2000-2024 • - AROUND THE SAILING WORLD
- BOAT OF THE YEAR
- Email Newsletters
- America’s Cup
- St. Petersburg
- Caribbean Championship
- Boating Safety
![yachtscoring block island race Sailing World logo](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2021/10/cropped-SLW-New-Logo-768x334.jpg) ![](//gbes.online/777/templates/cheerup/res/banner1.jpg) Block Island Race Week Filling Up Fast- By Storm Trysail Club
- November 29, 2022
![yachtscoring block island race Storm Trysail Club's Block Island Race Week](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2022/11/BIRW-1024x620.jpg) One-hundred boats have registered for the 30th Annual Block Island Race Week presented by Margaritaville next for Summer 2023 and sign-ups show no signs of slowing as new teams continue to join the ranks across divisions. While two-thirds of the participants are veterans of the event, there are a few new fleets setting their sights on the iconic 5-day regatta including two new one-design fleets: the IC37 and Cape 31. Storm Trysail Club is preparing for a high turnout for the thirtieth edition June 19 – 23, 2023. “We were pleasantly surprised how many people came out to Block Island in 2021 as we emerged from the pandemic,” says Andrew Weiss, 2023 Event Chair. “It was hard to plan with so much uncertainty then, but now we are able to really organize. We are busy working with class associations and talking with owners to get them the most out of 2023. Champlin’s is also rolling out the red carpet for us, we are taking over the resort for a great shoreside experience as well.” Discounted dockage at Champlin’s Resort and Marina runs through Dec 31, 2022. Competitors must first register and pay on yachtscoring.com for a discount code to be sent to them. One of those new fleets joining BIRW is the IC37 class. Established in 2019, New York Yacht Club owns 20 of these Mark Mills designs for their bi-annual Rolex Invitational Cup, but their members can also charter them for other regattas. Along with a number of privately owned boats, the IC37s are now considered one of the most competitive big boat fleets in North America – especially among Corinthian sailors. In 2022, their five major events featured five different winners and their national championships has 24 boats on the line. “We are thrilled to be heading out to Block Island with the IC37s for the first time,” says IC37 Class Governor and charter of Qubit, Chris Lewis. As this is an Invitational Cup year, we are hoping it will attract visiting teams from as far away as New Zealand and those Clubs who would like to practice for a week and enjoy all Block Island has to offer. BIRW is also an opportunity to sail with friends and family, something that these boats were designed to do by Mark Mills.” For the first time since the boats were launched, New York YC members can apply to event charter an IC37 the week. Contact the Yacht Club if interested. Another fleet that is starting to captivate sailors in the US is the Cape 31. Another design from Mark Mills, the Cape 31 was originally designed for racing in South Africa. Now a group of sailors are in the process of establishing a US Fleet and will have 5 boats delivered to Newport in the Spring of 2023. Class Manager, Martin Kullman says “We are looking to kick things off with the 2023 Southernmost Regatta, which will be the introduction of Cape 31 class racing to the US. From there we look to run our own event out of Stock Island in February before heading north to Newport for the major summer events and we can’t miss Block Island because it’s a chance for 5 days of great racing.” The One-Design circle will also feature the J/105s, J/109s (running their North Americans), J/88s, J/44s, and Melges 32s. However, one-design racing is just one of three circles at Race Week. ORC, PHRF, and Performance Cruising make up the other two-thirds of the event. ![yachtscoring block island race Windmill dinghy](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2024/06/02162024_SWRS_StPete-0637_edit-300x225.jpg) Windmills Plane and Simple![yachtscoring block island race Melges 15 dinghies racing in Florida](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2024/06/MWC-Launch-300x164.jpg) Melges Expands Into Florida with Watersports Center![yachtscoring block island race Luke Arnone and Cameron Giblin](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2024/06/20240323-M15MDW-Hi-EMK-36-300x225.jpg) Winners Debrief: Melges 15 Winter Champs![yachtscoring block island race National Sailing Museum and Sailing Hall of Fame 2024 Inductees](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2024/06/HOF2024-300x169.jpg) Twelve Inductees Headed to National Sailing Hall of Fame![yachtscoring block island race yachtscoring block island race](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2024/06/FD1-9495-768x525.jpg) Black Foils Pad Season Lead with SailGP New York Win![yachtscoring block island race Bill Widnall](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2021/09/180727_nautical_images_2192_todd-768x576.jpg) Widnall Prize Announced for Helly Hansen Sailing World Regatta at Marblehead Race Week![yachtscoring block island race Grangers waterproofing](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2024/06/grangers-768x592.jpg) Reproofing May Be Required![yachtscoring block island race yachtscoring block island race](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2024/06/Website-Thumbnail-768x530.jpg) Sagamore Ridealong in Chicago![yachtscoring block island race Sailing World logo](https://www.sailingworld.com/uploads/2021/10/cropped-SLW-New-Logo-300x130.jpg) - Digital Edition
- Customer Service
- Privacy Policy
- Cruising World
- Sailing World
- Salt Water Sportsman
- Sport Fishing
- Wakeboarding
![yachtscoring block island race facebook](https://www.sail-world.com/Library/Images/facebook-sw.png) - CLASSIFIEDS
- NEWSLETTERS
- SUBMIT NEWS
![yachtscoring block island race Musto 2023 HPX MPU 2](https://www.sail-world.com/images/thumbnails/SM11803_MUS_SAIL_WORLD_HPX_B-202302071702.jpg) 77th Annual STC Block Island Race set to sail in classic conditions![yachtscoring block island race yachtscoring block island race](https://www.sail-world.com/photos/phrf/yysw421526.jpg) ![](//gbes.online/777/templates/cheerup/res/banner1.jpg) Related Articles![yachtscoring block island race](https://www.sail-world.com/photos/j122/350/yysw474932.jpg) ![WindCheck Magazine WindCheck Magazine](https://www.windcheckmagazine.com/app/themes/windcheckmagazine/images/windcheck-logo.png) The Block Island Race is Getting Some Updates![yachtscoring block island race](https://www.windcheckmagazine.com/app/uploads/2020/02/post-1_image0-22-1024x647.jpg) John Donovan’s J/111 Libertas (Southport, CT) is a winner of the Terrapin Trophy, which is awarded to the first place boat in the Block Island Race’s PHRF fleet. Photo courtesy of Rick Bannerot/OntheFlyPhoto.net Registration for the 75th running of the Storm Trysail Club’s Block Island Race now open, and the Notice of Race is posted at Yachtscoring – Block Island Race NoR. The 186-nautical mile race, from Stamford, CT around Block Island and back to Stamford, is scheduled to start Friday, May 22. “Just like classic race boats sometimes need to be optimized for better performance, we really wanted to update the 75th running of this annual race to encourage maximum participation,” said Ray Redniss, Storm Trysail Club Rear Commodore and Block Island Race Principal Race Officer and Event Co-Chair. “For the 75th edition we will use YB Tracking for the first time. Navigators and race fans both love this feature. In another innovation for this year, double-handed entries will start and race with their fully crewed classmates, just like the Rolex Fastnet Race. This gives them an opportunity to compete for class silver as well as against each other for double-handed podium spots.” “Additionally, within the double-handed entries there will be a trophy for the top mixed-gender team,” Redniss continued. “This nods to the new Mixed Two Person Keelboat Offshore discipline slated for the 2024 Olympic Games. Note that we have adopted US Sailing Safety Equipment Requirements USSER “Coastal” plus a raft as the safety standards for the BI Course. These are very close to those used in the past, but we are trying to standardize sets of regulations, particularly when boats are preparing for the Bermuda Race. We will soon be announcing details about our expanded pre- and post-race parties and awards events. And if that wasn’t enough, we also have a nifty new logo!” Perhaps most importantly, the race will feature combined ORC/IRC scoring in the same methodology being used for the World Sailing ORC/IRC Championships in September. Under this system, each boat’s elapsed time will be corrected under ORC and IRC and those corrected times will be averaged to produce the boat’s score. That event, run by the New York Yacht Club in Newport, is a rare opportunity for U.S. racer/cruisers to compete for a Worlds in home waters. NYYC will also use this combined scoring in all of their events this summer. To facilitate this system, complimentary ORC club certificates will be made available to boats that hold valid IRC or ORR certificates and which have not held a valid ORC certificate in the last five years. ![yachtscoring block island race Boat US Header](https://www.windcheckmagazine.com/app/uploads/2024/05/New-Get-More-Pay-Less_728x90.jpg?pas=12031143922406290134) STC Commodore AJ Evans describes the thinking behind choosing the new ORC/IRC system: “Class size dilution from race organizers offering too many rules has become a real problem. We think that using combined scoring will lay the groundwork for STC – as one of the most influential clubs in the international sailing community, along with other important race organizers on the East Coast – to streamline VPP rule and class options for 2021. It might seem counterintuitive to utilize two rules when competitors tell us they want only one, but it is our expectation by the end of 2020 that boat owners will be in a better position to see how their boats actually fare under one rule compared to the other and how each is used in practice by race committees. We also hope that our use of combined scoring will encourage more participation in the Block Island Race and NYYC events given the similarities in ratings and scoring.” Event Co-Chair Doug Lynn encourages all entrants and prospective entrants to read the NoR carefully, as significant changes have been made to improve safety standards for boats (NoR 1.4) and crews (NoR 15). “With more than 100 days to go [as this issue went to press], it is easy for all to comply with a requirement which may well save a life!” said Lynn. “The links in the NoR and those found on the Storm Trysail Club website, as well as that of US Sailing, offer many options for you and your crew wherever they may be. These events often sell out, so please be sure to register early.” The Block Island Race is a qualifier for the Northern Ocean Racing Trophy, the Double Handed Ocean Racing Trophy, and the New England Lighthouse Series (PHRF – For more details, consult the Yacht Racing Association of Long Island Sound Handbook or the Stamford Yacht Club website). The Block Island Race is also a qualifier for the De Coursey Fales, Sagola and Windigo Trophies, the du Moulin Cup for Double Handed Racing, and the Youth Challenge Cup awarded by the YRALIS, as well as the Storm Trysail Club “Tuna Trophy” for the best IRC combined scores in the Edlu Race (40%) and the Block Island Race (60%). ■ Ron Weiss, Chair of the Storm Trysail Club Sponsorship and Communications Committee, contributed to this report. Share this:Previous article, next article, leave a reply cancel reply. You must be logged in to post a comment. ![yachtscoring block island race Boat US Header](https://www.windcheckmagazine.com/app/uploads/2024/05/New-Get-More-Pay-Less_728x90.jpg?pas=14360942962406290134) Block Island Race tune-up for BermudaPublished on May 23rd, 2024 by Editor --> Eight-two boats are entered for the 77th Annual Block Island Race which begins May 24 off Stamford, CT. The 186 nm course navigates through Long Island Sound, around Block Island, and back. The weather forecast offers a late sea breeze from the southwest and an outgoing tide predicted for the first afternoon, with sailors hoping for the breeze to fill to get them going out before the tide turns and the breeze turns back to the north. One of the standout competitors to watch is the Mills 68, Space Monkey. This Pro/Am team, led by David Greenstein, is coming off a string of victories, including line honors in the Fort Lauderdale Race and Nassau Race, and a first-to-finish in last season’s Vineyard Race on a similar course. Sailing Master Jesse Fielding and navigator Jan Majer are banking on their local knowledge to secure a top spot on the ORC podium this time around. However, they will have to contend with Andrew Weiss and his Italia 11.98 Christopher Dragon which won the 2024 EDLU Race and last year’s Block Island Race along with being a two-time Northern Ocean Racing Trophy champion. Weiss, along with 57 other teams, are using the Block Island Race to prepare for Newport Bermuda Race which starts June 21. A mix of PHRF and ORC classes divides the fleet into 12 division based on size and rating. Current weather and routing have many of the boats finishing in about 30 hours. Strategy of how to handle the tide and stay in the breeze will be key for the sailors. ![yachtscoring block island race](https://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/Scuttlebutt-Banner-Ad-TC.png) The Block Island Race is a key qualifier for several prestigious season trophies, including the Northern Ocean Racing Trophy and Double-Handed Ocean Racing Trophy, which represent the pinnacle of competitive offshore racing under the Offshore Racing Congress’ ORC International (ORCi) rating. It is also a qualifier for the New England Lighthouse Series (PHRF), De Coursey Fales (PHRF), Sagola (PHRF), and Windigo (PHRF) Trophies, the du Moulin Cup for Double-Handed Racing, the Youth Challenge Cup awarded by the YRA-LIS, the STC Rugg Family Youth Offshore Challenge, and the “Tuna Trophy” for the best combined ORC scores in the EDLU (40%) and Block Island Race (60%). Event information – Race details – Entry list Source: STC ![yachtscoring block island race comment banner](https://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Share-Your-Comments.png) Tags: Block Island Race Related Posts![yachtscoring block island race](https://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/2024-05-29_08-27-27-290x166.jpg) 77th annual Block Island Race →![yachtscoring block island race](https://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/2024-04-30_8-24-52-290x166.jpg) Preserving the memories and moments →![yachtscoring block island race](https://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/2022-05-31_12-19-11-290x166.jpg) Nasty collision at Block Island →![yachtscoring block island race](https://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/2022-05-30_17-24-07-290x166.jpg) Tradition resumes with Block Island Race →© 2024 Scuttlebutt Sailing News. Inbox Communications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. made by VSSL Agency . - Privacy Statement
- Advertise With Us
Get Your Sailing News Fix!Your download by email. - Your Name...
- Your Email... *
- Email This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
![yachtscoring block island race yachtscoring block island race](https://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/wp-content/plugins/arscode-ninja-popups/themes/newtheme1/img/lock.png) ![yachtscoring block island race Storm Trysail Club](https://stormtrysail.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/STC_Combo_Stacked_color.png) June 18, 2023 Block Island Race Week Through the Years – The Third 10 Race Weeks Featured News , Regatta News , Block Island Race Week ![yachtscoring block island race](https://stormtrysail.org/wp-content/uploads/brizy/imgs/2019BIRW_SRC_1443-scaled-789x512x60x0x668x512x1681294068.jpg) EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the third installment of a three-part series chronicling the history of Block Island Race Week. Part 3 looks at the last ten editions of Block Island Race Week from 2005 through 2023. 2023 marks the 30th edition of Block Island Race Week. It’s a momentous milestone, one that will be commemorated by one of the largest turnouts in recent years. A total of 177 boats in 18 classes on three racing circles will compete in Block Island Race Week 2023, presented by Margaritaville. Organizers with Storm Trysail Club have worked hard to build the numbers back up and regatta chairman Andrew Weiss is pleased with the results. “This will be the largest Block Island Race Week in more than 10 years,” Weiss said proudly. “We’ve been working hard on this year’s regatta ever since the 2021 event ended and are very pleased to see the sailors respond in such a positive fashion.” One initiative aimed at increasing participation involves the creation of a Performance Cruising Division. It has been hugely successful, evidenced by the fact there will be 57 boats in four Performance Cruising classes. A big attraction of the Performance Cruising Division is the fact those classes are all limited to one race per day. It reduces the stress on the water and provides more time ashore for enjoying historic Block Island. “That Performance Cruising area has proven very popular and has doubled in the last few editions,” Weiss said. “We are trying really hard to be inclusive. We have a lot of teams coming for the first time in 2023.” ![yachtscoring block island race](https://stormtrysail.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BIRW21-Kate-Somers-9960-1024x683.jpg) This edition of Block Island Race Week marks the debut of limitations on the number of professional sailors allowed to compete in some classes. Performance Cruising entries are allowed just one Group 3 on the crew with the number increasing depending on various metrics. There is an open class with no limits on pro sailors as well. For instance, a 40-footer with a crew of 10 can have two pros with other categories allowing for three or four. Specifics about the new rules involving professionals were spelled out in the Notice of Race. “We’re trying to make Race Week fun for families and not necessarily a fully pro event,” said Weiss , who serves as Race Chair and Vice Commodore of Storm Trysail Club per tradition. “We wanted to level the playing field so the family team had a chance to win the regatta.” Weiss noted that every decision he’s made as Regatta Chair has come from the point of view of a sailor. That makes sense since the Mamaroneck, New York resident has been coming to Block Island Race Week since 1975. Back then, Weiss crewed aboard Christopher Dragon , an Erickson 39 skippered by his father. Stephen Weiss had a passion for Block Island Race Week and it was passed down to his two sons. “I was 14 years old the first time I went to Block Island. It was my father, my brother and my father’s friends on the boat,” Andrew Weiss said. “It’s always been a family tradition to go to Block Island Race Week. Our crew has always been friends and family and it is a very close-knit group.” Stephen Weiss passed away in 2002 and Andrew took over the Christopher Dragon program two years later. He has competed at every Block Island Race Week except one since 2005 and done quite well whether racing a J/130, J/122, Sydney 43 or Ker 40. There have been a total of 12 different Christopher Dragon designs and Weiss said the latest, an Italia 11.98, may be his favorite. “I’ve told everyone that this is my last race boat. It has been so much fun to sail,” he said. ![yachtscoring block island race](https://stormtrysail.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Large_Christopher20Dragon1.jpg) Linda Weiss will skipper Christopher Dragon in the 13-boat ORC 3 class this year so her husband can focus on regatta management. Christopher Dragon has captured class honors at Block Island Race Week five times over the years and Weiss will never forget the 2015 edition when the Sydney 43 finished first or second in all 11 races on the way to topping IRC 2. Planning for the 2021 edition of Block Island Race Week was extremely difficult due to the pandemic. Weiss said Storm Trysail Club wasn’t even sure it would hold the regatta before pulling it together in a short period of time. Planning and preparation for this year’s regatta has been far more extensive with Weiss, executive director Whitney Simon and other Storm Trysail Club officials making multiple trips to Block Island. The Oar served as Race Week headquarters for decades and was a gracious host but when Champlin’s Marina was sold in 2021, it was a better alignment for all the needs of the entities to move back to where it all began. TPG Marinas was enthusiastic about the idea and Champlin’s agreed to berth boats competing in Block Island Race Week at a reduced rate. As a result, a whopping 110 boats will dock at the marina. Champlin’s has a permanent tent with an astroturf and stage that fits a few hundred people, which is perfect for post-race parties. Storm Trysail Club has rented two cottages on the property for Race Headquarters. There will be multiple vendors located along the pedestrian walkway as sailors come off the dock and many of the regatta sponsors such as Team One Newport, Helly Hansen, North Sails and New England Ropes will have booths. ![yachtscoring block island race](https://stormtrysail.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/2021BIRW_00937-1024x661.jpg) “We have the entire resort, including the swimming pool and recreation areas from Saturday to Saturday. It makes for more of a race village atmosphere, which is what we wanted,” Weiss said. Champlin’s served as Block Island Race Week headquarters from the inaugural event in 1965 well into the 1980s and Weiss is glad to see the regatta return to its roots. He was grateful to the many loyal sponsors who have kept the regatta going strong for 30 editions. Sponsors range in business size and support. “This is one of the last true race weeks still remaining in the United States,” Weiss said. “We think the competition at Block Island Race Week is the best on the East Coast every two years. The Round the Island Race is iconic, which is why we make sure it is held in the best wind conditions of the week.” Weiss joined the Storm Trysail Club Board of Governors in 2018 when Commodore Ed Cesare announced during the annual meeting that Rolex would not renew its title sponsorship agreement with Block Island Race Week. Weiss is a principal Flintlock Construction Services and AC Developers, which at the time was building a Margaritaville in Times Square. He and others with Storm Trysail Club felt it was time to bring back the fun factor to Race Week and what better way to do so than by partnering with Margaritaville. Weiss met with John Cohlan, CEO of Margaritaville Holdings. Jimmy Buffett and has been a longtime sailing enthusiast, loved the idea of sponsoring such a renowned, historic sailing regatta. “Jimmy’s interest in sailing made Margaritaville interested in Block Island Race Week. We struck an agreement and Margaritaville came aboard in 2019 and has really been an incredible partner. They know how to bring a fun atmosphere and happening affair with Land Shark beer, games and music.” Impetuous is synonymous with Block Paul Zabetakis grew up in Pittsburgh and started sailing when he was in his twenties. He was a post-graduate fellow at Yale and spotted a notice on a campus bulletin board: If you want to learn how to sail, come down to the Yale Sailing Center. “We went out on the water in a 420 and learned all the basics. How to tack and gybe, how to right the boat after a capsize and so on,” he said. Dr. Zabetakis began racing on Long Island Sound aboard a J/24 and also raced an Ensign out of Larchmont Yacht Club. He eventually decided it was time to buy a racer and found a Frers 33 at the Stamford Boat Show. ![yachtscoring block island race](https://stormtrysail.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/1989-Impetutous-Crew-1024x682.jpeg) That was the first Impetuous and Zabetakis brought it to Block Island Race Week in 1987. He’s been coming back ever since and has also campaigned a Mumm 36, Farr 40 and Swan 42. “I’ve been sailing with the same crew for 35 years. When I first bought the Frers 33 we were all starting our careers. We worked on the boat together and learned to sail together,” said Dr. Zabetakis , a nephrologist who operated a dialysis unit at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City from 1977 to 2000. He was a senior executive with Fresenius Medical Care from 2000 to 2018. This year, Zabetakis will be doing Block Island Race Week with Bill Rusconi, Eric Johnson, Cathy Cotell, Sean Cahill, Rob Brodsky and Bill Hajk o, all of whom have been crewing aboard Impetuous for more than three decades. Doyle pro-Alex Clegg has been the jib trimmer since 2012, while Casey Brown joined the crew in 2015. “I’ve been immensely fortunate to have such really good people sailing with me,” said Zabetakis , current commodore of New York Yacht Club. “It is a true team effort and everyone pitches in to help prepare for Block Island Race Week.” The Impetuous team picked up its first class victory in 1999 with the Mumm 36 with Rusconi calling tactics and “we were all ecstatic,” said Zabetakis , who keeps a team photo from that year on his desk. ![yachtscoring block island race](https://stormtrysail.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/3fe55186-05c4-0c1a-d361-eb4dc387ec6a-1024x683.jpeg) Impetuous topped the Swan 42 one-design class in 2015, posting a podium finish in 10 of 11 races. “We have learned an awful lot about racing on Block Island Sound over the years. We have taken meticulous notes about the currents and other unique conditions,” Zabetakis said. “We learned one key factor about the Round the Island Race. After you come around 1BI, as soon as you see the dump it’s time to tack and get into inshore.” Zabetakis would deliver his boat overnight from Larchmont Yacht Club and was always struck by how remote Block Island seemed even though it is located only nine miles south of the Rhode Island mainland. “You’d get there and feel like you were in another country,” he said. “It’s all about the novelty of being out on Block Island, which is very unique. You feel like you are away from it all.” The Impetuous crew house was on Corn Neck Road for years, but in 2003 Zabetakis began renting a property near the Southeast Lighthouse. It is always the 10 or 11 crew members as no one brings their significant other. “What I remember most about Block Island is enjoying being together with friends. There is great camaraderie among my crew and this is our favorite regatta,” Zabetakis said. “We have the same jokes, same laughs and same fun; only difference is instead of going to bed at 11, we go to bed at 9. Impetuous berthed at Champlin’s for many years before moving to the Boat Basin. Mudslides at The Oar following racing was a daily routine, then back to the house for a dinner of fresh fish, lobsters or steamer clams. “I think the Storm Trysail Club does an incredible job with this regatta. It’s a very loyal, dedicated group of volunteers,” said Zabetakis , who moved from Larchmont to Jamestown in 2003. “I’ll be 76 this year and I’m pretty healthy. I hope I have many more Block Island Race Weeks in me. As soon as each regatta ends, I begin looking forward to the next one.” All we do is win Block Island Race Week has seen some dominant racing programs over the past 20 years. None more so than Hustler , a J/29 owned by John Esposito of Mohegan Lake, New York. Hustler captured class honors at Block Island Race Week a total of 18 times, including 11 in a row from 1997 to 2017. Along the way, the brash bunch from Long Island sometimes rubbed competitors the wrong way. ![yachtscoring block island race](https://stormtrysail.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BIRW11df_1492-1024x701.jpg) “We may have been a bit loud and proud. We were always winning and every other boat in the class was gunning for us,” Esposito said. “We were kind of like the New York Yankees of sailing — the team everyone loves to hate.” John Esposito first came to Block Island Race Week in 1993 as crew for his father. Tony Esposito brought both a Tartan 30 and J/34 to the regatta and had some success. Father and son bought the J/29 in 1991 and the rest, as they say, is history. Hustler lived up to its name by displaying tremendous speed both upwind and downwind and a talented crew with great chemistry rarely made mistakes. Tony Esposito sailed with his son up until 2013, while Neil Caruso was a backbone member of the program for three decades. Robert Weir was a longtime helmsman and would travel all the way from Australia to do Block Island Race Week in the latter years. Tactician Max Lopez started sailing on Hustler at the age of 11. “We had the same five core guys the whole way and always had the boat perfectly prepped,” John Esposito said. “After doing the regatta for so many years, we were very in tune with the conditions off Block Island and understood how critical it was to understand the current.” Block Island Race Week doubled as a family vacation and John Esposito ’s kids loved everything about it. They would go to the Coast Guard Station in the afternoon to wave to their father and grandfather as Hustler returned to port. “Block Island has been a special place for me since I was 19 years old. Just thinking about the place brings back so many memories of great times with family and friends,” Esposito said. “We would rent a crew house and my mother would come out to take care of us. My wife and kids were there and it was just wonderful.” Esposito and his mates knew how to have fun, even during the arduous delivery from City Island Marina to the Great Salt Pond. Esposito would pick up two cases of Corona and a bunch of dry sausage from the Calabria Pork Store on Arthur Avenue in the Bronx, turning the 20-hour journey into an all-day party. Hustler did its last Block Island Race Week in 2017 and Esposito sold the boat to a Texas sailor last October. He once calculated that Hustler won 81 percent of its races at the regatta. Hustler won eight races and finished second in the other three in a fleet of 12 earning the Isbrandtsen Overall Perpetual Trophy for second-best overall performance in 2015. He just lost out to the top spot to another dominate boat that year, the J/109 Caminos who won a 25 boat one-design class. (In 2021, the Trophy was rededicated to be the top Corinthian boat.) Esposito still wears the Rolex watch he was presented for that feat. ![yachtscoring block island race](https://stormtrysail.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BIRW09dn_2381-1-906x1024.jpg) Hustler developed many rivalries along the way with Mighty Puffin (J/29, Steve Thurston ) and Dirty Harry (J/24, John Lavin ) among them. Some competitors felt certain Hustler somehow had an unfair advantage and Esposito recalls one rival measuring his keel in the middle of the night and another demanding to measure the spinnaker pole. Jeffrey Willis and the Challenge IV team were a dominant force in J/44 class, winning Block Island Race Week a total of eight times, including six in a row from 2005 through 2015. That streak was snapped in 2017 by the slimmest of margins in 2017 when the regatta doubled as the J/44 North American Championship. Kenai , owned by Chris Lewis of Houston, Texas, trailed Challenge IV by four points going into the last race and employed match race tactics to great effect. Kenai won Race 8 while Challenge IV finished fifth, resulting in a tie that favored the Houston boat. “I had already sold the boat, so I was hesitant to mix it up with (Lewis),” Willis said. “It was a little disappointing because I wanted to go out on top.” Willis credited crew chemistry for the sustained success of Challenge IV. David Willis served as tactician for his father, while Tim and Todd Willis were also part of the team. “One of the key factors was we had pretty much the same crew for the whole run,” Jeffrey Willis said. “We also got really good at boat preparation, tactics and weather. We were always ready to go. I don’t think we had a breakdown during any of those regatta.” Willis made his Block Island Race Week debut in 1967 as crew for Bob Derecktor aboard Wild Goose . He wound up doing the regatta a total of 26 times, one of which came during the second week of his honeymoon. “It was foggy, rainy and windy the whole week. I don’t think my wife was too thrilled, but she was a trooper,” said the owner of Willis Marine Center in Huntington, New York. Brad Porter was class champion of either PHRF 1 or 2 five times from 2007 to 2017. What was most remarkable about that feat was that those wins came on two different designs — a Carrera 280 and Evelyn 32. Porter, from Duck Island Yacht Club in Westbrook, Connecticut, had a top-notch helmsman in North Sails professional Todd Berman and a strong team overall. Kevin Carse (headsail trimmer), Bob Weinstein (navigator), Brian Weinstein (pit), Nicholas Porter (foredeck) and Eric Eisensmith (mast) were core members of the crew. “I sail with a very talented team that has been together since 1997. We have a lot of skilled sailors, practice a lot and I regularly buy new sails,” said Porter , who has been coming to Block Island Race Week since 1987. Porter captured class honors three times with the Carrera 280 and twice with the Evelyn 32, which he totally rebuilt. “The Evelyn was a new challenge and we enjoyed switching it up a bit,” he said. Out on the racecourse Dick Neville took over as Race Director in 2001, succeeding Peter Reggio as the maestro of all on-water matters. He implemented numerous advancements to make the windward-leeward racing more sophisticated, employing offset marks and gates among other things. Neville also made sure the principal race officers on all three circles maintained square courses, which often involved moving marks multiple times. That is no easy feat considering Block Island Sound is 100 feet deep. ![yachtscoring block island race](https://stormtrysail.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Dick-Neville-1024x871.jpg) Neville recalled when the late Luiz Kahl , creator of the YachtScoring program, came to Block Island Race Week in 2005 to gather information. Two years later, Block Island Race Week made its debut on YachtScoring and has used that platform ever since. “ Luiz was very diligent about learning everything about the regatta and wrote the software to suit what we needed,” Neville said. At one point, the Race Committee had grown to 70 on-water people with a lot of mark boats running around. Neville noted the resources needed to staff three windward-leeward courses was “enormous.” Housing was tight and expensive in 2021 and Neville was asked to reduce the race committee by 50 percent, which led to some difficult decisions. On the bright side, the introduction of MarkSetBots for Block Island Race Week 2021 made it possible to run three circles with fewer people. This year, Neville will utilize a total of 14 of the robotic marks that can be moved electronically. Neville remembers in 2017 when Regatta Chairman John Fisher asked him and Nick Langone to take a VIP out on the main committee boat that roams all three circles. It turned out it was none other than famous musician James Taylor , whose son Henry was crewing aboard Temptation/Oakcliff. “We were a bit surprised when James Taylor and his wife showed up at the dock,” Neville admitted. “(Taylor) was a low-key guy who was impressed that I could go so close to Temptation prior to the start. He lived in Jamestown for part of the year and is a boater, so I think he enjoyed the experience.” Neville believes an important part of the enduring popularity of the regatta is Block Island itself, which is vastly different from Nantucket or Martha’s Vineyard. That’s because the Block Island Conservancy has bought up so much land to stop development. “We all love Block Island. It’s a very special place that maintains its charming atmosphere,” Neville said. “As for the regatta, we work very hard to keep the fun factor at the forefront. It certainly helps having sponsors like Margaritaville and Mount Gay Rum.” FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL: ![](//gbes.online/777/templates/cheerup/res/banner1.jpg) |
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
2024 Storm Trysail Club Block Island Race Storm Trysail Club Stamford, CT, USA Friday, May 24th, 2024: Online Registration Form - Closed For Entry, please contact the Event Organizers. Current Registration List. Scratch Sheet. ORC Ratings Table. ORC 5-Band Ratings Table. Crew List. Starting Sequence.
2023 Storm Trysail Club Block Island Race Week presented by Margaritaville Storm Trysail Club Block Island, RI, USA June 19 - 23, 2023: Online Registration Form - Closed For Entry, please contact the Event Organizers. Current Registration List. Scratch Sheet. ORC Ratings Table.
2024 Storm Trysail Club Block Island Race Preliminary Results Race 1: Select to view a specific Class results: ... Block Island: ORC: Class 12 ORC: 24/May/2024: 03:25 PM: 5-Band AP Low 186 NM: 6 Kts: Bow: Sail Number: Yacht Name: Yacht Design: Owner/Skipper: Status: Rating: Finish Time:
YachtScoring. Quick Links: BIRW NEWS. June 23, 2023. The 1BI 2023 Day 5 - Final Recap. The final recap on the 30th Block Island Race Week! Check out all the photos, videos, and articles! June 22, 2023. The 1BI 2023 Day 4. Mount Gay Race Day became a lay day on Thursday due to high winds and inclement weather.
The 76th Annual Block Island Race was more of a Long Island Sound Race this year as Storm Trysail Club Race Committee decided the morning of the start to shorten the 186 nm course to 116 nm due to light winds. May 30, 2022. Featured News, Regatta News Block Island Race.
Yacht Scoring is a web based regatta management, regatta administration and regatta scoring system that simplifies the task of competitor registration, event management, competitor and media communications while providing results in near-real time to competitors and the World following your event on the internet.
The Block Island Race was first held in 1946. The race also serves as a qualifier for the North Ocean Racing Trophy (ORC), the Double Handed Ocean Racing Trophy (ORC), the New England Lighthouse Series (PHRF) and the Gulf Stream Series (ORC). The Block Island Race is also a qualifier for the Caper, Sagola and Windigo trophies awarded by the YRA ...
2022 Storm Trysail Club Block Island Race Storm Trysail Club Stamford, CT, USA Friday, May 27th, 2022: Online Registration Form - Closed For Entry, please contact the Event Organizers. Current Registration List. Scratch Sheet. ORC Ratings Table. ORC 5-Band Ratings Table. Crew List. Starting Sequence.
Storm Trysail Club's Block Island Race Week hits its milestone 100th entry seven months ahead of racing in June 2023. ... Competitors must first register and pay on yachtscoring.com for a discount ...
The Block Island Race is also a qualifier for the De Coursey Fales (PHRF), Sagola (PHRF) and Windigo (PHRF) Trophies, the du Moulin Cup for Double Handed Racing and the Youth Challenge Cup awarded by the YRA- LIS, as well as the STC Rugg Family Youth Offshore Challenge, and the "Tuna Trophy" for the best ORC combined scores in the EDLU (40% ...
82 boats are gearing up for the 77th Annual Block Island Race, set to commence this Friday, (May 24) at 2 p.m. off Stamford, CT. Teams will embark on the challenging 186-nautical mile course, navigating through Long Island Sound, around Block Island, and back. The weather forecast looks to be typical for this time of year.
The Block Island Race is a qualifying race for the Northern Ocean Racing Trophy, the Double Handed Ocean Racing Trophy, the New England Lighthouse Series, the Gulf Stream Series, and a qualifier for the YRA of LIS Spring Series, DeCoursey Fales and Windigo Trophies, and "The Tuna Trophy.". The Storm Trysail Club is the Organizing Authority ...
After a pandemic in 2020 and extreme weather in 2021, the 75th Block Island Race will try again in 2022 when it plans to start the 186nm race on May 2 off Stamford, CT. "We are hoping 'the ...
2024 Storm Trysail Club Block Island Race Preliminary Cumulative Results: Select to view a specific Class: Bow: Sail Number: Yacht Name: Yacht Design: Owner/Skipper: Race 1: Total: Block Island Racing: ORC Division: Class 2 ORC-DH: 1. USA 26: Groupe 5: Figaro 2: John Feleciano 1: 1.0: 2. USA 12424: byte: Sunfast 3300: Robert & Collin Alexander ...
Best Yacht at Block Island Race week 25 years old or older, substantially unaltered, with the best point score for the week. 2021 News. The 1BI - 2021 - Friday. The 1BI - 2021 - Thursday. The 1BI - 2021 - Wednesday. The 1BI - 2021 - Tuesday. The 1BI - 2021 - Monday.
Registration for the 75th running of the Storm Trysail Club's Block Island Race now open, and the Notice of Race is posted at Yachtscoring - Block Island Race NoR. The 186-nautical mile race, from Stamford, CT around Block Island and back to Stamford, is scheduled to start Friday, May 22. "Just like classic race boats sometimes need to be optimized for better performance, we really ...
Eight-two boats are entered for the 77th Annual Block Island Race which begins May 24 off Stamford, CT. The 186 nm course navigates through Long Island Sound, around Block Island, and back.
As Robert F. Kennedy Jr. pushes to gain ballot access in all 50 states, Democrats are ramping up their efforts to block the independent presidential candidate by filing legal challenges seeking to ...
A total of 177 boats in 18 classes on three racing circles will compete in Block Island Race Week 2023, presented by Margaritaville. Organizers with Storm Trysail Club have worked hard to build the numbers back up and regatta chairman Andrew Weiss is pleased with the results. "This will be the largest Block Island Race Week in more than 10 ...
2021 Storm Trysail Club Block Island Race Week presented by Margaritaville Storm Trysail Club Block Island, RI, USA June 21 - 25, 2021: Online Registration Form - Closed For Entry, please contact the Event Organizers. Current Registration List. Scratch Sheet. ORC Ratings Table.
2021 Storm Trysail Club Block Island Race Storm Trysail Club Stamford, CT, USA Friday, May 28th, 2021: Online Registration Form - Closed For Entry, please contact the Event Organizers. Current Registration List. Scratch Sheet. ORC Ratings Table. ORC 5-Band Ratings Table. Crew List. Starting Sequence.
172. 173. 174. Yacht Scoring is a web based regatta management, regatta administration and regatta scoring system that simplifies the task of competitor registration, event management, competitor and media communications while providing results in near-real time to competitors and the World following your event on the internet.
Race # Protesting : Protested: Reason: Hearing: Status: Jury Decision: 1. 1: Inisharon (USA 51003) vs: Kent Racing (USA 34) 1. At approximately 0455 Inisharon was on starboard tack rounding the south end of Block Island, leaving BI to starboard. Winds were 20 kts with gusts to 24kts, sea state 4-6 ft and confused.
2022 Storm Trysail Club Block Island Race Preliminary Scratch Sheet: ... Racing Area: Block Island : Class 3 PHRF: ToD / ToT : 1. USA 230: Daydream: Gregory Madzio PYC: Southport, Ct, USA: Beneteau First 36.7: 36: 84.0 / 1.0252 2. USA 51950: Duet: Andrian (Andy) Lubimov Glen Island Yacht Club: