Vesper Hangs Tough to Claim Overall ORC Win in 170th Annual Regatta

David Team’s TP52 Vesper © NYYC / Daniel Forster

16 June 2024, Newport, R.I., USA — On a light-air, four-race day, the final standings in a top-flight competitive fleet are as likely to come down to the mistakes you avoid as the things you do right. That was the case in ORC B at the 170th Annual Regatta. David Team’s Vesper squad fought all day with rival Fox, skippered by Victor Wild, doing most everything as right as can be expected on a very challenging day.

“We felt in the first two races, when it was really light, 6 knots and under, that we had a click of pace on people,”
says Team. “But then the wind shifts come into play with that light of a breeze. The first race we got it called right, the second race we were on the wrong side of the shift, but our speed was still good all day.”

As the sea breeze filled for Races 3 and 4, Fox found its groove. Going into the leeward mark rounding of the final race, it appeared everything was going the way of Wild’s crew, which had a two-point lead in the standings and was ahead in the race.

“Fox was leading, we were trying to do our best to figure out how to pass them,”
says Team. “They fouled [a boat from another fleet] and they did the right thing, a 360, and that kind of just reshuffled the race.”

In the five-boat ORC B, with a preponderance of professional sailors across the fleet, one small mistake can make a huge difference. In this case, it dropped Fox from first to fourth in the race, and from first to second in the regatta.

Team has actively raced his 52-foot Vesper for four-plus years. While he’s based on the West Coast, his sailing has been concentrated further east, Florida in the winter and then splitting his summer regattas between the Great Lakes 52 circuit in the Midwest and Newport. This year, with the ORC World Championship scheduled for early fall, is a Newport summer, and the Annual Regatta is one key step on the way toward contending for a world championship in the fall.

“It’s a process,” Team says. “We think we’re on the path to where we hope to be. We still have some things to accomplish. We’ve got a couple of very strong competitors that we are trying to beat. Sometimes we do, sometimes we don’t. We’re all trying to get better for September/October.”
PACIFIC YANKEE Cape 31 of Drew Freides © NYYC / Daniel Forster
PACIFIC YANKEE Cape 31 of Drew Freides © NYYC / Daniel Forster

While Team has his eyes squarely set on ORC competition, that’s definitely not the case for Drew Freides. A devoted one-design skipper, Freides entered his Cape 31 Pacific Yankee in the Annual Regatta hoping that enough of his fellow Cape 31 owners would follow suit and he would enjoy some one-design racing in the up-and-coming class. When the class fell short of what’s required for a one-design start, the Pacific Yankee team and three other Cape 31s were moved to ORC D.

“It definitely had us on two wheels a little bit,”
says Freides, a former world champion in the Melges 24 and Melges 20 classes. “We weren’t prepared for handicap racing, so we had to adjust our sailing. We wanted to beat our fleet [of Cape 31s]. But the boat is pretty competitive under ORC. We changed our expectations after we got off to a good start and started racing against the rest of the fleet as well.”

Freides and his team were super consistent through three races, taking two seconds and a third, winning the class by 3 points. As the smallest and lightest boat in the fleet, successfully racing the Cape 31 required some strategic concessions.

“Tactically, it made you think differently,”
says Freides. “We couldn’t put ourselves in spots that could compromise us because the bigger boats were faster upwind. Once we turned the corner, we could sail away from them pretty easily.”

In second and third in the overall standings were two other Cape 31 teams, which is somewhat of a surprise given that handicap rules have traditionally not been kind to lighter, smaller, faster boats.

“I haven’t done a lot of homework on the ORC rating of the Cape 31,” says Freides. “But these boats seem to rate really well under ORC. [Cape 31 designer] Mark Mills has done a fabulous job. I’m surprised more people haven’t bought these boats because they’re just a lot of fun.”

ORC A (One Design - 4 Boats)
1. Proteus, US60722, George Sakellaris - 1 -1 -2 ; 4
2. Vesper, CAY007, Jim Swartz - 3 -2 -1 ; 6
3. Temptation/Oakcliff JV66, USA119, Art Santry Oakcliff - 2 -3 -3 ; 8
4. FOGGY, USA2829, Richard Cohen / Jay Cross - 4 -4 -4 ; 12

ORC B (One Design - 5 Boats)
1. Vesper, USA52007, David Team - 1 -3 -2 -1 ; 7
2. FOX, USA55052, Victor Wild - 2 -1 -1 -4 ; 8
3. Prospector, USA52052, Larry Landry Paul McDowell - 3 -2 -3 -2 ; 10
4. Azulito, USA4501, Wendy Schmidt - 4 -4 -4 -3 ; 15
5. Summer Storm 52, USA520, Andrew Berdon - 6 -6 -6 -6 ; 24

ORC C (One Design - 13 Boats)
1. Vamoose, Uni52443, Bob Manchester - 1 -3 -1 ; 5
2. Entropy, USA4235, Patricia Young - 4 -6 -2 ; 12
3. Jax, USA 2022, Øivind Lorentzen - 2 -4 -7 ; 13
4. Settler, USA8668, Thomas Rich - 6 -2 -5 ; 13
5. Impetuous, USA4206, Paul Zabetakis - 3 -7 -3 ; 13

ORC D (One Design - 14 Boats)
1. PACIFIC YANKEE, USA31062, Drew Freides - 2 -2 -3 ; 7
2. Cool Breeze, USA31072, John Cooper - 7 -1 -2 ; 10
3. Dingbat, USA70, Miles Julien - 6 -5 -1 ; 12
4. The ROCC, 64, Al Minella - 3 -6 -4 ; 13
5. Rima98, USA8198, John Brim - 1 -7 -7 ; 15


The New York Yacht Club’s Annual Regatta was first sailed on the Hudson River on July 16 and 18, 1846. A similar competition the previous year was called a Trial of Speed. With a few exceptions for world wars and other global crises, the event has been held every year since. For the majority of its existence, the Annual Regatta was raced on waters close to New York City. Since 1988, however, the event has been sailed out of the Harbour Court clubhouse in Newport, R.I., and, in 2004, it settled into the current three-day format, which includes a race around Conanicut Island on Friday, two days of buoy or navigator-course racing on Saturday and Sunday and nightly social activities on the grounds of the historic Harbour Court mansion. The 170th Annual Regatta will feature an historic fleet of more than 150 boats, including the 10-foot 52 Super Series fleet, competing in North America for the first time since 2017. The Annual Regatta is sponsored by Helly Hansen, Safe Harbor Marinas, Peters & May and Hammetts Hotel,