Rice and Eric Cusin and St. John’s Winn Majette rounded out the Bill T crew.

Finally, it was also a nail-biter finish in the one-design Hobie Wave Class. After 13 races in two days, it was the USA’s Michael Compton and the UK’s Niall Bartlett that finished tied on points. Again, the tiebreaker was the total number of first-place finishes and Compton beat Bartlett 6 to 5, respectively.

“I was the only one who steered the tiller with my foot,” admitted Compton. “Doing that moves my body weight forward and enables me to go faster. I did that all three days. The other thing is that since I finished fifth last year, I looked at all the places I messed up like weak starts and poor boat speed. I targeted these things in my training and this year I came out on top.”

Racing was held March 25-27.

Event informationRace detailsResults

Source: Carol Bareuther

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