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E' iniziato ad Annapolis il Campionato del Mondo J-24, manifestazione che vede impegnati oltre 80 equipaggi, tra i quali i campioni uscenti di Fiamma...

J-24 World Championship – Annapolis – E’ iniziato ad Annapolis il Campionato del Mondo J-24, manifestazione che vede impegnati oltre 80 equipaggi, tra i quali i campioni uscenti di Fiamma Gialla, guidati da Andrea Casale.

La flotta, comprendente scafi provenienti da ben 16 nazioni, è stata impegnata dal Comitato di Regata in due prove svolte in regime di venti medi.  A prendere la testa della classifica provvisoria è stato Bruschetta, del timoniere brasiliano Mauricio Santa Cruz, campione iridato nel 2006 e nel 2007.

Alle spalle del talento carioca, al comando grazie a un sesto e un primo di giornata, è al momento classificato il campione del mondo del 2005, Anthony Kotoun. Il suo Bomba Charger ha fatto appena peggio di Bruschetta, rimediando un zettimo e un secondo. Piuttosto staccati i giapponesi di Three Bond, terzi in classifica con 15 punti, contro i 9 del secondo.

Partenza al rallentatore per Andrea Casale e gli uomini di Fiamma Gialla (Vittorio Rosso, Enzo di Capua, Ernesto Angeletti, Fabio Montefusco) che nel corso delle prime prove hanno rimediato un ventunesimo e un nono, iniziando il loro Mondiale decisamente in salita.

J-24 World Championship, day 1
1° – Bruschetta, Mauricio Santa Cruz (BRA), 6-1, pt. 7
2° – Bomba Charger, Anthony Kotoun (USVI), 7-2, pt. 9
3° – Three Bond, Tetsuya Matsunaga (JAP), 12-3, pt. 15
4° – Paraloc, Will Welles (USA), 14-7, pt. 21
5° – Carrera, Matias Pereira (ARG), 8-14, pt. 22
Seguono 77 scafi


J-24 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP, BRUSCHETTA LEADS AFYER DAY ONE
[J-24 World Press Release] Brazilian Mauricio Santa Cruz, who earned the J-24 World Championship title in 2006 and 2007 only to be unseated last year by Italian Andrea Casale, has made it clear that he wants to get back to the top with his Bruschetta team’s performance in today’s opening round on the waters of the Chesapeake Bay off Annapolis.

Confronted with a fleet of 82 teams from 16 countries and more than a dozen U.S. states, including some of the class’ and the sport’s top champions, Santa Cruz managed finishes of 6-1 on a challenging day with constant drizzle interspersed with a few squalls and shifting northeasterly breezes ranging from 10 to 15 knots.

Homeported in Rio de Janeiro, Santa Cruz’ team includes Daniel Santiago, Alexandre Saldanha, Paolo Boido, and Alfredo Rovere.

Not far behind the Brazilian team was 2005 World Champion Anthony Kotoun out of the US Virgin Islands, with finishes of 7-2. His Bomba Charger team includes Chad Atkins, Chuck Norris, Mark Ivey, and Matt Lindblad.

The fleet got off to a clean start in the first race of the day, but repeated general recalls for the start of the second resulted in the application of the dreaded “black flag” – which penalizes sailors who were identified as over early in starts that are subsequently recalled, even if they start clean in the race which ultimately counts. Twenty teams were caught in this bitter trap as the fleet’s aggressiveness came to a head before obtaining a clean start.

1996 J-24 World Champion Chris Larson, sailing in his home waters, with crew Dave Hughes, Moose McClintock, Steve Frazier, and Curtis Florence, took second in the day’s first race but learned later that he had been penalized under the Z, or black, flag in the second, in which he finished sixth. Larson recently returned to big-fleet J-24 racing with an entry in last month’s National Offshore One Design Regatta, also at Annapolis Yacht Club, and managed to capture third after three days of tight competition despite some slightly uneven results.

“It was pretty nice out there today, other than the rain and the visibility, which was bad in the squalls,” he said. “Then it was hard to see the mark, or the [Chesapeake Bay] Bridge.”

Headed for a redress hearing on the penalty, Larson said that being out in the big fleet for this event “feels a lot better than it did last weekend,” admitting that his team felt “pretty rusty” in the NOOD event. “But we’re pretty happy to be 2 and 6 on the water today.”

Scoring including the Z flag penalty, pending the result of the redress hearing, had Larson’s National Sailing Hall of Fame crew in sixth overall.

The regatta is scheduled to go through Friday, with a total of 10 races on the slate. Once the total hits five complete contests, a worst-race throwout will kick in.

2008 Champion Casale, with finishes of 21-9, was standing 13th with his Fiamma Gialla crew, including Vittorio Rosso, Ernesto Angeletti, Enzo di Capua, and Fabio Montefusco.

In this event, the results also are dotted with 20% penalties. This reflects a new rule, under which sailors who commit a foul or hit a mark cannot exonerate themselves with penalty turns, but must instead fly an “I” flag and accept the penalty – which climbs to 40% if they do not do so before finishing.

J-24 World Championship, results after day 1
1° – Bruschetta, Mauricio Santa Cruz (BRA), 6-1, pt. 7
2° – Bomba Charger, Anthony Kotoun (USVI), 7-2, pt. 9
3° – Three Bond, Tetsuya Matsunaga (JAP), 12-3, pt. 15
4° – Paraloc, Will Welles (USA), 14-7, pt. 21
5° – Carrera, Matias Pereira (ARG), 8-14, pt. 22
Following by 77 boats

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