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SCUTTLEBUTT 2479 – November 20, 2007

Scuttlebutt is a digest of major sailing news, commentary, opinions, features
and dock talk . . . with a North American focus. Scuttlebutt is published
each weekday with the support of its sponsors.

BAD KARMA
Famous photographer Gilles Martin-Raget has gone on a rant, and who better to
listen to than the keen observations and translated thoughts of a
well-traveled French man:

What’s happening? Did we have a specific solar eruption for the sailing world
only? Is the sport of sailing now reaching such a momentum that it can only
destroy itself with bad moves and wrong decisions? If you pile up the news of
recent weeks, with the complete mess in which the America’s Cup has put
itself in, the totally stupid decision of ISAF regarding classes that will be
used in the 2012 Olympic games, the last race of the 60ft multihulls in
Transat Jacques Vabre, a race which, at the moment, will have no more boats
to send across the Atlantic in 2 years time as IMOCA has decided to do
something else (which doesn’t exist now...) and Class 40 being crossed
against the organization, if you look at those two races – Jacques Vabre and
Barcelona World Race - that send racing offshore the same type of boat within
a height days interval, well you can only conclude that something is strongly
wrong in our sport. Oh yes, I could also add the jury result for Rolex
Yachtsman of the Year award. Nothing to say for Claire Leroy and crew for
being awarded, but, frankly, even if Ed Baird is a great sailor who did a
fantastic job behind Alinghi’s wheel and has a strong career, what Ronan Veal
has done for sailing at large in promoting foiled sailing with his Moth will
let much more memories and lead to more drastic changes in our sport. -- Read
on: http://martin-raget.blogspot.com/2007/11/bad-karma.html

* The basis of Scuttlebutt’s trivia question last week was the rumor that a
decision on the America’s Cup court case would come this Wednesday. If
Justice Cahn does decide this week, it will be nothing more than an epic
coincidence, as it was in 1987 that an America’s Cup decision was also handed
down from the NY courts on the day before the US holiday Thanksgiving Day.
Otherwise, there is absolutely no basis for this rumor. Additionally, there
was chatter about Alinghi making a huge announcement on Monday (didn’t
happen), and that they have now instead gone silent until the lawsuit is
settled (conjecture). There was also talk of the Swiss instigating the
eviction of the BMW Oracle Racing team from their base in Valencia. However,
this appears to have been smoke too:
http://bymnews.com/news/newsDetails.php?id=18449

RECORD ATTENDANCE AT OD SYMPOSIUM
An all-time record of more than 130 one-design sailors and class or fleet
leaders traveled from across the country to Columbus, Ohio, last weekend to
attend US SAILING’s One-Design Sailing Symposium. The record attendance at
the fourth annual Symposium represented an increase of more than 20 percent
compared to previous years. The event featured many seminars and workshops,
including presentations by sailing experts Dave Perry, Stuart Walker, Greg
Fisher, and many more. Organized annually by US SAILING, the Symposium is
geared towards one-design sailors who are interested in keeping the
one-design sector of the sport healthy and thriving and in improving their
own sailing skills. In addition to seminars and workshops, US SAILING
presented several awards to one-design sailors and organizations:

* Greg Fisher (Annapolis, Md.) was presented with the One-Design Service
award for distinguished service and exceptional dedication in the promotion
of one-design sailing and class organization.

* Bill Fastiggi (Winooski, Vt.) and Allan Terhune (Annapolis, Md.) received
the One-Design Leadership award for successfully creating the revolutionary
International Lightning Class Association's (ILCA) boat grant program,
designed to help young sailors experience the high level of competition
offered by the Lightning class.

* Cedar Point Yacht Club of Westport, Conn., received the One-Design Club
Award for administrative excellence, fleet growth, creative programming,
regatta support and member contribution at regional, national and
international levels of one-design sailing.

* Fishing Bay Yacht Club (FBYC) in Deltaville, Va., received the national
award for organizing the best One-Design Regatta, the Flying Scot 50th North
American Championship. -- Complete report:
http://www.ussailing.org/pressreleases/2007/odsswrapup.asp

YOU CAN GO FASTER!
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Beneteau 36.7s won the San Diego, Annapolis, Detroit and Chicago NOODs, a
Doyle client won the J/109 North American Championship and the Larchmont NOOD
Regatta, and a Doyle-powered J/122 won the American Spring Series and the
Greenwich Cup. The secret? Doyle Offshore One Design customers are finding
that not only are their sails faster than the competition, but that the Doyle
Set-Up and Tuning Guides help them go faster across a wide range of
conditions. You too can go faster - take the first step and contact your
local Doyle loft, 800-94-DOYLE, http://www.doylesails.com

MONDAY MORNING TACTICIAN
by Andrew Campbell (USA), 2008 Olympic Laser representative

While I was home in San Diego last weekend, I had the pleasure of joining my
father and some of the regular crew aboard Doug and Pam Werner’s J105
Javelin. While I was holding down the pit and sewer, I got to banter back and
forth with my old man about tactics and strategy getting around the
racecourse. On the way in after a day-winning 1-4-1 in the ten-boat fleet, we
were chatting about how steady the conditions were. I had spent the last few
weeks sailing in very shifty, puffy conditions on the east coast, and
honestly the steady 270 degree 4-6 knot westerly seabreeze surprised me.
Boatspeed was king and clear lanes were worth their distance in gold.

After expressing my surprise, Dad’s comment to me was “That’s the thought
right: West Coast sailors go straight better and East Coast sailors sail the
shifts better.” I thought about that comment and laughed at its stereotyping
and generality. Sailors like to generalize with the East Coast/ West Coast
argument all the time. Even Midwesterners, Gulf Coasters and Hawaiians take
sides in the argument. Stereotypes and accusations fly exerting superiority
of optimists versus sabots, 420s versus FJs, comparing windy and light air
venues across the nation. The stereotypes are fairly clear. -- Read on:
http://tinyurl.com/24hrf4

WHY I GAVE MY A-CAT "WINGS"
by Ben Hall, Hall Spars & Rigging
While everybody else was feverishly working on new hull shapes or sail
designs in preparation for the A-Cat Worlds, I decided to replace my
mast/sail combination with a wing. Why? Because we can in this development
class, where we all want to go faster. Building the wing is really like
building a big model airplane and as a kid I did a lot of that (maybe it was
the glue). The wing on my A-Class Catamaran was inspired Steve Clark’s
C-Class Catamaran Cogito built for the Little America’s Cup (see
www.cclass.ca for pictures). Steve convinced me that it was really not that
hard to build a wing, so I decided to give it a shot. Dave Hubbard designed
the wing and Steve and Henry Elliot were a big help along the way. The carbon
elements were constructed in the Hall factory, and I assembled most of the
parts in my basement until I needed a bit more room to put the entire wing
together.”

The design of the wing is a simplified version of the Cogito wing. It has two
elements while Cogito has three. The wing is slotted and both elements have
twist control. The controls are simpler than the standard A Class rig. The
Wing has four controls: a 2:1 mainsheet, camber control (this adjusts flap
angle from 0 to 35 degrees), twist for the main element, twist for the flap
element. (The standard rig has: traveler, mainsheet, outhaul, downhaul,
rotation, over-rotation, and diamond tension controls.) The length of the
wing is 29 feet. The top two elements are a little over nine feet, and easily
removable to facilitate transportation. The wing stores in a 21-foot trailer
box that’s six feet wide and two feet high. The boat sits upside down on top
of the box. I can tow the entire set-up with my mini-van. -- Read on:
http://www.hallspars.com/News/article.htm#news

SAMBA GEARS UP FOR 2008
Fresh off her victory at the IRC East Coast Championships in Annapolis, MD,
John Kilroy’s TP52 Samba Pa Ti is taking a brief side trip to Goetz Custom
Boats in Bristol, RI for IRC optimization in preparation for Key West Race
Week. Samba’s team manager, Eric Arndt, describes the changes as including a
new bow sprit, heavier bulb, and new deck and interior layouts. “Last year
was very good to us, with many wins, but we know that IRC is a building class
and to be competitive we need to make some changes,” says Arndt.

It was, according to Eric, a lot of work to do in a short period of time.
Following a conversation with Goetz Custom Boats’ John Boone, however, he
learned that GCB’s former home at 15 Broad Common Road had been converted to
a facility focused on grand prix refits and aftermarket work, and had the
boat moved to Rhode Island for the overhaul. “It was a big production to
finish our last regatta in Annapolis on a Sunday, break the boat apart and
have it on a truck to RI by Tuesday… but it all worked out well,” Arndt
reports.

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BARCELONA WORLD RACE
Open 60 doublehanded round the world race (started Nov 11; 25,000-miles)

(November 19, 2007) Paprec-Virbac 2 roared through the second scoring gate in
the Canary Islands at 07:01 GMT this morning, leading the fleet for the
second time past a course milestone. PRB was some three and half hours later,
and both had opened up a reasonable (50+ miles) gap with the bulk of the
fleet chasing them. Behind the top pair, an intense battle has been waged
over the past two days between Veolia Environnement and Delta Dore, more akin
to a match race than an around the world ocean marathon. The pair has matched
each other tack for tack and approach the Canaries gate at a dead heat. Both
teams are anxious to get clear of the islands, sensing an opportunity ahead.

Further back, the frustration continues for teams like Hugo Boss, Temenos II
and Estrella Damm, who sent a photo illustrating exactly how calm the
conditions can be. Out furthest west of this pack is Hugo Boss, who was
sailing fast, but had that advantage effectively neutralised by the
additional miles on its track. -- Complete report:
http://www.barcelonaworldrace.com/default.asp?section=10&sid=10780

Day 9 Positions - November 19, 2007 - 18:00 (GMT)
1. Paprec-Virbac 2 - Jean-Pierre Dick (FRA)/Damian Foxall (IRE), 23,310 DTF
2. PRB - Vincent Riou (FRA)/Sébastien Josse (FRA), 26 miles DTL
3. Delta Dore - Jérémie Beyou (FRA)/Sidney Gavignet (FRA), 92
4. Veolia Environnement - Roland Jourdain (FRA)/Jean-Luc Nélias (FRA), 93
5. Hugo Boss - Alex Thomson (GBR)/Andrew Cape (AUS), 115
6. Estrella Damm - Guillermo Altadill (ESP)/Jonathan McKee (USA), 132
7. Temenos II - Dominique Wavre (SUI)/Michéle Paret (FRA), 145
8. Mutua Madrilena - Javier Sanso Windmann (ESP)/Pachi Rivero (ESP), 154
9. Educación sin Fronteras -Albert Bargués (ESP)/Servanne Escoffier (FRA),433
Race website: http://www.barcelonaworldrace.com

SAILING SHORTS
* Jacksonville, FL - Bora Gulari at the helm for Chuck Holzman on 'Flyer'
played his trump card as they took the Melges 24 King's Day/Atlantic Coast
Championship title by one point this past weekend. Forty-one entrants
competed in the mostly light air event, where skippers Bill Hardesty and
Terry Hutchinson rounded out the top three. Sailing with Gulari and Holzman
was George Peet, Wally Cross, and Todd Jones. -- Complete report and results:
http://sailingscuttlebutt.com/cgi-bin/forum/gforum.cgi?post=5533

* Long Beach, CA -- With all of those turkeys awaiting the winners, Alamitos
Bay Yacht Club almost needed the wishbones to settle some of the class
championships in their annual Turkey Day Regatta this past weekend. Among 262
boats in 17 classes, four titles were determined by tiebreaking rules when
leaders completed the six-race schedule even in points, and a few others were
hanging in the balance to the end. Winds were a light 5 to 7 knots both days
for an event that has evolved into a cult classic of sailing over the
years. – Complete report with results:
http://sailingscuttlebutt.com/cgi-bin/forum/gforum.cgi?post=5536

* It was the situation this past weekend at the Ft. Worth Boat Club (TX) that
would find the entrants at the College Sloop Nationals facing the gauntlet of
wind conditions. Ten teams competed in J/22s, and they were greeted on Friday
with winds in the high teens to low twenty's, with several gusts in the 25-30
range, Saturday was ten or less, and Sunday morning was even lighter, a zero
to five drifter, before filling back in to a very nice ten to twelve.
St.Mary's won the event, with Boston College and Navy filling out the top
three in that order. -- Final report with results:
http://www.collegesailing.org/nas/fall07/results.asp?RegattaID=244

* Video highlights (4:34 minutes) from the latest event on the World Match
Race Tour - the Vitoria Brasil Sailing Cup 2007 - are now online, where the
on the water action is laced with a surplus of verbal banter and the
shoreside events showcase the dancing skill of energetic locals, all tied
together with vibrant tunes:
http://www.sail.tv/player?cid=540&scid=5&source=wmrt

* Singapore will host a stopover for the 2008-09 Volvo Ocean Race. It is the
first time in the 34-year history of the event that a southeast Asian
destination has been included in the route. The fleet, which is scheduled to
stop over in Singapore in late December 2008, will call at the resort island
of Sentosa and be based at the new, state-of-the-art One Degree 15 Marina
Club, one of Asia’s leading marinas. The race route is nearing finalisation
with the offshore start set for Alicante on 11 October, 2008. -- Race
schedule: http://www.volvooceanrace.org/abouttherace/raceschedule

* The Notice of Race is now available for US SAILING's 2008 Youth World
Qualifier Regatta, which will take place January 18-21, 2008 in Long Beach,
CA. Racing will be in Lasers (boys' singlehanded), Laser Radials (girls'
singlehanded), 29er (boys' and girls' doublehanded), RS:X (boys' and girls'
sailboard) and SL16 catamaran (open multihull). The winners of the multihull
division will also be named 2008 US Youth Multihull Champions. --
http://www.abyc.org/event.cfm?id=280

* (November 19, 2007) The monohull fleet in the Transat Jacques Vabre, a
4,300-mile doublehanded ocean race from Le Harve, France to Salvador, Brazil,
is led by Foncia, Michel Desjoyeaux/ Emmanuel Le Borgne (Open 60; 252 mile
DTF) and Télécom Italia, Giovanni Soldini/Pietro D'ali (Class 40; 1396 miles
DTF). The ORMA 60 multihull contingent has completed the race, with Class 50
leader Crèpes Whaou!,Franck Yves Escoffier/Karine Fauconnier 181 miles from
the finish. -- Event website: http://www.jacques-vabre.com/en

RACE FASTER AND SMARTER
If you want to improve your racing results, you should read Speed & Smarts.
This bi-monthly newsletter, written by winning America's Cup tactician Dave
Dellenbaugh, is full of race-winning tips on boatspeed, tactics, strategy,
rules and more! To see a sample issue or get a subscription, visit
http://www.SpeedandSmarts.com


LETTERS TO THE CURMUDGEON
Letters selected for publication must include the writer's name, and may be
edited for clarity or simplicity (letters shall be no longer than 250 words).
You only get one letter per subject, so give it your best shot, don't whine
if others disagree, and save your bashing and personal attacks for elsewhere.
As an alternative, a more open environment for discussion is available on the
Scuttlebutt Forum.

-- Scuttlebutt Letters: editor@sailingscuttlebutt.com
-- Scuttlebutt Forum: http://sailingscuttlebutt.com/forum

* From Jack Dinelli: Until in Issue 2478 when former ISAF president Paul
Handerson wrote a 100% correct post, everyone was blaming and accusing the
ISAF (for the 2012 Olympic events decision). Has anyone considered that those
who sit on the ISAF Council are those who run the sport of sailing in their
countries/ areas and that they are aware of what the sport of sailing is in
their countries/ areas, which strengths and which weakness it has? Does
anyone really think that the "gurus", journalists, bloggers, and experts know
better then everyone else in the sport of sailing? It seems to me that one
thing is talking about where the sport of sailing should go or would be nice
to go, and another thing is where the sport of sailing can really go.

I wonder if all those who are speaking, for instance, in favor of the skiff
for women, have ever paid attention to the speeches of the delegates in the
various ISAF committees and of the ISAF Council members coming not from USA,
GBR, or countries where skiff sailing is well established? Well, you would
have heard another story about the desire of the women to jump on a skiff!

* From Ray Tostado: OK, so the multis are being 'phased out' by market
brokers of monohulls. Fine, market power is great. This will have no effect
on ocean racing venues, but just wait until next year when lakes are fallow
of water and the only white triangles on the horizon belong to 18" draft
multis. It's not a matter of if. It's here now!

Maybe there is a fortune to be made by entrepreneurs who offer bus travel
tours to visit land locked marinas and fest the keel in mud statues of idle
monos. Multis may not have qualified for the Olympics, but they will, for the
immediate time, rule the race courses on inland waters. Farewell, nine-foot
drafts....

* From Paul Notary: Dave Tommela may have Issues about "Butt 2477" and I
agree with him about Tabloid Magazines & "Lurid Articles”, however this
report is not sensational nor titillating; it has reported a predator and a
Criminal act. In Australia, we may be half way around the world and upside
down but the last two decades have seen major achievements in both child
protection and the safety of citizens in public places by strong legislation
plus checks and measures for employees to help avoid such sad and abusive
situations.

From the late 1970s, we as a Nation realized that the biggest crime is the
silence or silencing of victims. The "Affirmative Action" process began that
covered every thing from inappropriate comments at work/ school to full scale
abuse, resulting in many new laws being passed to cover situations and ensure
that the victim would not be further violated via the court process. Shortly
our courts will have streamlined measures in place so a victim will not be
dragged through a muck raking process further traumatizing them.

Top marks to Scuttlebutt for posting the article as later down the track it
may just stop someone from employing this sad individual and also alerts all
of us to be a bit smart about our surroundings in this digital age and way
too easily used equipment.

=> Curmudgeon’s Comment: The incident that we reported on last week was the
second such occurrence included in Scuttlebutt within the past month, and
hopefully it will also be the last one. Thread closed.

CURMUDGEON’S OBSERVATION
I don't want to become immortal through my work. I want to become immortal
through not dying.

Special thanks to Doyle Sails, Camet Clothing, and Speed & Smarts.