
Sailors in some classes solidified their lead in this second day of racing in the 47th annual St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR).ย Others lost the top spot they held yesterday to fellow competitors, while those in the 8-boat Hobie Wave class landed on the scoreboard for the first time. Either way, competition proved keen in the 15 to 20 knots of breeze on the round-the-buoy and round-the-islands courses set off and between St. Thomas and St. John.
San Diego, CA-based Victor Wildโs Botin 52, FOX, lengthened its lead in CSA Spinnaker Racing, with St. Thomasโ Peter Corrโs King 40, Blitz, two points behind in second. A mere 1.5 points behind in third is St. Croixโs Chris Stanton driving the Melges 24, Brew STX Crew.
โWe thought we were fast, but weโre the slowest out there,โ said Stanton, who literally raced for the start line for today after having to take the Melgesโ mast down, quickly fit a new shroud made fast by a local sailmaker and put the mast back up all before the 11 a.m. start. โBecause our class ranges from a 52-footer to us thatโs less than half that length at 24-feet, we all sail by ourselves out there. Itโs definitely COVID-safe spacing. But on the corrected time, weโre all within a minute or two of each other.โ
Puerto Ricoโs Marco Teixidor, who has raced this regatta in an IC24 in the past, is driving his new J/111, Cachondo, this year.
We intended to race the Caribbean circuit โ St. Maarten, BVI, St. Barths and Antigua. STIR is a great first regatta for us,โ sais Teixidor, who like many of todayโs Caribbean sailors got his start racing Optimists. โSo far, we are learning a lot about the J111, how to make it go fast and get the boat handling down. Weโve made some good progress throughout the races and hope to continue improving.โ
In the CSA Non-Spinnaker Class, St. Thomasโ Lawrence Aqui on his Dufour 40, lengthened his lead over Puerto Ricoโs Fernando Montillaโs Tartan 10, Timon 2, from 2 points to five.
Washington, DCโs David McDonoughโs and his team on the Pearson 37-2 Trinity III, didnโt lose or gain places on the scoreboard, but that didnโt stop them from having fun.

โWhile we are not very competitive, weโre more of a cruising boat, I have always enjoyed the phrase โracing is simply an excuse to go sailingโโ said McDonough. โThe complete delight of sailing, great crew and the camaraderie associated with this regatta make it sailing joy of the very highest order.โ
In the One-Design IC24 Class, Puerto Ricoโs Efrain โFraitoโ Lugoโs Orionโs first day lead was lost to St. Thomasโ Chris Rosenbergโs Bill T who on day two is at the top of the 14-boat class with a 4-point lead.
โIt was definitely a learning curve for us on the first day, today we were more consistent,โ said Rosenberg, whose crew is two-time Olympian Cy Thompson and long-time St. Thomas sailor, Addison Caproni. โA four-point lead is nothing in this class. Tomorrow, anything could happen.โ
Puerto Ricoโs Enrique Figueroaโs team on the chartered IC24, Voila, certainly agreed with the highly competitive nature of the class.
โYou can feel like you sailed super well and still finished 6th,โ said Figueroa. โIโd have to say that we were in the top six within seconds of the other boats and four of the races were real nail biter finishes.
The Hobie Wave class sailed for the first time today, as for this group STIR is a two-day regatta. St. Thomasโ Nick Bailey on Hobie Wave finished third after 8 races to fellow island father and son, Mark and Julian van den Driessche, who placed first and second, respectively. Yet, Bailey did finish first in three races.
โI havenโt sailed since last year,โ said Bailey. โSo, for me this morning was all about shaking the rust off. This afternoon, I had the feel of it back. What I like about sailing the Hobie Wave is that itโs simple, just me and one string.โ
St. Thomasโ Michael Compton, who ranked 45th in the world in the RS:X Windsurfer in 2006, enjoyed getting into a Hobie racing groove.
โSailing comes natural to me. My father taught us when we were young,โ said Compton, whose father Marcus Compton sailed his J/27, ATN, for many years in STIR. โI did get one first today, so the potential is there. Itโs a blast to come out and have a good time.โ
STIR 2021 concludes on Sunday. There will be two awards ceremonies: 4 p.m. for IC24s and Hobie Waves, and 5 p.m. for CSA Spinnaker Racing and CSA Non-Spinnaker Racing.
COVID-Safe Top of Mind
Social distancing, mask-wearing and hand sanitization stations are among COVID-19 protocols in place for STIR 2021. On the water, crews in boats such as the one-design IC24 were limited to three this year, and bigger boat classes have remained in social bubbles throughout the regatta. Onshore, there have been staggered class finishes and staggered Happy Hours daily.
How to Follow
Results for the Round the Rocks Race are available at: https://yachtscoring.com/event_results_detail.cfm?Race_Number=1&eID=14277
Results for STIR are available at: https://yachtscoring.com/event_results_cumulative.cfm?eID=14270 ย Check for live updates from STIR on Facebook!
For more information, call 690-3681, email: dave@stthomassailingcenter.com or visit www.stthomasinternationalregatta.com



