Video highlights from Antigua Sailing Week day five
Sojana’s winning elapsed time of 7h 55m 58s in the 65-nautical mile event earned Harrison and his crew the Corum Round Redonda Trophy, sponsored by Corum Watches, just days after setting a new course record?and earning another piece of impressive silverware, the Yachting World Trophy from Yachting World magazine?in the 2009 running of the Round Antigua Island Race. Virgin Islands legend Peter Holmberg, the Olympic medalist and America’s Cup veteran, was a member of Sojana’s crew for both races.
“We had full sail flying with about 18-24 knots of breeze for most of the day,” said Sojana skipper Marc Fitzgerald shortly after the victory. “Everything was up, sailing along at 18 knots, just flying along with Peter Holmberg trimming the spinnaker for me. It just doesn’t get much better than that as far as I’m concerned. I was in heaven.”
“I’d never been around Redonda Island before,” said Holmberg. “It was pretty interesting. Sailing a ketch was something new as well. It’s actually quite nice. The sail plan is split up and everything is much more manageable for the guys. I think Peter Harrison, Marc and Bruce Farr did a nice job, the cockpit is real smart and the whole boat is really balanced. And to come here and break one record and set a new one was a unique opportunity. It’s a credit to the whole crew.”
Fitzgerald said that the newly established Antigua Ocean Series -comprised of the Antigua-Guadeloupe Race, the Yachting World Around the Island Race and the Corum Round Redonda Race -was a welcome change for the Sojana team. “It’s pretty risky to come out and sail against smaller boats on close courses,” he said. “So this new format has been fantastic. Hopefully in future years more superyachts will see the attraction and come along and join in the fun.”
While Sojana’s team relished their trophy-winning ways, another Farr design, the 50-foot canting-keel Lee Overlay Partners corrected out to first place to become the first winner of the Antigua Ocean Series. Meanwhile, in the Racing 1 and Racing 4 classes, both of which sailed an abbreviated version of the Round Redonda Race, circling a mark about halfway to the island on a 30 nautical-mile course, Charles Dunstone’s TP 52, Rio, and Dig Van der Slikke’s Grand Soleil 43, Curacao Marine, both led their respective fleets home to win Day 5’s races.
The 42nd edition of Antigua Sailing Week is now firmly on the home stretch. On Thursday, the majority of the fleet will conclude competition with the Division A racers slated to sail a pair of windward/leeward contests off the island’s southern coast, while the Division B fleet is scheduled to return to Falmouth Harbour in the 16-nautical mile Jolly Harbour Race. With that, the final day of racing will be left for the four Bareboat classes, which will close out their week with Friday’s Gold Silver Fleet Race to determine 2009’s top Bareboat crews and skippers.