Ready to race
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Mike Sciacca
The rigors of training on the open sea have done nothing to dampen
the enthusiasm of a team of five local women who will compete this
weekend in the 2004 Tommy Bahama Newport to Ensenada Yacht Race.
Two members of the all-female team, Lisa Schick and Stacey Miller,
are from Huntington Beach.
The 57th annual race, one of the largest international yacht
races, sets sail Friday from Newport Beach.
The race is hosted by the Newport Ocean Sailing Assn. This year’s
event is expected to draw a record number of boats for the
competition.
The three-day event will conclude with an awards ceremony Sunday
in Ensenada, Mexico.
Of the 456 boats that entered the race as of Tuesday, one of
them, a Dufour 38, named, FoxSea, will be skippered by Schick.
The 40-year-old will skipper a boat of five women that includes
Miller, Marcella McSorley of Seal Beach and Patty Cochran and Amy
Jones of Newport Beach.
None of the women own a boat.
Amy Garrard, a friend of Schick’s visiting from Mississippi, will
go along for the ride, Schick said, serving as the team’s official
photographer.
Also on the boat, in the role of advisor, is racing coach Dave
Tomlinson, who trained the women for the race.
Tomlinson is president of Club Nautique Sea Time, Inc., which has
three locations, including one in Newport Beach, where the women
train.
The FoxSea is a boat kept in the sailing club by owners Chris and
Danielle Fox.
Tomlinson said that the team aboard the FoxSea is one of three
all-female teams entered in the race.
The race is the first event for the recently launched women’s
sailing program at Club Nautique.
“These women have completed U.S. Sailing instruction and they have
really been training hard for this race,” Tomlinson said. “They
didn’t know each other four months ago but have really bonded to form
a really great team.
“They’ve been training two days a week, working on everything from
navigating to tactics, as well as holding an overnight race. They’ve
just done a tremendous job in their preparation. They’re very, very
excited to be competing and that enthusiasm is a great tool. I think
it’s great for women to get involved in a race such as this, and
these women have made me proud.”
Of the five women aboard the FoxSea, only Schick has done the
Newport-to-Ensenada event before. She served as a crew member nine
years ago.
Training for the race, she said, has been intense. Practice
sessions included work on tacks, jibes and sail trim.
“Precision sailing is a very physical sport,” Schick said. “When
you do 20 or 30 tacks in a row, it takes a lot out of you. We all
have very sore muscles after each outing, so we have added additional
physical training to our daily regime.”
The women have dedicated numerous hours to this race.
“Training has been pretty intense,” said 32-year-old Miller, who
will man the foredeck. “It’s taken up our weekends, from 10 in the
morning, to five or seven at night, for the past few months. I come
to work every Monday pretty sore.”
The team went through a race simulation last Friday, in an effort
to create what the race atmosphere might be like.
“We wanted everyone to get a feel for what it would be like on a
boat for 24-hours straight,” Schick said. “We set up watch schedules
and rotations. We simulated what we think we will experience in the
race, such was wind conditions and directions, could we sail the
rhumb line with the wind conditions and if not, figure out where
would be have to be to maximize our time and speed.
“For most of the women, this was the first time they had ever
sailed over night. There are certain things one should be aware of at
night, versus day time sailing, and most are safety related.”
The all-female team is comprised of an eclectic group of
professionals.
Schick sells software for IBM, McSorley is a pharmaceutical
scientist, Miller is in the banking business, Cochran is a mortgage
broker and Garrard is a home contractor and designer.
The start to the race, which had 461 entries in 2003 and 438 in
2002, will be broken into 24 classes.
Some of the big names in sailing have participated in past races,
including former America’s Cup winners, Dennis Conner and Bill
Ficker.Roy Disney is said to have his new sailboat launched in time
for the weekend race.
“I’m thrilled to be a part of this extra special venture,” Schick
said. “The club is extremely supportive of our efforts and it is
awesome to be able to participate in the competitive sailing arena
without owning a boat.
“We would like to make this an annual event for our team. We’re
all really pumped for the weekend. It’s going to be great.”
Miller did Schick one better.
“We’re going to win,” she said. “Wouldn’t that be awesome?”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports and features. He can be reached at
(714) 965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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