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Corum Melges 24 World Championship Series


KEY LARGO, Fla., Dec. 14, 2006 ­ Two Italian sailing teams are leading
the 99-boat fleet after four intense days of racing in the 2005 Corum
Melges 24 World Championship at Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo.

A mostly professional crew of international sailors led by Australian
America’s Cup skipper James Spithill has claimed the number one position with two days of competition remaining. A largely amateur crew, sailing together for the first time and led by pro skipper Gabriele Benussi, is clinging to second place overall, just one point off the pace.

Conditions inside the reef off the northern end of Key Largo were ideal with a sunny sky, and slight chop stirred by a brisk ten-knot easterly breeze Spithill, who now steers the Italian America’s Cup contender Luna Rossa for Genoa’s Yacht Club d’Italiano, is sailing with American brothers Jonathan and Charlie McKee, from Seattle, Washington. Both McKees are double Olympic sailing medalists. A fourth crew member is Manuel Modena, a 49er sailor from Italy’s Lake Garda. All four sailors are part of the Italian challenge and not surprisingly they have named their chartered boat Luna Rossa.

The “secret weapon” aboard Luna Rossa is their fifth man ­ 11-year-old
Mac Agnese, an Optimist sailor from Ft. Lauderdale, drafted because he is a light, nimble and knowledgeable sailor who brings their crew weight up to the maximum allowed 750 pounds. The crew first sailed together in Key West last winter when they took a second place in the Melges 24 Class.

“Mac’s a great little kid,” said Spithill, who is only 14 years older
than his youngest crew man. “He trims the traveler that controls the
position of the mainsail and is an extra hand to speed up all of our
maneuvers. He’s just as committed and as involved as the rest of us. I think we’re learning more from him than he’s learning from us.”

Agnese’s tutors certainly have the experience. Spithill skippered his
first America’s Cup challenge for his native Australia at the tender age of 19. The McKee brothers, Jonathan, 43, and Charlie, 45, are on their third America’s Cup challenge, delight in the challenge of campaigning the notoriously skittish Sydney 18-foot skiffs, and share four Olympic medals between them. Jonathan won his gold medal in the Flying Dutchman class in 1984, while Charlie took a bronze in 470 dinghies in ’88. They sailed their 49er to a third place bronze in Sydney in 2000, and won the 49er World Championship one year later.

The second place boat, Marrachech Express, steered by professional
sailor Gabriele Benussi and crewed by a group of amateur sailors from
Trieste, continued its strong performance today but dropped to second
place after Spithill, who took two first-to-finish guns yesterday, ran away from the fleet for a comfortable victory in the last race today.

Benussi has won a total of nine Italian Championships, two European
Championships and three Worlds. He was third in the J/24 Worlds in 2003 and has featured prominently in a number of ocean racing campaigns in IMS boats.

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This entry was posted on Thursday, December 15th, 2005 at 9:46 am and is filed under Main Stories. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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