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OLD
NEWS 2003
Last
revised 3/12/04
Text
restored from server loss - missing photos coming soon - 11/29/03
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SCHOCK
NATIONALS 2003
San Diego Yacht Club, September 5th – 7th, by
Michael Ross, Kathmandu
In
1989 the San Francisco earthquake ripped through the bay area, the Berlin
wall was dismantled, a brave student stood before a tank in Tiananmen
Square and Dave Voss began assembling a competitive Schock 35 crew. Back
then the architect of a championship team was doused in Gatorade. Today,
he’s thrown into the harbor!
San Diego Yacht Club marked the
location of the 2003 Schock 35 Nationals – a regatta noted by excellent
weather, superb tactics and at times menacing kelp.
Muggy
temperatures and challenging wind shifts characterized Day 1 in the South
Bay. “You couldn’t have asked for a better day though,” said Barry VanEss
of Notorious. Piranha took Race 1 in 8 to 12 knot winds and secured their
first of two bullets in the regatta. Race 2 followed with the first of
three general recalls of the regatta and an exciting second start. Ripple
lead throughout the race, protecting the lead even as the wind dropped
below 5 knots on approach to the second leeward mark. They knocked off a
1st place finish as Super Gnat came from the middle of the fleet to finish
an impressive 3rd. “We had bad starts in 1 and 2 and came back to finish
3rd overall in both races due to the
preparation we did all year with the boat and crew maneuvers,” said Cliff
Thompson of Super Gnat. Strategem and Shillelagh were over the line at the
start of Race 3 and were required to restart while Whiplash took a quick
lead and was first to round the windward mark. But it was Outlier nudging
past Whiplash on the second windward mark to capture a 1st place victory –
its best finish of the regatta. “It was a very tactical day, unusual for
the South Bay in that the right side didn’t pay,” said Bob Patterson of
Piranha.
The
bay yielded to an ocean racecourse on Day 2 as light wind, kelp and
Whiplash were the stories of the day. “We were doing well until we hit the
mother of all kelp,” said Doug Sisk of Outlier who along with Kathmandu
sent divers overboard between races to clear kelp. Perfect Circle had
their best leg of the r egatta during Race 4, beating Whiplash and Piranha
to the windward mark before falling to the back of the fleet and finishing
a disappointing 10th. “Form doesn’t follow function with our kite,” said
Allan Marsh of Perfect Circle. It did with Team Whiplash though who had
their best day of the regatta. “We sailed fast and worked it as hard as we
could,” said Jon Robinson of Whiplash. “We normally do well in light air
and had great boat speed on just about everybody. The whole crew worked
well together.” And they continued doing so, sailing well in light wind
and nailing their second bullet in Race 5, while Super Gnat slipped past
Ripple to capture 3rd and Kathmandu squeaked past Outlier for 6th.
A
foggy morning with visibility under six boat lengths presented a challenge
sailing through the bay entrance on Day 3 of the regatta. Half a dozen
Schocks followed race committee boat Corinthian past anchored merchant
marine vessel Aquarius Ace to the ocean racecourse. The fog lifted for an
on-time start to Race 6, however the race was called off one minute before
the starting gun due to a sudden wind shift on the course. Once underway
though, it was a day for the San Diego boats. “Our goal for the day was to
protect 6th place,” said Rob Canterbury of Kathmandu who traded 2nd
position twice with Whiplash and ended up taking 3rd by only half a boat
length. “It was definitely a day for the San Diego boats,” said Rob,
noting Kathmandu’s best finish of the regatta and the 1st place finish of
Super Gnat in Race 7. “We looked really bad at the beginning,” said Cliff
Thompson of Super Gnat. “I have to thank our tactician that called two
shifts in the middle that put us upfront.”
But
it was Dave Voss and the crew of Piranha edging out Whiplash to take the
2003 Schock 35 National Championship. “We’ve had the same ten people for
two years. That’s what makes the difference,” said Dave upon receiving the
1st place trophy. Shortly thereafter, Dave’s crew threw him into the
harbor in celebration – a tribute that may start a new tradition amongst
winning teams. And as he sat with crewmates drying off at the bar, he
said, “we’ve been at it since 1989 and have settled for nothing other than
first or second the past twenty-five months. The difference is definitely
in the crew.”
Looking at the 2004 season, Fred
Young the new class president, says the first order of business is, “for
the class to
buy
all boats a new set of sails.” Realizing the delusion of his assertion,
Fred says he’ll, “settle for the class to buy the new president a beer!”
All in all, fantastic San Diego
weather and a very competitive fleet marked the 2003 Schock 35 Nationals.
Bob Green and the race committee did a phenomenal job with course settings
and communication. And a fourteen-year pursuit of a National Championship
was realized in a wet but unforgettable moment for Team Piranha.
E-mail Michael Ross at
michaelfrancisross@hotmail.com
|
Place
|
Boat Name |
Owner |
Race 1
|
Race 2
|
Race 3
|
Race 4
|
Race 5
|
Race 6
|
Race 7
|
Total
|
|
1
|
PIRANHA |
Dave Voss |
1
|
4
|
2
|
2
|
2
|
1
|
2
|
14
|
|
2
|
WHIPLASH |
Ray Godwin |
2
|
2
|
6
|
1
|
1
|
2
|
5
|
19
|
|
3
|
SUPER GNAT |
Cliff Thompson |
4
|
3
|
4
|
7
|
3
|
5
|
1
|
27
|
|
4
|
OUTLIER |
Schmidt/Gordon |
3
|
6
|
1
|
3
|
7
|
6
|
3
|
29
|
|
5
|
RIPPLE |
Jeff Janov |
5
|
1
|
3
|
5
|
4
|
7
|
4
|
29
|
|
6
|
KATHMANDU |
Rob Canterbury |
8
|
7
|
7
|
4
|
6
|
3
|
7
|
42
|
|
7
|
NOTORIOUS |
T & L O'Neill |
7
|
8
|
5
|
6
|
5
|
4
|
10
|
45
|
|
8
|
LIMERICK |
Alice Leahey |
6
|
5
|
10
|
8
|
9
|
11
|
6
|
55
|
|
9
|
POWER PLAY |
Tom McQuaid |
10
|
10
|
8
|
9
|
8
|
10
|
8
|
63
|
|
10
|
PERFECT CIRCLE |
Fred Young |
9
|
9
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
8
|
11
|
67
|
|
11
|
STRATEGEM |
Mark Hinrichs |
11
|
11
|
11
|
12
|
12
|
9
|
9
|
75
|
|
12
|
SHILLELAGH |
Charlie Cavallino |
12
|
12
|
12
|
11
|
10
|
12
|
12
|
81
|
NORTH SAILS RACE WEEK/SCHOCK
35 PACIFIC COAST
CHAMPIONSHIP – Long Beach, June 27-29
By Chip Robertson, Kathmandu crew/Input from Dave Voss
and Ron Baerwitz
This
year saw eleven Schock 35's attend the popular three-day regatta in
Long Beach. Everyone saw their conditions in this regatta from as
Friday turned out to be a rather windy, Saturday light and Sunday more
moderate conditions. The fleet was sent out to a new venue for this
regatta just to the South of the harbor entrance for all three days.
Friday morning saw windy
conditions building as the Schocks headed out to the racecourse
prompting the decision to go with #3 head sails. By the time the first
warning signal went off the wind was around 15kt’s, guaranteeing some
exciting racing. When all was said and done, Outlier had grabbed the
first bullet of the regatta, followed by Piranha, Whiplash and Ripple.
The second race saw the wind
gusting to 20kt’s causing more than a few over-powered moments.
Kathmandu tried the new ‘submerge your foredeck crew’ technique, which
was surely not to their liking and gave an “I’m glad that was them and
not me” feeling to the crews on the other boats close by.
Unfortunately no pictures have surfaced to prove the incident.
Outlier got the best start and was
first to the weather mark. They were leading by a good distance on
the second downwind run of three when a spinnaker halyard broke and
the spinnaker ended up around the keel. Other big excitement saw
Limerick running in second only to do a round down pirouette around
the spinnaker pole – aka death roll. Then on the third upwind,
Piranha broke the jib halyard, but the crew had the sail down and back
up on a spare halyard so quickly they only lost three boatlengths and
held onto the lead. The finish line saw Piranha take the gun followed
by Ripple, Notorious and Outlier.
The
weary sailors headed back to the docks glad the day’s sailing was
over, but looking forward to the always popular after race party. The
standings after day one saw Piranha leading with 3 points, followed by
Outlier (5), Ripple (6) and Notorious (8).
Saturday morning was overcast
but to the relief of everyone the winds stayed down around 10kt’s,
which is much more favorable Schock conditions. Kathmandu took
advantage of the San Diego like conditions and was the second fastest
boat of the day grabbing a fourth and two second place finishes which
was an excellent result for the young crew.
The
third race got off without incident in the light air and by the
windward mark Perfect Circle was the first boat followed by Outlier
and Ripple. Fred was excited to have lead for a leg, this being his
first year owning a Schock and stated “It was a watershed moment for
his program to look back at the whole fleet for the first time”. By
the end Ripple made the most of the shifty conditions and took the
first bullet for the day, their first of the regatta. Piranha,
Whiplash, Kathmandu and Perfect Circle rounded out the top five boats.
Limerick
caught all the right puffs on the first leg of race four and reached
the windward mark in first followed by Piranha. By the end of the
race Piranha jumped into first followed closely by Kathmandu who ran
out of time, on the last downwind leg, to get by and grab their first
bullet. Ripple and Outlier followed rounding out the top four places.
Race five saw similar
conditions to race four. This time Outlier jumped out to a big lead
over the fleet followed by Kathmandu and Piranha at the finish. The
race standings after day two saw Piranha leading with 6 points
followed by Outlier (10) and Ripple (10)
with one race discarded.
Day
three saw more of the same light shifty conditions making it crucial
to catch the wind shifts and puffs to do well. Race six had everyone
fighting for pin end of the start line with Piranha squeaking around
the pin and out into a big initial lead. The velocity on the right
benefited those who went there early and by the windward mark Whiplash
was first followed by Piranha and Outlier. In the end Whiplash took
the gun followed by Ripple, Outlier and Piranha.
The final race of the regatta
saw the wind increase slightly but it was nowhere near Friday’s fury.
Piranha nailed the start again - this time at the RC end, covered
Outlier and raced to the weather mark rounding first, followed closely
by Outlier. This was a battle for both the regatta and Season
Championship.
In
the end, Piranha was able to hold off the fleet taking yet another
bullet in the regatta and securing their second straight season
championship. Congratulations to Dave and his crew on another
excellent year of racing.
Next stop is back down in San
Diego for the Schock 35 Nationals on September 5th, 6th
and 7th. Hope to see you all there!
|
Schock 35
(Course 2) |
Number of Entrants:
11 One Throwout Scoring |
1
|
87780
|
Piranha
David Voss |
Schock 35
CYC |
2 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
4 |
4 |
1 |
11 |
|
2 |
87694 |
Outlier
Dick Schmidt |
Schock 35
CYC |
1 |
4 |
12
DSQ |
4 |
1 |
3 |
2 |
15 |
3
|
97866
|
Ripple
Jeff Janov |
Schock 35
CYC |
4 |
2 |
1 |
3 |
5 |
2 |
3 |
15 |
4
|
87995
|
Whiplash
Ray Godwin |
Schock 35
LBYC |
3 |
6 |
3 |
5 |
3 |
1 |
4 |
19 |
5
|
97012
|
Kathmandu
Canterbury/ Beale |
Schock 35
CorYC |
6 |
8 |
4 |
2 |
2 |
5 |
6 |
25 |
6
|
40210
|
Notorious
Tom & Laurel O'Neill |
Schock 35
MBYC |
5 |
3 |
8 |
7 |
6 |
10 |
7 |
36 |
5
|
97868
|
Limerick
Alice Leahey |
Schock 35
CYC |
7 |
7 |
9 |
6 |
9 |
8 |
5 |
42 |
8
|
97663
|
Mischief
David O'Hara/ Tom Hartman |
Schock 35
BSSB |
8 |
5 |
10 |
9 |
8 |
7 |
8 |
45 |
9
|
46735
|
Xylocaine
Sal & Bev Pestritto/Tony Beltrans |
Schock 35
DPYC |
11 |
9 |
6 |
10 |
7 |
9 |
9 |
50 |
10
|
87811
|
Perfect Circle
Fred Young |
Schock 35
SMWYC |
10 |
10 |
5 |
11 |
12
DNF |
6 |
11 |
53 |
11
|
97974
|
Strategem
Mark Hinrichs |
Schock-35
BCYC |
9 |
11 |
7 |
8 |
10 |
11 |
10 |
55 |
CAL RACE WEEK/JIMMY MORRIS
MEMORIAL
Ten Schock 35's, from five
different yacht clubs, attended this year’s race on a cool but sunny
weekend in Marina Del Rey. The mornings were overcast and grey but by
the sun came out just in time for racing to start. The Schocks were
sent to course two with a swarm of J-105’s and three PHRF classes
which included two Schock 40’s in class A. With all these boats
present we knew that the mark roundings were going to be exciting.
For
race one, the race committee called for course E totaling 7.2NM. The
wind was around 9kts at 210˚. With twenty J-105’s using the start
line, there was plenty of room for the ten Schocks to get clean air
for a good start. Piranha, Outlier and Whiplash were the first three
boats to the weather mark taking advantage of wind shifts to get ahead
of the fleet. By the second weather mark, Ripple had squeezed ahead
of Whiplash to take third place and that’s how it stayed to the finish
with Piranha grabbing the first bullet of the day, surely confident
that they could take two more. The remaining boats finished like
this; White Fang, Limerick, Twister, Power Play, Notorious and Perfect
Circle.
Now that everyone was warmed
up and hopefully had the kinks worked out we were ready for race two
and again the race committee called for course E. The wind was still
puffing around 9 – 10kts so no sail changes were in order. With ample
starting line room, everyone got away safely with Whiplash leading the
way. By the first windward mark Whiplash lead, followed by Limerick,
White Fang and Twister holding back the usual group of leaders. At
the leeward mark the race committee signaled a course change due to a
wind shift. The second windward mark saw Whiplash was still holding
onto their lead but Limerick had lost their second place to White Fang
and Notorious had rolled past Twister grabbing fourth place. Whiplash
was still holding onto their first place at the third weather mark
with White Fang and Limerick in toe but Outlier and Piranha and moved
themselves up into fourth and fifth respectively. On the downwind leg
Piranha had edged by Outlier to claim fourth place at the finish.
Had Piranha’s confidence been
affected, now tied with Whiplash for first place with Outlier nipping
at their heels only two points back? Race three would be yet another
chance for someone to take control, who would it be?
Course D was chosen for the
final race of the day totaling 6.2NM with winds gusting from 11 –
14kts, causing some skippers to evaluate their sail choices. The
first weather mark saw Ripple leading the way followed by Whiplash,
Piranha, Power Play and Limerick. By the second weather mark rounding
Outlier had jumped to fourth, knocking Power Play down to fifth and
that’s how it finished with Ripple taking their first bullet of the
regatta showing they weren’t about to give up.
After a long day of racing
(20.6NM’s total) everyone was looking forward to returning to the CYC
for the Mexican buffet dinner, live music and of course the bar to
drown their sorrows and heal their wounds. The leader board after
three of five races looked like this; Whiplash lead with seven points,
followed closely by Piranha with eight, Ripple with ten thanks to
their first place in race three and Outlier with eleven. The top
three boats had each one a race on the first day and with the points
this close, an exciting day was upon us to see who could take home the
gold on day two.
Sunday morning started with
the same overcast and grey background as the sailors were greeted with
on Saturday but once again the sun broke through in time for racing.
This was likely not to the relief of those that were fooled by the
overcast morning on Saturday and didn’t put on sun block and were
probably hoping not to see any sun today. With only two races on tap
for the day everyone had to put in their best efforts if there were to
be any changes in the standings.
Lighter winds of 7 – 8kts blew
at the start of race four making catching the wind shifts all the more
important. Once again course E was chosen and White Fang jumped out
to the lead rounding the first weather mark ahead of Outlier, Power
Play, Piranha and Ripple. The race committee signaled a course change
at the first leeward mark due to another wind shift on the course. By
the third weather mark White Fang was still pulling out their lead
with only Outlier making any gains on them. Piranha and Ripple jumped
ahead of Power Play followed closely by Whiplash who was trying to
maintain their lead in the regatta. The finish line saw White Fang
grab their first bullet, followed by Outlier, Piranha, Ripple and
Whiplash. The top five boats were now only separated between 11 and
15 points. The last race was sure to be tight.
The final race of the regatta
saw 7 – 8kts of wind at the start again this time with the shorter
course D chosen by the race committee. Notorious got a good shift on
the right side of the course helping them to round the first mark just
behind Whiplash, followed by Piranha. Whiplash stretched out their
lead by the second weather mark taking advantage of every shift they
could. Piranha had edged into second and Outlier and Ripple had
stepped up into third and fourth spots. By the finish Whiplash had
grabbed their second bullet of the regatta putting them into a tie
with Piranha for first place overall at thirteen points a piece,
followed by Outlier three points back with sixteen and Ripple at
eighteen.
The overall season standings
see Piranha ahead by one point over Outlier followed by Whiplash three
points back with one regatta to go which is the three day North Sails
Race Week in Long Beach. Can Piranha hold onto their first place lead
and win their second season championship in two years or will Outlier
or Whiplash steel the spoils. Make sure to tune in June 27 – 29 for
all the Schock 35 action.
Chip Robertson
Shillelagh/Notorious crew.
|
Schock 35
(Course 2) |
Number of Entrants: 10 |
|
Place |
Sail#
Bow# |
Boat Name
Skipper Name |
BoatType
Club |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
Total
Points |
1
|
87995
02 |
Whiplash
Ray Godwin |
Schock 35
LBYC |
4 |
1 |
2 |
5 |
1 |
13 |
2
|
87780
08 |
Piranha
David Voss |
Schock 35
CYC |
1 |
4 |
3 |
3 |
2 |
13 |
3
|
87694
07 |
Outlier
Ron/Dick Bearwitz/Schmidt |
Schock 35
CYC |
2 |
5 |
4 |
2 |
3 |
16 |
4
|
97866
03 |
Ripple
Jeff Janov |
Schock 35
CYC |
3 |
6 |
1 |
4 |
4 |
18 |
5
|
97513
01 |
White Fang
Don Adams |
Schock 35
SMWYC |
5 |
2 |
7 |
1 |
7 |
22 |
6
|
97868
04 |
Limerick
Alice Leahey |
Schock 35
CYC |
6 |
3 |
8 |
8 |
6 |
31 |
7
|
40210
06 |
Notorious
Tom & Laurel O'Neill |
Schock 35
MBYC |
9 |
8 |
6 |
7 |
5 |
35 |
8
|
97979
05 |
Power Play
McQuade/Arkle |
Schock 35
CYC |
8 |
9 |
5 |
6 |
8 |
36 |
9
|
97350
10 |
Twister
Ty Hokanson |
Schock 35
SBYRC |
7 |
7 |
11
DSQ |
9 |
11
DNF |
45 |
10
|
87811
09 |
Perfect Circle
Fred Young |
Schock 35
SMWYC |
10 |
10 |
11
DNS |
10 |
9 |
50 |
32nd
ANNUAL YACHTING CUP
San Diego Yacht
Club, May 3/4, 2003
by Dave Stotler, Whiplash
San Diego offered some surprises during this year’s Yachting Cup –
several hours of rain and wind gusts of 25 knots Saturday morning.
Twelve Schock 35’s geared up on time and headed for the course area
south of the Coronado Bridge- expecting an 11:30 start of racing.
Only the earliest boats reached the starting area – the rest learned
through hand signals and radio contact that racing for the day had
been abandoned on all three Yachting Cup courses. While winds of 18 to
25 knots appeared manageable to many on the protected south course,
the race committees on the two ocean courses found a heavy swell more
than they were willing to deal with. The rumor went around the fleet
that SDYC’s bar manager had instigated the abandonment as a revenue
boosting initiative. And from the look of the crowd there later the
ruse worked - with lots of Bloody Mary’s taking the chill off and the
Kentucky Derby on the monitors.
Meanwhile, an unlucky thirteenth boat, Ripple, had been delayed in
departing Marina del Rey due to a collision on the preceding Wednesday
night. The delay put the delivery straight into the teeth of the
storm front on its delivery South and by now it was headed back to
Marina del Rey (thinking they couldn't make it on time for the
Saturday start) leaving the team without a boat. Upon finding out
that racing would not start until Sunday, the owner, Jeff Janov
initially tried to hire a helicopter to go out and turn the boat
around to head to San Diego! The helicopter was reportedly even
warming up to take off when a better opportunity came up -- Jeff found
out that he could charter local SD boat Shillelagh. When Ripple got
to MdR, the sails were hauled to San Diego and the unlucky thirteenth
boat made it to the starting line Sunday morning.
Sunday
racing was amended to start an hour earlier at 10:30. By 10:00 the
breeze was at 10 knots and built to 13 ½ knots from 255 degrees by
race time. The race committee posted a twice around course and on the
first beat Outlier crossed ahead of the class on port to take a clean
lead. Jeff Janov and his Ripple crew showed a quick mastery of
the new boat rounding in second, and then Whiplash which had crossed
into the lineup just ahead of Notorious.
As
the lead boats approached the leeward mark they found both a mark and
a markset boat anchored and flying the “M” flag indicating that it was
acting as a replacement mark. While the three leading boats rounded
the market boat cleanly, the mark switch caused considerable confusion
and some close right of way calls among the following boats many of
whom rounded the mark or both. Outlier, Shillelagh and Whiplash
continued to lead the remainder of the second trip around and were
followed by Super Gnat and Piranha at the finish.
After
a wait for the two PHRF classes to finish, the RC called for another
twice around course in 13 to 15 knots of breeze. Half the class chose
#3 headsails. Outlier pulled out from the starting line in the lead,
followed by Piranha, with Whiplash and Notorious neck and neck at the
top mark. Stratagem was caught over the line early and returned to
restart.
On
the downwind leg Notorious passed Whiplash for third position but
remained tight with Whiplash squeezing inside by the windward mark.
But Whiplash’s position was slow and both Notorious and Limerick
steamed past them toward the finish.
Race
three brought out more #3’s and started in 15 knots of breeze – a
trimmers relief and still fast in the flat water! The course was three
times around and Outlier, Piranha and Whiplash led at the first mark
followed by Power Play. Limerick broke its spinnaker pole and fell to
last place. On the way to the second windward mark Outlier held the
lead while Whiplash and Piranha traded leads several times. Piranha
passed at the mark with Power play still in contention.
By
the third windward mark the leading three boats had separated widely
from the rest of the class. Heading into the final downwind, Whiplash
got into a massive spinnaker wrap but was saved by the healthy gap to
the #4 boat since the mainsail kept up decent boat speed in the hearty
breeze. At the finish it was Ripple/Shillelagh and then Power Play in
fourth and fifth position. Limerick recovered well from its broken
pole, climbing back five places to finish eighth.
Before
the start of race four the wind went light at 9 knots from 300
degrees. For a time it looked like the light #1, heavy #1 or #2 could
have been called for. Super Gnat led at the windward mark. Power Play
and Outlier moved into second and third by the leeward mark. Back to
the second windward mark, and through the finish, Super Gnat and Power
Play held the lead with Outlier holding third after taking an
impressive three firsts in the first three races.
Leaving the course on the way back to SDYC it looked like Outlier in
first with 6 points, with Whiplash and Piranha tied with 15 points
with Piranha ahead on the tiebreaker followed by Ripple/Shillelagh
with 17 points with Ripple ahead on the tiebreaker.
Back at the dock, a protest against the top three boats that rounded
the replacement mark in race one got a lot of skippers buried in their
rulebooks. In the end the protest committee never heard the protest,
but the race committee acted on its own initiative to throw out the
race, leaving the class with just three races scored for the weekend.
While the new mark had been identified by the “M” flag, was at anchor,
and was verbally identified as the new mark, its attendants failed to
produce a regular sound signal to alert competitors. As a result
Shillelagh lost its second for that race and Ripple lost its third so,
for overall, the positions remained the same except for hard luck
Ripple which fell to sixth after a three way tiebreaker with Super
Gnat and Power Play. Number 13 will continue to be superstitious!
All in all a surprising weekend for San Diego’s weather conditions and
another solid turnout for the Schock 35 class.
Next stop…Cal Race Week in Marina Del Rey on May 31!
|
|
|
Place
|
#
|
Boat Name |
Owner |
Race 1
|
Race 2
|
Race 3
|
Race 4
|
Total
|
|
1
|
87694 |
Outlier |
Schmidt/Gordon |
|
1
|
1
|
3
|
5
|
|
2
|
87780 |
Piranha |
David Voss |
|
2
|
2
|
6
|
10
|
|
3
|
87995 |
Whiplash |
Ray Godwin |
|
5
|
3
|
4
|
12
|
|
4
|
42439 |
Super Gnat |
Cliff Thompson |
|
7
|
7
|
1
|
15
|
|
5
|
97979 |
Power Play |
McQuade/Arkle |
|
8
|
5
|
2
|
15
|
|
6
|
97866 |
Ripple |
Jeff Janov |
|
6
|
4
|
5
|
15
|
|
7
|
40210 |
Notorious |
Tom & Laurel Oneill |
|
3
|
6
|
7
|
16
|
|
8
|
97868 |
Limerick |
Alice Leahey |
|
4
|
8
|
8
|
20
|
|
9
|
46735 |
Xylocaine |
Salvatore Pestritto |
|
10
|
9
|
9
|
28
|
|
10
|
97012 |
Kathmandu |
Rob & Kim Canterbury |
|
9
|
12
|
10
|
31
|
|
11
|
87879 |
Shaman |
Richard Hohol |
|
13
|
10
|
12
|
35
|
|
12
|
87811 |
Perfect Circle |
Fred Young |
|
11
|
13
|
11
|
35
|
|
13
|
97974 |
Strategem |
Mark Hinrichs |
|
12
|
11
|
15 dnf
|
38
|
|
14
|
97306 |
Shillelagh |
Charlie Cavallino |
|
15 dnc
|
15 dnc
|
15 dnc
|
45
|
Ahmanson Regatta Recap
Schock 35 Hi-Point Regatta #3
By Ann Chamberlin and Dick Schmidt
Newport Harbor Yacht Club and their race committees put on
another good regatta over the weekend of April 12-13. There were several
one-design and PHRF classes, and the Schock 35s contributed 12 boats to be
the second-largest class. The racing was good, with mostly two-lap
courses that were on the short side, 5 races total, and on the near course
which made the commute somewhat easier. Throughout the regatta, the fleet
was closely bunched at marks, and the racing was remarkably close. There
were three different race winners, and a competitor who didn’t win a race
almost won the regatta. We saw the return of former Class President Cliff
Thompson with his newly refurbished Super Gnat, as well as appearances by
newcomers to the fleet Sal and Beverly Prestittor (in Xylocaine--We wonder
what they do for a living), Fred Young (in Perfect Circle--ex-Last Tango),
and Charlie Cavallino (in Shillelagh). It was great to see new faces in
the fleet.
After a fabulous supply of donuts at the Skippers’ Meeting,
Saturday began with somewhat atypical conditions for Newport, as rain was
predicted and the weather was cloudy and unstable looking. The wind was
far to the left (145-160 degrees) and well filled-in early at about 7-8
knots with very light seas. Over the day, these were to be the
conditions, with the wind shifting to about 205 at the most, with the wind
being pretty steady overall. These were good race conditions for the
Schock 35. It didn’t rain, and we had fabulous views of Catalina all day.
In the first race, the fleet got off to a good start, and
found Ripple leading at the first mark, Whiplash and Outlier right behind,
with Piranha a ways back in the pack. Outlier managed to edge past Ripple
on the first run, and Whiplash still enjoyed a slight lead at the bottom
mark. Outlier got the best of the second beat, though, and led Whiplash
at the second weather mark, with Ripple right behind.
Uncharacteristically, Piranha was still in the middle somewhere. But then
on the second run, Piranha made a comeback “from the dead” to round right
behind Outlier, and just ahead of Whiplash and Ripple. After the short
beat to the finish, it was Outlier, Piranha, Ripple, and Whiplash, with
good, close racing all the way.
In Race 2, Super Gnat and Power Play got off to a great
start and rounded 1-2, followed by Whiplash and Piranha. Super Gnat faded
to 3rd by the first leeward mark, with Whiplash taking over the lead and
looking very good indeed. By the second windward mark, Whiplash was now
walking away, but the “rest of us” at least had a race, with Power Play,
Piranha, Outlier, and Ripple fighting it out. At the last downwind mark,
after Whiplash came Super Gnat, Piranha, Outlier, and Ripple. Whiplash
won this one easily, with Piranha second, Super Gnat third, then Outlier
and Ripple.
For Race 3, it was more of the same conditions. Piranha
seemed to like it, and led at the top mark, followed by Ripple, Super
Gnat, and surprising newcomer Xylocaine. Piranha looked to have this one
well in hand for the first run and second beat, and the rest were mixing
it up. At the final leeward mark, the Piranha gang tried a new procedure
to cut weight aloft, rounding the mark with the spinnaker “mostly” down
but no jib up due to a mis-feed of some sort. Ripple jumped all over this
opportunity, and passed them to win the race. Piranha got it together to
finish second, with Super Gnat, Notorious, and Outlier following in that
order.
This all left Piranha with a very strong 2-2-2 for the day,
with the rest of the pack bunched about 3-5 points back. Ripple had a
great day, with 3-5-1, but unfortunately they later found out that they
were OCS in Race 2, so had to eat a DSQ. NHYC had ample beer on the docks
when we returned, and later put on their usual tasty buffet for dinner
with live music.
After fueling for the day on Sunday with more donuts, we
found conditions to be again atypical. It had rained overnight, and it
appeared to be clearing, but the clouds were threatening. The wind was a
little stronger than for Saturday (at about 10 knots), but was still
pretty far to the left in direction (about 160 or so). It turned out to
be a nice day, but less sunny and windier than Saturday, with clear views
of Catalina again.
Race 4 saw all of the regatta leaders off the line well and
leading up the rest up the left side of the first beat. Outlier, missing
tactician Ron Baerwitz (something about work, he said) but sporting
instead “The Curmudgeon” (Tom Leweck, Outlier’s tactician from their 1990
championship), was furthest left and tacked first to port. First
Whiplash, then Piranha, then Ripple crossed nearby without tacking to
cover, leaving Outlier a near-perfect lane to the mark. Outlier rewarded
the others’ good sportsmanship by rounding the mark first, followed
closely by Piranha, Ripple, and Whiplash. Outlier and Piranha had a good
battle for the next leg, but gradually pulled away for the win, with
Piranha second (yet again), Ripple third, and Whiplash fourth. Notorious,
Power Play, and Super Gnat were up in among ‘em during the race, but
couldn’t hold on by the end. Again, there was good, close racing.
Going into Race 5, Piranha had a very good lead over
Outlier, who was only 1 point ahead of Whiplash. Winds were now up to
about 13-14 knots and using the H#1s. At the start, Whiplash was over
early and had to go back, and Piranha had a poor start, putting them both
back on the first leg. Outlier found good speed on the left, and barely
held off Super Gnat and Notorious in that order at the top mark. Outlier
continued to lead, but Piranha came back to second just ahead of Super
Gnat and Ripple on the run. It appeared that Piranha was going to win the
regatta with all seconds. But then, rounding the leeward mark inside of
Super Gnat and Ripple, the Piranha crew dumped the spinnaker all over the
mark and had to do a 360, and 5 closely bunched boats passed them, putting
them in 7th. Mistakes are costly in this close racing! Piranha had lost
a lot of ground, and couldn’t get enough back, and finished the race 6th
behind Outlier, Super Gnat, Ripple, Whiplash, and Notorious, giving
Outlier enough to win overall.
The regatta win for Outlier was somewhat surprising in the
light of the consistent sailing by Piranha. Piranha was surely the class
of the regatta, with good starts, speed, and tactics, their only major
downfall being the mark contact with the spinnaker in the last race.
Piranha was second in the regatta by only 2 points, and Whiplash third.
Next up for all of us is the Yachting Cup regatta in San
Diego, May 3 and 4. Hope to see you all then.
1 87694
Gordon Outlier
1 4 6 1 1 13
2 87780 David
Voss CCLP Piranha 2 2 2 2
7 15
3 87995 Ray Godwin LBYC
Whiplash 4 1 4 4 4 17
4 42439 Cliff Thompson SDYC
Super Gnat 6 3 3 6 2 20
5 97866 Jeff
Janov CAL YC Ripple 3 3\OCS 1 3
3 23
6 97979 Tom McQuade CAL
YC Power Play 5 5 7 5 6 28
7 40210 Tom
O'Neill MBYC Notorious 7 6 5 7
5 30
8 97868 Alice Leahey CAL
YC Limerick 11 7 9 8 8 43
9 97306 Charlie Cavallino
Shillelagh 8 9 10 11 9 47
10 97974 Mark Hinrichs BCYC
Strategem 9 8 11 9 10 47
11 46735 Salvatore Pestritto DPYC Xylocaine 10
10 8 10 13\OCS 53
12 87811 Fred Young SMWYC Perfect Circle 12
11 12 10 11 56
W.D.
SCHOCK MEMORIAL REGATTA
Story by
Angel Lopez, Ripple
For
the last several years, the late-winter W.D. Schock Memorial Regatta, held
at the Newport Harbor Yacht Club, has provided the Schock 35 fleet with as
much breeze as anyone could want. The 2003 edition, held on March 1st and
2nd, kept up the trend – with a few interesting twists.
NHYC’s familiar mound of
welcoming donuts and excellent coordination under race administrator
Jennifer Lancaster make up for the all-too-familiar trek out to the racing
area. A harbor cruise of Newport’s fantasy real estate can’t provide
enough distraction for Schock 35 crews eager for action, or for those same
tired crews on the way back to the club’s inside-outside bar to swap war
stories.
Saturday’s
racing gave the fleet a moderate breeze with a lot of South in it, along
with sizable swells, both the result of an offshore low. The wind’s
regular pulses of velocity and angle gave Dave Voss’s team aboard Piranha
the leverage they needed to win the first race. “We banged the shifts hard
and kept extending,” was how Voss described his recipe for victory. From
that moment, the rest of the fleet was playing catch up. Jeff Janov on
Ripple came in second, followed by Dick Schmidt on Outlier.
Ray Godwin’s Whiplash was fairly
launched for race two, but Voss’s second-place finish kept Piranha at the
head of the fleet. Janov and Ripple’s third also protected their place in
the fleet.
Outlier
came back for a victory in race three, and yes, Piranha was right up there
in second. Tom O’Neill and Notorious finished in the money. At the end of
the day, Piranha had a five-point lead over Outlier and Ripple, tied for
second with nine apiece for the day – though Outiler had the edge in a tie
breaker. But the real winner of the day was that class-sponsored keg of
Samuel Adams magically waiting on the dock for the raft-up!
Sunday morning provided the
racers with the incongruous sight of snow-covered San Gorgonio peak
hovering over Newport Harbor. The
offshore breeze of 18-20 knots seemed to blow right from the mountains and
kept the race committee on the dock for an extra half-hour, trying to
determine if racing would be abandoned.
Once everybody got on the other side of the
peninsula, however, the fleet found the breeze moderated to around 10-12,
with some fresh puffs that kept the foredeck crews rotating headsails
through the pre-start. The committee started the race in an offshore
breeze that rapidly clocked around to a southerly. Those
who caught the big shifts made out; everybody else reached around the
course in a train of boats. Piranha and Outlier took first and second,
trading their results of race three. Isn’t if funny how these two top
boats got “lucky” in the fluky conditions? Alice Leahey on Limerick took
third.
The
last race of the regatta saw the number three headsails come out. The
swell and wind chop made for lumpy but manageable conditions. Dick Schmidt
and Outlier led comfortably the whole race, while Ripple and Whiplash got
into it on the second downwind leg and then traded tacks upwind to finish
second and third. Dave Voss’s fourth place in race five in no way
endangered Piranha’s leadership of the regatta. Outlier clinched second
place, and Ripple third overall. For the crews, it sure was a hard day of
racing to maintain the same positions as the day before – but it was worth
it.

| Schock 35 |
Number of Entrants: 12 |
| Place |
Sail#
Bow# |
Boat Name
Skipper Name |
BoatType
Club |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
|
Total
Points |
1
|
87780
|
Piranha
David Voss |
Schock 35
CCLP |
1 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
4 |
10 |
| 2 |
87694 |
Outlier
Dick Schmidt |
Schock 35
CYC |
3 |
5 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
12 |
3
|
97866
|
Ripple
Jeff Janov |
Schock 35
CYC |
2 |
3 |
4 |
6 |
2 |
17 |
4
|
87995
|
Whiplash
Ray Godwin |
Schock 35
LBYC |
5 |
1 |
6 |
4 |
3 |
19 |
5
|
97868
|
Limerick
Alice Leahey |
Schock 35
CYC |
4 |
6 |
8 |
3 |
5 |
26 |
6
|
97979
|
Power Play
Tom McQuade |
Schock 35
CYC |
13
DNS |
7 |
5 |
7 |
6 |
38 |
7
|
40210
|
Notorious
Tom & Laurel O'Neill |
Schock 35
MBYC |
7 |
4 |
3 |
13
DNF |
13
DNS |
40 |
8
|
97663
|
Mischief
David O'Hara |
Schock 35
BSSB |
10 |
12 |
10 |
5 |
7 |
44 |
9
|
97974
|
Strategem
Mark Hinrichs |
Schock-35
BCYC |
8 |
8 |
9 |
11 |
9 |
45 |
10
|
97350
|
Twister
Ty Hokanson |
Schock-35
SBYRC |
6 |
10 |
7 |
10 |
13
DNF |
45 |
11
|
97306
|
Shillelagh
Charlie Cavallino |
Schock 35
CRA |
9 |
9 |
11 |
8 |
10 |
47 |
12
|
87811
|
Perfect
Circle
Fred Young |
Schock 35
SMWYC |
11 |
11 |
12 |
9 |
8 |
51 |
Dave
Ullman Clinic
Story by
Alice Leahey/Photos from Samy and Ann Chamberlin
Approximately 70 Schock 35
sailors attended a clinic given by Dave Ullman on February 1 at California
Yacht Club. The crews of Notorious, Outlier, Perfect Circle, Twister,
Limerick and Ripple, along with representatives from Whiplash, Strategem
and Piranha, all received valuable tips on rig tuning, boat setup, and
sail trim. Dave recommended that we each get the Ullman Tuning Guide for
Schock 35’s (available from the Ullman loft and website), and gave us a
detailed description of the tuning process. This was followed by
discussion of sail trim for all three sails. Dave’s comments were very
specific to the Schock, and he was explicit about such things as lead
positions, headstay sag, halyard tension, runner tension, etc., as well as
the order of steps to take in powering up and depowering. He also stressed
the critical importance of proper placement of crew weight to minimize
helm, pointing out that having crew below deck in bumpy light air is just
as important as having them hike hard in breeze. Photos taken by Outlier
crew Ann Chamberlin during the Champagne Series the previous day
supplemented the morning “chalk talk”, giving Dave examples of points he
wished to illustrate.
After a short break, the
group reconvened on the dock, where Dave used Limerick as his teaching
platform. Yumio Dornberg of Ripple assisted Dave, demonstrating the use of
the Loos gauge in tuning the rig. Dave then reviewed deck layout, giving
his preferences on locations of controls. He also spent some time looking
at the layout of a few other boats.
The plan for the afternoon was to
have Dave do some on-the-water coaching, spending time on each of the
boats. However, Mother Nature was not at her most cooperative that day.
Those who think there is never much wind in Marina del Rey should have
been at the clinic. The over 20-knot gusts were well in excess of ideal
teaching conditions, so Plan B was put into action. The group broke for
lunch, and then came back for Q & A on tuning and trim. There was time for
everyone to get their questions covered, and still have Dave give us his
personal insights into the Louis Vuitton and America’s Cup action. Having
recently returned from New Zealand and the Oracle campaign, he had some
interesting views on the different competitors, the “Hula”, and the
conflict on and off the water.
The
clinic attendees encompassed a broad spectrum of experience levels, but
there was something for everyone that day. Even the most experienced
Schock sailors in the group came away with some new ideas to digest, while
the newer crews got a valuable jumpstart on their learning curves. We can
expect to see an enhanced level of performance out on the racecourse in
upcoming events.
Many thanks to Dave for giving us
his time and the benefit of his years of experience with Schocks. Mike
George, the MdR Ullman rep, coordinated between Dave and the class, and
helped make this event possible. And great news - Dave is anxious to
return for “Part 2” to conduct on-the-water drills. More on this as the
schedule firms up.
MIDWINTERS
2003
Story by David Stotler, Whiplash
California Yacht Club in Marina Del Rey,
California hosted the Schock 35 Class for Midwinters 2003. Ten 35’s were
entered. The class welcomed Shillelagh back under new owner Charlie
Cavallino along with Perfect Circle and its new owner Fred Young. Perfect
Circle last raced actively a few years back as Last Tango. As they say,
preparation pays, and eight of the boats that headed to the starting
line had attended Dave Ullman’s class clinic on February 1st.
After weeks enjoying January’s unseasonably warm
and dry days, February brought heavy cloud cover and temperatures just
above 60 degrees – with little and no wind! Nine boats reached the
starting line with those heading out early for practice getting an extra
dose of slatting sails. After an hour’s postponement for wind, the race
committee got the class off at 12:50 PM in 7 knots of breeze from the
southwest. The weather mark was set at a distance of 1.5nm with a 4 nm
course of one time around. The same course offered a shorter windward leg
for 11 Martin 242’s and the 16 boat Star class.
In 30 minutes Piranha, the 2002 Season National
Champion, had reached the first mark with Whiplash, 2002 National
Championship Regattawinner, following closely behind. Ripple followed
another four boat lengths behind, with Stratagem another boat length
behind. Heading downwind the breeze dropped to 5 knots but held steady.
By the leeward mark Piranha and Whiplash held
their position with a cluster of boats shortly behind. Ripple had been
passed by Power Play and Limerick had closed to join them. While Piranha
and Whiplash chose to go right on port, Power Play headed left after a
tack to starboard.
After a half-mile hitch to windward to reach the
finish line, Piranha led Whiplash by 40 seconds for a first. Ripple had
pulled into third, 1:40 behind the leader. Power Play, with Limerick close
behind followed at 4:20.
After a short gap, the race committee got another
clean start on Race 2 with 4-5 knots of breeze with a repeat of the first
race’s course assignment. Boats headed to either side after the gun with
most going left. Piranha got clear on the left and headed up the middle.
Whiplash, Shillelagh and Notorious headed right with Whiplash heading back
towards the middle first.
Two-thirds
of the way up the course, with the breeze dropping to 3 knots at times, it
looked like a repeat with Piranha and Whiplash leading…until Power Play
and Ripple pulled into the 2 and 3 spot from the left. Tight tacks between
Piranha and Ripple while approaching the mark cost Ripple time and
Powerplay rounded second.
On the downwind leg the breeze often dropped off
the scale with shifts between headings of 160 and 240 degrees. Boats
sailed wide gibing angles and followed zephyrs into the corners. Ripples
showed excellent downwind speed and pulled into second at the leeward mark
followed by Powerplay and Whiplash. Shillelagh moved up and finished
fifth.
With crews well aware of the day’s 4PM start for
Americas Cup Race 2, everyone made a beeline for the Cal Yacht Club docks
and the regatta hospitality tent. Southern Hemisphere wind gods showed
consideration and the Cup race start was postponed so everyone had a
chance to enjoy the race from the comfort of a bar chair.
At the close of Saturday’s races, Piranha held a
firm first place position with two bullets, followed by a tight pack of
Ripple, Whiplash and Power Play with 5, 6 and 7 points respectively.
Shillelagh and Limerick were tied with 11 points.
Sunday brought more seasonable conditions with
racing starting on time in 7 knots of breeze under broken clouds. The pin
end appeared favored on a long starting line. The Race Committee called
for a 6.5 nm course with a long windward leg followed by a leg to the
shorter .75 nm windward mark. Shillelagh got a good start near the pin and
led off to the left along with Piranha. Whiplash got a middle starting
position later went right to found better pressure.
By
the mark, Whiplash led by six boat lengths. Piranha, Ripple and Power Play
followed. The downwind leg benefited by wind building to 9 knots. The
approaching leeward buoy was nicely framed by the sight of 16 Star boats
headed back upwind. Whiplash led again followed by Piranha, Power Play and
Shillelagh. On the short windward leg Ripple moved back into third while
the wind built further to 9.9 knots.
The class lined up into the leeward mark in the
order they would ultimately finish in – Whiplash, Piranha, Ripple and
Power Play with Notorious moving up into fifth.
After three races Piranha held onto a solid first
with Whiplash ahead of Ripple by one point. Power Play held fourth with
Limerick just a point ahead of Shillelagh in fifth. Race 4 was assigned
the 5.5 nm ‘Victor’ course with a leeward finish. Wind speed was showing
occasional 11’s so a few boats rehoisted with heavy #1’s before the start.
Ripple had a great windward leg to round in first followed by Piranha.
Whiplash went out to the port layline and came in to the mark to find a
hole in the rounding line. Limerick rounded within an inch of Whiplash’s
backstay in third.
Downwind,
wind speed reached 13 knots and the remaining boats set up heavy #1’s for
the last upwind leg. Limerick passed Whiplash to move up into third at the
leeward mark.
By the last windward mark Notorious edged
Whiplash out of fourth in the rounding with the first three boats holding
position. By the downwind finish Ripple held onto a solid first with
Piranha locking into a regatta first by placing second for the race.
Limerick held onto third and Whiplash edged ahead of Notorious by an inch
at the line.
Marina Del Rey delivered excellent conditions
with smooth race management, keeping the races flowing without
interruption (thank you, Denny Haythorn.) The trip back to the dock and
boat clean up got the crews finished as early as 3:30, ready for more CYC
hospitality and trophies for the winners. Final results…Piranha with six
points, Ripple with nine and Whiplash at eleven.
In
a regatta that saw wind from 4 to 14 (more 4 than 14) the key to doing
well on Piranha was keeping the boat moving fast for VMG and finding clear
lanes that allowed us to sail our own boat rather than pinch around the
course. Congratulations to Whiplash and Ripple for their wins in
Races 3 and 4! - Dave
Click on photos for larger
versions.
| Schock 35 |
Number of Entrants: 10 |
| Place |
Sail#
Bow# |
Boat Name
Skipper Name |
BoatType
Club |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
Total
Points |
1
|
87780
39 |
Piranha
David Voss |
Schock 35
PSSA |
1 |
1 |
2 |
2 |
6 |
2
|
97866
57 |
Ripple
Jeff Janov |
Schock 35
CYC |
3 |
2 |
3 |
1 |
9 |
3
|
87995
32 |
Whiplash
Ray Godwin |
Schock 35
LBYC |
2 |
4 |
1 |
4 |
11 |
4
|
97979
37 |
Power Play
Tom McQuade |
Schock 35
CYC |
4 |
3 |
4 |
6 |
17 |
5
|
97868
36 |
Limerick
Alice Leahey |
Schock 35
CYC |
5 |
6 |
6 |
3 |
20 |
6
|
97306
|
Shillelagh
Charlie Cavallino |
Schock 35
CRA |
6 |
5 |
7 |
7 |
25 |
7
|
40210
70 |
Notorious
Tom & Laurel O'Neill |
Schock 35
MBYC |
8 |
11
RAF |
5 |
5 |
29 |
8
|
97974
33 |
Strategem
Mark Hinrichs |
Schock-35
BCYC |
7 |
7 |
8 |
8 |
30 |
9
|
87811
|
Perfect
Circle
Fred Young |
Schock 35
SMWYC |
9 |
8 |
9 |
11
DNF |
37 |
10
|
97209
|
Empress
Vince Kent |
Schock 35
CYC |
11
DNC |
11
DNC |
11
DNC |
11
DNC |
44 |
The opinions expressed
herein are those of the author alone and are not officially endorsed by
the Schock 35 Class. |