Antigua Sailing Week is back for the 55th edition with 13 racing classes filled to the brim with sailors from all over the world. Teams from over 20 different nations are set for the Caribbean’s famous regatta. Antigua Sailing Week will deliver sensational racing and amazing parties in one of sailing’s most beautiful settings.
From Thursday April 25, racing action starts with the Antigua Wingfoil Championship. On Saturday April 27, the start gun will fire for the stand-alone Peters & May Round Antigua Race. From Sunday April 28, Antigua Sailing Week has five days of racing plus a midway Lay Day on Wednesday May 1. On Friday May 3, the Final Prize Giving Party follows the last day of racing.
First held in 1968, Antigua Sailing Week set the bar for yacht racing in the Caribbean and it continues to evolve. The 2024 edition features new racing classes, competing to win the Caribbean racing scenes most illustrious trophies.
Entry Lists HERE: https://yachtscoring.com/event_scratch_sheet.cfm?eid=16104
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CSA 6 The pocket rockets of Antigua Sailing Week are grouped together with 24-26ft flying machines ready to surf and sail. Two Antiguan boats will be rising to the encounter. The National Sailing Academy 1720 Challenger, skippered by Tajanica Thomas and the Melges 24 Whiplash, skippered by Ashley Rhodes from the Antigua Yacht Club will go head-to-head with Parish & Ferron’s Melges 24 Team Budget Marine from St. Maarten. Jolyon Ferron has been racing at the regatta since he was 14 years old. “Coming from the island of St Maarten we enjoy the opportunity to sail against our neighbours and friends. We know they are good but we think we may be able to beat them!” Two Surprise 25s will be in action including CSA Class winner for 2023 Tristan Marmousez’s GFA Caraïbes - La Morrigane. Nicolas Gillet’s Clippers Ship Doub 6 will also be racing, both boats are from Martinique. |
CSA Club Classes Club Class has been specially created for sailors who want to participate in the on-the-water action but who may not take their racing as seriously as others. The class will score using the Variable Simplified CSA Handicap. This results in tighter racing as the week progresses with more opportunities for all teams to experience the thrill of a podium position. The Club Class will have an interesting mix of boats this year as big performance cruising boats face off against some well know classics of every size. The largest boat at Antigua Sailing Week, George Curtoys’ CNB 76 Spark 3 from France will face boat-for-boat from competition from two S&S Swan 65s, Matthias Maus’ German Alpha Centauri and Juerg Schneider’s Saida from Switzerland. Another Swan will be in the mix; Sebastian Gylling’s Frers Swan 51 Eira is from Finland. The smaller boats in this fleet are diverse. Watch out for the Brit sailors racing boats ranging in size from Scot Ian Galbraith’s Oyster 523 Jigsaw to Jon Constantine’s Feeling 39 Imagine of Falmouth. Three other modern cruisers are Jeremy Sell’s Grand Soleil 46 Mandalay, Chloe Need’s Salona 44 Moonflower 3 and Germaine Williams’ Harmony 52 Sao Jorge. As part of Sail Racing Academy, Sao Jorge crew are all from the Civil Service Yacht Club in the UK, the thrills and spills of the event will be a new experience. “On a wet and windy race in the Solent two of our crew dreamed of something different and it has snowballed from there,” says foredeck crew Georgina Forson. “We are looking forward to challenging ourselves against different crews and in different waters.” During the event the crew of Sao Jorge, a Harmony 52, are proud to be raising funds for Antigua National Sailing Academy, Sailability and the Schools Swimming programmes. |
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For more information about Antigua Sailing Week including racing, watching the action and the fun-packed shoreside entertainment, visit the official website: www.sailingweek.com
Follow on social media: #antiguasailingweek #ASW55 #racechasecelebrate #asw2024