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Will Crump and Scott Collins 4th in J-22s at Annapolis NOODThis past weekend the Fishing Bay Yacht Club may not have been represented widely among the many classes at the Annapolis NOOD event, but in the hotly contested 50-boat J/22 fleet, a couple of Fishing Bay boys demonstrated that the little club is still a force to be respected. Scott Collins and I represented FBYC in the J/22 fleet and brought home a hard fought fourth place standing.
We began the regatta with a respectable 2nd place finish that was a nice little private race between Greg Fisher and ourselves as we caught the first shift to move into a comfortable position. We promptly followed that race up with another match race with Greg crossing tacks through the middle of the fleet to land ourselves in 22nd with Greg behind in 24th. After a few jokes with Greg between races about being stuck together with glue we did it again with another match race landing in Greg’s favor with him in 7th and us 10th.
After two days with three races, we were in 10th place overall on the scoreboard with better than 10 points to make up in order to break into the top 5. In the first race on Sunday, we experienced one of the greater moments of fortune I’ve ever witnessed in large fleet competition. Having been flushed on the start from the position we wanted near the pin with a lane into the left side of the course, we tacked to port and watched as every single boat in the fleet passed in front of us in bunches. Scott was calling out “all clear” for starboard tackers, and as the last boats crossed our trimmer Dave Thomas from the Houston Yacht Club says to me in a challenging kind of way “Just so that you know, we were the very last across the line.” Thanks Dave. I knew that. Fortunately the entire fleet wanted the left side so badly that they acted with a herd mentality. So, we quickly found ourselves in open territory on port tack with clear air. To our surprise and amazement we continued to move into more pressure on the right side of the course and even received a favorable header on port-tack that allowed us to tack over to starboard accepting it as a lift. As we watched the pack of boats converging from the left under the boom, we noticed they were not in as much pressure (breeze) because they weren’t hiking as hard as us, and we had gained enough ground to round the windward mark in 2nd. We maintained the second place to bring ourselves into possible contention for the regatta. You know that I have to tell this story because never again will I go from last to second in a fleet of this quality without the conditions for racing being totally bogus. We followed up the 2nd place with a 9th in the last race and sailed happily in talking about Clark and Susan Dennison’s new baby girl that arrived this weekend and about how great it is to share the camaraderie of competition amongst buddies over so many years together. (Consequently, David Thomas while not an FBYC member has sailed there a few times during the 8 years he has been sailing with me). Having said that, I would like to thank Kenzie Hubard who worked so hard when we were young to provide and develop the FBYC junior program that has allowed Scott, I and many others to enjoy sailing on a very special level now. Kenzie enthusiastically motivated our parents to be involved and lay the foundations for something that will be a legacy for the yacht club for many years to come. Please know that the fun Scott and I had this past weekend is the result of her efforts as well as those from many others such as Johnny Hawksworth, Charlie Clough, Jere Dennison, Happy Hubard, Jimmy Rogers and of course our parent's patient encouragement to sail for fun. Full results can be found at http://www.sailingworld.com/sw_article.php?articleID=1798
Thanks, First 15 boats in J-22 |
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