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Harry Melges Still Leading
By Three Points After Day Two
14 October 2003 - After two more tough races at the Audi Melges
24 World Championships in San Francisco Harry Melges, helming
for Jeff Ecklund, is still hanging onto his overall lead although
fourteen year old Shark Kahn is giving him plenty to worry about
and is now only 3 points behind him. "It was a good day
but we missed a few opportunities and I don't think we were quite
as fast. I think some of the others found some speed today so
it was tough." commented Harry Melges after racing.
Racing was delayed until midday to allow the breeze to build and
the fleet started on the last of the flood tide with some individual
recalls in 8-10 knots from 210 degrees. The right hand end of the
line was definitely favourite and the wind clocked about 15 degrees
up the first beat. Shark Kahn lead round the first mark from Bruce
Ayres, Egidio Babbi and Kenneth Kaan. Behind them a number of boats
misjudged the strength of tide and understood the mark. Benoit
Charon just managed to shoot the mark for fifth but Kerry Poe,
along with a number of others, was forced to bail out and was left
battling for a way back in through the starboard tack wall.
By the first leeward mark Shark had opened up a 30 second lead
from the pack whilst Kaan had pulled up to second from Babbi.
Paul Brotherton sailed a very smart run to come from the teens
up to fourth whilst Ayres dropped to fifth in front of Harry
Melges who'd also pulled up from the teens.
Shark pulled out his lead to a minute and ten seconds on the second
beat whilst Babbi moved up to second with Melges third, Kaan
fourth, Brotherton fifth and Ayres sixth. Shark covered to the
finish whilst behind him Melges got past Babbi as Kahn and Ayres
held fourth and fifth respectively with Brotherton sixth.
By race four the wind was up to 14-16 knots and the tide had turned
bringing up the chop. The fleet got underway at the second attempt
and again they like the right hand end of the line. Shark Kahn
yet again got the measure of the first beat and this time it
was Luca Santella, helming Giovani Maspero's Joe Fly Team, who
was hot on his heels at the weather mark with Ayres third, Melges
fourth, Hubert Guy fifth, Doug Weitz sixth and Sheldon Ecklunk
seventh. Brian Porter rounded eighth but having forced his way
in was forced to do a turn on the spreader leg and dropped back
to thirteenth.
Santella and Shark Kahn had a humdinger of a battle down the first
run with Santella just in the lead by the bottom mark. Both of
them opted for the right gate with Melges following in at the
head of the pack. First to opt for the left was Dave Ullman who'd
come from tenth to fourth down the run. Weitz had pulled up to
fifth with Porter sixth, Rob Greenhalgh seventh and Brotherton
ninth.
Up the second beat Santella opened up 30 seconds on Shark while
Porter moved up to third. Melges had a lousy beat and dropped
back to tenth leaving Weitz in fourth, Greenhalgh fifth, Ullman
sixth and Ayres seventh.
The final lap saw no change in the top three but Melges showed
that he might be down but he sure wasn't out and managed to pull
back up to fourth with Ullman fifth and Weitz sixth. Greenhalgh
had to be content with seventh from Ayres.
Overall Harry Melges, Shark Kahn and Luca Santella remain in the
top three slots, while Brian Porter has moved up to fourth. After
racing Porter's crew member Vince Brun, who already holds two
Melges 24 World titles as helmsman, commented on his new role
as trimmer "I’m really enjoying the sailing but it’s
very hard work to be trimming instead of helming. I think I’m
getting to old!"
A disapointing 17, 13 score line was still enough to leave Philippe
Kahn, father of the fourteen year old Shark, in fourth place
with Ullman sixth, Greenhalgh seventh, Babbi eighth and Ayres
ninth. Local boy Seadon Wijsen rounds out the top ten.
With his 1, 2 score line Shark Kahn, the teenage surprise from
Hawaii, was definitely today's most consistent performer. After
racing Shark acknowledged that his crew of Richard Clark (Illbruck
Volvo Race, three times Canadian Olympic Finn representative),
Mark Christensen (multiple Volvo race veteran), Brian Hutchenson
(Melges 24 sailing guru) and Brian Lee (Shark's 20 year old cousin)
are playing a vital role in his success at this event along with
a huge amount of practise. "In the past 8 months we’ve
done about 60 days sailing. We’ve done a lot of smaller
regattas, we did San Diego Regatta, a lot of regattas up here,
two on the Berkeley Circle and four on the City front and we’ve
done a lot of training in Hawaii with Dave Ullman and my Dad." said
Shark, who also paid tribute to his Dad's support of his campaign. "I’m
just really lucky to be able to do this because of my Dad who
offered me the opportunity and I just want to keep doing it."
Full Results and Scores
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