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Anteater
05-01-12, 10:53 AM
I was going to write about the tragedy at the yacht race in San Francisco two weeks ago, when a crew of 5 were lost on the rocks of an island during a race, but held off. It was a story that struck uncomfortably close to home for me, because my nephew Daniel, whom I love as if he were my own child, is a competitive sailor. Sadly, I now have more to write about.

It was a gorgeous day last Friday; Mr. Anteater and I saw our nephew Daniel and crew off for the Newport-Ensenada yacht race. The Newport-Ensenada race has been going on for 65 years without a single loss of life. It has the reputation of being a party with a sailing race thrown in, but everyone observes safety measures while on the open seas.

Daniel and his crew arrived safely at the finish line, but the crew of the Aegean was not as fortunate:


http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/more/wires/04/30/2080.ap.us.yacht.race.deaths.9th.ld.writethru.1296/index.html

Ocean race accidents stun sailors as probe deepens

By BERNIE WILSON, AP Sports Writer – 7 hours ago

SAN DIEGO (AP) — For 65 years, sailors have raced 125 nautical miles from Newport Beach, Calif., to Ensenada, Mexico, with expectations of a safe overnight voyage followed by beers at a popular cantina.

Likewise, sailors in the century-old Full Crew Farallones Race off San Francisco would return to the docks jubilant at having mastered winds averaging 10 to 20 knots and churning Pacific Ocean swells that can reach 14 feet.

Death was an afterthought. At least until this spring.

Two weeks after five sailors were killed in the waters off Northern California when their 38-foot yacht was hit by powerful waves and ran aground on a rocky island, the sailing community was stunned again this weekend.

Three sailors were killed and one went missing, their yacht found in pieces near the Mexican border, perhaps in a collision with a large ship in the middle of the night.

The San Diego County medical examiner said Monday night that Kevin Eric Rudolph, 53, of Manhattan Beach, died of blunt force injuries to his head and neck; William Reed Johnson Jr., 57, of Torrance, Calif., died of multiple blunt force injuries; and Joseph Lester Stewart, 64, of Bradenton, Fla., drowned. The boat's skipper was missing.

The coroner's report listed all three deaths as accidents but did not say what could have caused the wreck.

The Coast Guard was seeking records of any large ships in the area when the 37-foot Aegean was believed to have been destroyed early Saturday, Lt. Bill Burwell, an agency spokesman, said Monday.

Investigators are also examining the yacht's debris and GPS coordinates and trying to find other race participants who were in the area.

Burwell, a Coast Guard pilot who helped locate the three bodies, said he isn't ruling out that the yacht collided with rocks on Mexico's Coronado Islands. Race organizers say they see no other explanation other than a collision with a larger ship.

"I think equal opportunity should be given to the idea that there wasn't another vessel involved. The evidence doesn't point to that yet, but the evidence doesn't point anywhere," he said.

Eric Lamb, who stumbled on the wreckage Saturday morning while on safety patrol, said debris strewn over 2 square miles looked as if the boat had "gone through a blender" — too small to suggest a collision with rocks. His discovery came about nine hours after the Aegean's last GPS coordinates.

By ocean racing standards, the number of casualties in the two races is startling. Previous major ocean racing disasters have been caused by freak storms, including the one that killed 15 sailors in the Irish Sea in the 1979 Fastnet Race and one that killed six in the 1998 Sydney to Hobart Race.

Gary Jobson, president of the U.S. Sailing Association, said he was "horrified" by the latest accident. "We need to take a step back and take a deep breath with what we're doing. Something is going wrong here," he said.

Jobson said he's scheduled to speak by phone with a Coast Guard official in San Francisco on Tuesday to decide on an independent review panel, and then hopes to quickly do the same in San Diego.

Dennis Conner, a four-time winner of the America's Cup who has also won the Newport to Ensenada Race, called the two accidents in different conditions in different races a "tragic coincidence."

Conner didn't participate in this year's Newport to Ensenada Race.

"That race has been going on, sometimes with 500 boats, although there were more like 200 this year, and there's never been a problem in 65 years. Hopefully it doesn't disrupt the continuity of the race," Conner said.

Other sailors who have participated in the races were stunned at what happened to the Aegean. While reluctant to assess blame, they found it hard to believe the sailors weren't aware of the danger they were in.

Troy Sears, who owns the Next Level Sailing charter company in San Diego, wondered if fatigue was a factor. The wind was light, swells were modest and a small moon lit the sky. "The world is a much different place on the ocean at night," he said.

Sears said he has a sophisticated tracking system and requires two people on watch while sailing at night.

"When I see a ship, I always assume that I have to get out of its way. I never let a ship get within miles of me," he said.

Rudolph's wife, Leslie, said he leaves two grown children and the couple would have celebrated their 27th anniversary May 26.

Leslie Rudolph said her husband was competing in the race for the third time with the Aegean's skipper, Theo Mavromatis of Redondo Beach.

Mavromatis was a sailor his entire life and did not appear to have ever faced scrutiny about safety, said Conrad Thieme of Marina Sailing, which rented the yacht on his behalf. He previously won the race in his category.

"Based on his sailing resume, this whole occurrence is really surprising," Thieme said.

The deaths are the first fatalities in the race's 65 years. The race attracted 675 boats at its peak in 1983 before falling on hard times several years ago amid fears of Mexico's drug-fueled violence.

Participation has picked up recently, reaching 213 boats this year. The race attracts sailors of all skills, including some who are new to long distances.

The Aegean competed in one of the lower categories, which allows participants to use their motors when winds drop to a certain level.

The deaths came two weeks after five sailors died in the waters off Northern California when their 38-foot yacht was hit by powerful waves, smashed into rocks and capsized during a race.

The accident near the Farallon Islands, about 27 miles west of San Francisco, prompted the Coast Guard's temporary suspension of races outside San Francisco Bay. The Guard said the suspension will allow it and the offshore racing community to study the accident and race procedures to determine whether changes are needed to improve safety.

Just a horrific and tragic story...I worried about Daniel when he raced from Long Beach to Honolulu in the Transpac race last summer, and again when he raced from San Diego to Puerto Vallarta in March; however, I didn’t much thought to his safety for this little 125-mile race. :(

Anteater
05-01-12, 10:55 AM
The crew looked so happy in these photos:
http://newportbeach.patch.com/articles/three-killed-during-newport-to-ensenada-yacht-one-still-missing#photo-9769868

:(

dando
05-01-12, 11:57 AM
:(

-Kevin

cameraman
05-01-12, 01:04 PM
I am surprised that there are not more yachts run down at night by cargo ships. Those things are fast and if they are not keeping close watch on their nav systems they might not pick up a small boat on their radar.

I thought all the large ships had to have gps tracking systems installed so that the Coast Guard knew exactly where every ship was at all times. I would think that they would be able to check to see what ships were in the area when the yacht disappeared.

Anteater
06-19-12, 01:02 PM
A panel has concluded that the Aegean was not hit by a passing ship, but ran into a rocky island in the dark:
http://www.ocregister.com/articles/aegean-358497-race-panel.html
http://www.ocregister.com/news/aegean-359585-island-walton.html

:shakehead Hard to believe that a veteran crew made such a mistake, but the evidence certainly supports the theory.

cameraman
06-19-12, 01:22 PM
CO from the engine? :shakehead

cameraman
07-05-12, 12:56 PM
When you combine stupid with boats bad things happen.

Take one of these:

http://www.nypost.com/r/nypost/2012/07/05/news/web_photos/yacht--525x415.jpg

Put 27 people on it and go watch fireworks. On the way home put the helm hard over and have the grossly overloaded boat flip in flat calm water and drown three of the kids on board. :shakehead:flame::shakehead

Methanolandbrats
07-05-12, 01:26 PM
4th of july is amateur hour for boats. Lotsa people **** up.