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HI FI ADDS IRC OVERALL TO HER LINE HONORS WIN

April 5, 2010

HI FI arrives in Subic Bay, Photo credit: Rolex / Daniel Forster Neil Pryde’s Hi Fi (HKG) held off several strong challenges from two TP52s for the IRC Overall win in the 2010 Rolex China Sea Race. This was after the boat clinched the Line Honours win yesterday morning.

Hi Fi, which also took IRC Racing A division, held off rival Ray Roberts’ Evolution Racing by less than two hours. Roberts said that Evolution ‘parked up’ two times on the first night and lost about 12 miles to Hi Fi. For the rest of the way down the track the boats would close up and then spread apart again. Several hours behind Evolution, and keeping the pressure on all the way, was Geoff Hill’s Strewth (AUS), which was 3rd overall.

Pryde was presented with a Rolex Yacht-Master timepiece for his IRC Overall win, which he generously handed over to Hi Fi crew member Kevin Costin (Kos), who has managed Pryde’s racing programme for the past 13 years.

Y K Szeto's CLOUD arrives in Subic Bay , Photo credit: Rolex / Daniel Forster Kos prepared Hi Fi for the Rolex China Sea Race in 2008, but had to return to Australia for a prior racing commitment – and Hi Fi went on to win Line Honours. So this time Pryde said if they won again, he’d give Kos the watch. Kos said, “It was his threat, the whole race he had a photo of Hi Fi crossing the finish line from last time in the cockpit.”

Ernest Echauz’ Subic Centennial (PHI) won IRC Racing B division, holding off a strong challenge from the Mills 41 Ambush. Echauz sailed as navigator this year, with Vince Perez as skipper. While Subic is the only Philippine entry in the race, Echauz is not just a local favourite, but also highly respected among other competitors for his efforts promoting youth sailing as President of the Philippine Sailing Association. Echauz always includes young sailors in his crew for both offshore races and around the buoys, providing them with some great training under the coaching of Australian Jamie Wilmot.

Echauz revels in this race, which finishes in his home waters. About the conditions this year, he said, “It was very unique in that there were very light winds on the first day, and strong winds on Friday afternoon and Saturday. It was exciting in the sense that you have to prepare your route and where you’re going to have your landfall. It paid off in that we were more east compared to the others in our division, so we were able to get the land breeze earlier.”

Neil Pryde presents the Rolex Yacht-Master for IRC Overall to Kevin Costen (HI FI Boat Captain, Photo credit: Rolex / Daniel Forster This race, Echauz traded skippering duties with Vince Perez who was co-skipper with him in the 2008 Rolex China Sea Race, when Subic Centennial won IRC Overall. Perez said, “Having won last time, the pressure was for us to come back, but we were downplaying our expectations by saying ‘let’s just have a relaxing voyage’. We enjoyed two full days of good winds and we thought we’d have the hometown advantage knowing the local land breeze…perhaps we arrived just a little bit late coming in!”

Perez is chairman of the Word Wildlife Fund - Philippines which seems fitting as he reflected on the natural beauty of sailing to the Philippines: “It was very nice to see on the first day a couple of pilot whales and a pair of hitchhiking swiftlets that tagged along with us, which added a sort of side drama to the action of tacking and changing course. Overall it was very pleasant, and I always enjoy travelling with Judes (Echauz), talking about good books and planning our next adventure.”

In IRC Racing C, it was Anthony Root’s Red Kite II that prevailed. Talking about the 2009 San Fernando Race (the boat won IRC Racing), Root said, “Last year we beat our bodies, this year we beat our brains – this was a very tactical race.

“We always planned to go north then come south, but we actually had to do an ‘S’. Our plan was to stay high, but we knew from the weather on Thursday night that a big surge would come through. Our plan was just to bear off and go with our max VMG with the surge. It was very frustrating sitting around yesterday, and we caught a corridor of wind and we were desperate to get to the land by dawn, but we didn’t make it. We knew there would be no wind out on the sea and we wanted the land breeze. So we had to struggle; we would go along the coast and sail into each bay – there was more wind in the bays than outside, so we scalloped our way down the coast.”

Jon Wardill’s Australian Maid (AUS) won IRC Premier Cruising. This was Wardill’s fourth race on Australian Maid – a boat he allowed, “is an old, wooden boat, but still competitive. Long-distance passage racing is where she traditionally does her best.”

Dockside the morning after a middle-of-the-night finish, Nicholas Mittendorf, a crewman on board, talked about how Australian Maid came out on top, and said “The back end had a strategy of what to do, but always the weather makes various changes and you’ve got to adjust your strategy. Everyone is a mixture on the crew (friends from Darwin, other parts of Australia, the Netherlands) and everyone came together and sailed well. The owner really enjoys these passage races.

“The race itself presented a number of challenges, we tore the mainsail and had to repair it at sea, and the steering chain split pin broke, and that blew things apart for a short period of time. So that put us behind, and a little bit on edge about our position in our division. But our plan was just keeping on working hard and doing all the right things we could do and keeping the pressure on, and staying in the areas where the wind was worked, and we managed to come out ahead in our division.

“At times there were a few “zeros” coming up on the (wind instrument) readings and that just added a bit of frustration to the whole thing. But, it was just a matter of working ones’ position out and doing the best one can with the sail changes and to get moving again.”

In the IRC Cruising division, at press time, only one boat -- Skipper CP Wong’s Tipsy Frenz (HKG)-- had finished, so that class winner has yet to be determined.

Dream and Baringo have retired and are motoring to Subic Bay. Eleven boats are still racing with most due to finish through the night; the time limit and cut-off provision for the race is 1200 hrs, Tuesday 6 April 2010.

An informal dockside presentation took place tonight at the Subic Bay Yacht Club for the 1st – 3rd place finishers, in each division. The official Rolex China Sea Race prizegiving will be held on Wednesday 14 April at the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club branch at Kellet Island, Hong Kong.

 

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