Storm Try Foundation Logo insert.jpg

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:  Barby MacGowan, Media Pro Int'l, 401-849-0220,
[email protected]  
or Marcy Trenholm, Storm Trysail Club, 914-834-8857, [email protected]  

 

 

Storm Trysail Foundation Intercollegiate Offshore Regatta 

Presented by Prestige BMW

 

Maine Maritime, USMMA and Tufts Win Big

 

LARCHMONT, N.Y. (October 13, 2010) -- Maine Maritime's sailing team coach
Tom Brown decided to pull his team out of all of its dinghy events Columbus
Day weekend so that it could instead sail big boats at the Storm Trysail
Foundation's Intercollegiate Offshore Regatta (IOR) Presented by Prestige
BMW. After driving over eight hours with his 17 athletes, Brown's strategy
paid off, as the team won two of five divisions in the 38-boat fleet. Over
300 sailors from 30 schools participated, making the IOR the largest college
sailing regatta in the country.

 

The regatta is run by the Storm Trysail Foundation and the Larchmont Yacht
Club, both of which are dedicated to helping the next generation of sailors
become better and safer sailors. 

 

Maine Maritime Academy won the seven-boat J/44 one-design division and the
eight-boat J/109 one-design division. Other winners were the U.S. Merchant
Marine Academy at Kings Point, N.Y., which won the IRC 40 handicap division
as well as the 11-boat J/105 division, and Tufts University (Medford,
Mass.), which won the six-boat IRC 35 handicap division. The Paul Hoffman
Trophy for the overall winner went to the Kings Point team sailing Damian
Emery's J/105 Eclipse. Emery won the Edward du Moulin Trophy for the boat
that was sailed by winning team.

 

The Weather Gods smiled this year, offering sunny skies and breezes that
built from 10 knots for the first race to 15-20 knots for the subsequent
races on both days. The race organizers worked hard to put together
one-design and closely-rated divisions to keep the racing tight, and PRO
Butch Ulmer ran seven races in two days. "The student sailors were some of
the best we have seen in the 10 years that STC has been running this event,"
said Paul Hoffman who ran the windward mark boat. "Racing was so close that
three of the divisions ended up tied for first after seven races. More than
once, practically the whole J/109 fleet rounded the marks en masse." 

 

Maine's Coach Tom Brown said, "I have never seen so many smiles. Our team
was so stoked that they stayed awake talking about the racing for the
eight-hour drive back to Castine. When I got back to school, I had a
congratulatory note from the President of the school. They take big boat
sailing seriously here. We will be back next year, and we hope to have the
same boats again."

 

The purpose of the regatta is two-fold: to introduce dinghy sailors to the
team work and fun of big-boat racing and to provide a chance for experienced
big boat sailors to have a chance to compete in well-prepared evenly-matched
boats. Unlike other collegiate regattas, the boats are privately owned and
the boat owners sail with the student sailors as coaches and safety
officers. The regatta is not possible without the boat owners who lend their
boats and time in order help educate the next generation of offshore racers.


 

Dr. Carl Olsson, who has lent his J/105 Morning Glory to his alma mater,
Bowdoin College, for the last eight years and who will be Larchmont Yacht
Club's Commodore next year, pledged to help the regatta grow significantly
under his watch. "I believe that this regatta is so important that we will
grow the event from 300 sailors to 500 in the next two years." To help meet
this goal, the Storm Trysail Foundation funds educational events like the
IOR and its junior safety at sea seminars across the country. 

 

"Everyone who participates in this regatta has a great time," said Regatta
Chair Adam Loory. "Both college sailors and boat owners tell me that this is
the most fun regatta that they sail in all year. The boat owners get to go
sailing without having to make a week's worth of phone calls to round up
crew, the kids get to sail on some of the most competitive boats around, and
the whole event is free thanks to the sponsors who help support the
regatta." Corporate sponsorship came from Prestige BMW, Rolex, Vineyard
Vines, Safe Flight Instruments, Caithness Energy, UK-Halsey Sailmakers,
Gill, Coca Cola and Heineken. 

 

Jim Marran and Gerard Girstl, the owner's representatives on the Express 37
Soulmates for the last 10 years, coached a very green team from Denison
University in central Ohio this year. "It was amazing how fast the crew went
from not being able to tack the boat to winning the last two races. They
were like sponges; most of the crew had never sailed on a boat with a
spinnaker before this," said Marran. After the regatta, Denison's team
captain Will Jaquinde said, "Thank you for the opportunity we won't soon
forget. We can't wait for next year."

 

For full results, a list of competing schools and photos, visit:
http://www.stormtrysailfoundation.org/intercollegiate.htm 

 

-end-

<<image003.jpg>>

________________________________________________
icsa mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.collegesailing.org/mailman/?listname=icsa
Unsubscribe: Send a blank email to [email protected]

Reply via email to