Alfa Romeo is back in the USA and to celebrate Alfa Romeo owners from across
California will gather in Los Angeles on 28 June – but it’s not the modern Alfa
Romeo cars that they will be greeting but the Australian-made all-conquering
‘Alfa Romeo’ super maxi and her Kiwi skipper, Neville Crichton, as they prepare
for their assault on the USA’s toughest yacht race, the TransPac.
“It's an honour
to be the forefront of bringing the Alfa Romeo name back to
the USA,” says Neville Crichton, Skipper and Owner of ‘Alfa
Romeo’. “And we will be doing our best to prepare
California, the USA’s largest car market, for the return of
Alfas to the USA. Our yacht is the epitome of the Alfa Romeo
brand – stylish, technically advanced, fast and it provides
a unique experience behind the wheel! The ‘Alfapalooza’
gathering of classic Alfas on 28 June will show Californians
why people are so passionate about Alfa Romeo and our yacht
will give them a taste of the spirit and technology that is
to come.”
The TransPac
Race from Los Angeles to Hawaii also means that ‘Alfa Romeo’
and its skipper, Neville Crichton, are literally racing
across the Pacific Ocean to take part in the 2009 Rolex
Sydney to Hobart Race. Crichton, who won the 2002 Rolex
Sydney to Hobart race and 2003 Fastnet Race, and ‘Alfa
Romeo’, which came second in Australia’s blue water classic
in 2005 with Crichton at the helm, are taking part in the
USA’s oldest and longest ocean race, the TransPac, from Los
Angeles to Hawaii which starts on June 29.
The return of
‘Alfa Romeo’ to Australia for the 2009 Rolex to Sydney to
Hobart sets the stage for an epic battle with Crichton and
‘Alfa Romeo’ out to break ‘Wild Oats’ hold on the event and
it will provide the most exciting race in 2005 – the last
time ‘Alfa Romeo’ and ‘Wild Oats’ went head to head in the
run to Hobart. Since that race ‘Alfa Romeo’ has beaten ‘Wild
Oats’ every time that have competed, so both super maxi
yachts and their crews will have something to prove.
“The TransPac is
the ideal preparation for the Rolex Sydney to Hobart,” says
Crichton. “We have been racing – and winning – in Europe for
the past two years with Alfa Romeo, but tough as some of
these Mediterranean races are, they just don’t compare to
open ocean races in either conditions or length. The
TransPac does not have the range of conditions of the Sydney
to Hobart, but, even if – or should I say when! – I break
the TransPac race record, it’s still a much longer event in
both time and distance than the Sydney to Hobart. This means
‘Alfa Romeo’ will arrive in Sydney fully prepared to smash
the record for the run from Sydney to Hobart.”
Its taken 30
years, but Neville Crichton, the leading maxi yacht skipper
in Australia and New Zealand, to return to the USA’s most
important single yacht race and this time, at the helm of
Alfa Romeo, he’s determined to win. The Transpacific Yacht
Race runs for 2,225-mile (4120 km) course from Los Angeles
to Honolulu and is the USA’s answer to the Rolex Sydney to
Hobart, but its nearly four times longer and heads out into
the Pacific Ocean with nowhere to come ashore in case of
problems, making it the USA most important single yacht
race.
"It has taken me
the best part of 30 years to get back to the Transpac Race,
but I can't wait," says Neville Crichton, who, at the helm
of two generations of Alfa Romeo super maxi yachts is one of
the world’s most successful yachtsmen as well as 2003
Yachting New Zealand Sailor of the Year. Neville Crichton
was the skipper of the 42-foot Uin-Na-Mara in Transpac 1979,
finishing eighth in the 22-boat B Class. "We were up with
the frontrunners until the middle of the race when the winds
turned against us - something we will be lot better equipped
to avoid this year!"
This summer he returns to the Pacific in Alfa Romeo, the
100-foot Reichel Pugh design some call 'the fastest yacht in
the world' ... certainly the fastest monohull ever to grace
the Transpac race course. And after dominating the racing
scene in Europe (having won line honours in 170 races to
date in both Alfa Romeos) Crichton no doubt has his eye on
Transpac line honours too, and hopes of upsetting the
monohull record of 6 days 19 hours 4 minutes 11 seconds set
in 2005 by Hasso Plattner's Morning Glory. "Given the right
winds, I firmly believe the race record is achievable,
something we could only dream about back in 1979!" Crichton
adds. "Alfa Romeo has clearly established itself as the
yacht to beat in Europe and, after all our success in
Europe, the Transpac will provide our team with a fresh
challenge and a race that is unlike anything in which we
have competed in Europe, in terms of both the event and our
competitors."
Alfa Romeo will compete in the new "Unlimited" division of
RSS 52 waiver yachts (exempt from the Racing Rules of
Sailing limitations on stored power) up to 100 feet in
length. This class does not qualify for the Transpacific
Yacht Club Perpetual Trophy (AKA 'Barn Door') but instead a
newly deeded trophy which will debut this summer. It marks a
momentous homecoming for the yachtsman and automobile
importer, who purchased his first boat at age 11 from change
collected gathering and selling empty beer bottles in his
native New Zealand; and who later moved to Hawaii for
several years.
Crichton's passion is typical of Transpac racers: once
they've had a taste of the competition and downwind thrills,
they come back again and again - and from all over the
world. Other returning entrants include Ruahatu, from
Mexico; Lawndart, Canada; Bengal 7, Japan; and Hawaii's
Ragtime - competing in a record 14 Honolulu Races.
Forty-seven yachts have already entered this 45th running of
the Transpacific Yacht Race, with Close of Entries still two
months off (May 27). Transpac 2009 starts begin Monday June
29 with subsequent starts for faster rated boats Thursday
July 2 and Sunday July 5.
The Transpacific
Yacht Race, 2,225 nautical miles from Los Angeles to Hawaii,
is sailed in odd-numbered years as the oldest and longest
enduring ocean race in the world. Originally, it was the
vision of Hawaii's King Kalakaua as a way to build the
islands' ties with the mainland U.S., although he didn't
live to see his dream come true in 1906, when Clarence
MacFarlane organized the first race. The many famous
celebrities who have sailed and won the 44 Transpacs include
Roy E. Disney, actor Frank Morgan and such business tycoons
as Hasso Plattner, Larry Ellison, Richard Rheem, Doug DeVos,
Jim Kilroy and Philippe Kahn. In the past 100 years,
Transpac has become synonymous with challenge, adventure,
teamwork and excellence.
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