Hap Fauth Featured in Naples Illustrated
Hap Fauth, owner/driver of Maxi 72 Bella Mente, makes a splash in the April/May 2015 Issue of Naples Illustrated after winning the RORC Caribbean 600 in February of this year.
The team just wrapped up Les Voiles de St. Barth earlier this month and is preparing to head to the UK to kick off its European campaign, which consists of the RYSR Bicentenary International Regatta, Aberdeen Asset Management Cowes Week, the Rolex Fastnet Race and the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup. For more media features on Hap and the team, visit our “In The Press” page.
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On the Horizon: Les Voiles de St. Barth
With two successful events behind them, Bella Mente Racing turns focus to Les Voiles de St. Barth, the last event for the team before heading across the Atlantic to race in the UK and Europe.
Although we’ve already completed two major events, the crew has really only sailed together very briefly,” said Owner/Driver Hap Fauth adding that the team was missing a few guys during Quantum Key West and didn’t have the practice days leading up to the RORC Caribbean 600 due to some structural issues with the boat.
“We will have a number of practice days in St. Barth, so I think after Les Voiles we will have bonded pretty well and will be in a great position to go over and compete on the Solent.
Going into Les Voiles we obviously aren’t as fast as the canting keel boats but we do very well against them on a corrected time basis. We feel the boat is sailing to its rating, especially in medium to heavy air, which will play to our advantage.
Hap’s Bella Mente Wins 2015 RORC Caribbean 600
Hap Fauth’s Maxi 72, Bella Mente has been declared the overall winner of the 2015 RORC Caribbean 600. Although several yachts are still racing as of this morning (Friday, February 27), none of the remaining teams have the ability to better Bella Mente’s corrected time under IRC. Third time proved to be the charm for Bella Mente as the Maxi 72 has finished second overall for the past two years. Bella Mente was also the winner of the highly competitive IRC Zero Class and retained the Bella Mente Trophy as the first IRC Yacht to finish that is wholly manually powered, without either variable or moveable ballast.
A delighted Hap Fauth spoke about the achievement and was full of praise for both the race team and shore crew:
Friday, before the race start, we had a structural problem with the boat and limped home from practice to assess the problem. We took the boat apart and for two days the shore team set up a temporary boat building workshop and did a great job just to get us to the start line. Throughout the race we had no problems at all and my hat goes off to our ground crew.
This is the third go at winning this race and three is the beauty! This is the third Bella Mente since 2006 and the majority of this team have been with me for at least five years – it is an outstanding group of guys. They like each other, we have a good time together – they are all mates. Everybody puts safety first, that’s the way it should be offshore but after that we push to the limit.
This race is a series of sprints and every leg is different, you are trying to get out of the blocks at the start of each segment and as soon as you get going, you are looking to get to top speed without increasing the distance sailed in that quest for boat speed. We try to make a couple of minutes up at every corner – with 12 corners if you save three minutes a corner then that makes a real difference to your finish time. Everybody works together, it is our big strength; the crew did a phenomenal job.
We knew that the wind direction would flick to the south east just as we were arriving at Guadeloupe and, although we were looking at the current situation, we had pretty much made the decision to take our chances by going inshore. In the past, we have had some bad experiences going offshore, if you run out of wind you can get trapped for a very long time. I would give Bella Mente’s performance in the wind shadow a solid nine out of ten, we did really well but we had to fight for it and use all our skill to keep the boat going. Moose (Mike Sanderson) was driving, Terry (Hutchinson) and Ado (Adrian Stead) had their eyes out of the boat and I was just giving them the numbers and I believe that combined tactical sailing knowledge got us through.
Nicknamed the ‘Guadeloupe Casino’, the wind shadow of Guadeloupe can make or break a performance as the largest and tallest island on the course can be an unforgiving trap. Bella Mente’s British navigator, Ian Moore, spoke about a crucial part of the course:
We knew that the wind direction would flick to the south east just as we were arriving at Guadeloupe and, although we were looking at the current situation, we had pretty much made the decision to take our chances by going inshore. In the past, we have had some bad experiences going offshore, if you run out of wind you can get trapped for a very long time. I would give Bella Mente’s performance in the wind shadow a solid nine out of ten, we did really well but we had to fight for it and use all our skill to keep the boat going. Moose (Mike Sanderson) was driving, Terry (Hutchinson) and Ado (Adrian Stead) had their eyes out of the boat and I was just giving them the numbers and I believe that combined tactical sailing knowledge got us through.
Hap Fauth had left nothing to chance in his quest to win the RORC Caribbean 600 and brought a team of world class sailors to run the afterguard which included Volvo Ocean race winning skipper, New Zealand’s Mike “Moose” Sanderson, current Rolex US Sailor of the Year, American Terry Hutchinson and British America’s Cup tactician, Adrian Stead, who has been on the winning team for the RORC Caribbean 600 on three occasions. Mike Sanderson spoke about Bella Mente’s victory:
It was a great race at the end of the day and we had Maserati to race with some of the time. To be boat-on-boat with a Volvo 70 was a nice surprise. We have worked on the boat very hard since we were here last year. Hap loves this race and it was very pleasing for us sitting on the dock feeling that we didn’t leave anything on the table. This was one of our best overall performances. We have two big races this year; the RORC Caribbean 600 and the Rolex Fastnet and we have produced a sail programme that covers the range well for those races. At one point we went through the lee of Leopard, reaching with a jib-top. Leopard is a fast 100 ft canting keel boat, so we are really excited at how well Bella is going with its new mast and new sails. We have done a lot of work on the aero-package and the boat feels great and she is going quick but we are really ringing its neck. To be honest the boat is pretty cranky and very physical. It is some of the most physical keel boat sailing that we do because you are muscling a windward leeward orientated boat around a reaching course, so it is tough on the wheel and there is a lot of grinding for the big boys.
Bella Mente has become the third Maxi 72 to win the race overall and the fifth American owner to win the RORC Caribbean 600 Trophy. The RORC Caribbean 600 Prizegiving will take place on Friday 27th February at the Antigua Yacht Club.
Bella Mente Crew: (Owner) Hap Fauth, Thomas Allin, James Baxter, Michele Cannoni, Carlo Castellano, Sean Clarkson, Sean Couvreux, James Dagg, Federico Giovanelli, Peter Henderson, Terry Hutchinson, Keats Keeley, Brian Macinnes, Craig Monk, Ian Moore, Michael Sanderson, Matt Smith, Adrian Stead, Morgan Trubovich and Jim Turner.
More photos from the docks after racing (Photo Credit: RORC/Ted Martin)
Terry Hutchinson Honored Today as Yachtsman of the Year
Last month, Bella Mente Racing Tactician Terry Hutchinson was named US Sailing’s 2014 Rolex Yachtsman of the Year and today (Thursday, February 26) he will be honored during a luncheon at the New York Yacht Club in Manhattan and presented with a specially-engraved Rolex timepiece.
Hutchinson finished the RORC Caribbean 600 with the Bella Mente Racing yesterday in Antigua. The team, led by owner/driver Hap Fauth, currently holds the best time in IRC but there are several yachts still racing that are contending to better that.
Here, Hutchinson weighs in on the race:
This was a great race for Bella Mente as a team. The entire crew’s dedication and hard work has been on display around the clock for the past four days. Without question, we wouldn’t have made it to the start without the great work down by boat captain Pete Henderson and shore crew Kyle Fitzgerald, Kyle Hintze, Ollie Dickens and Ryan Brown; all of who spent 50 hours straight making a substantial repair to Bella’s deck. From there, it was up to the sailing team to not let that effort go to waste.
Our lack of time preparing had the squad a bit off kilter, but the race itself was solid, with great maneuvers, communication and boat speed throughout. Over the fall and winter we have been working hard on our offshore boat inventory and sail sizing. It was good to see our hard work come to fruition in our first distance race of the year. I’m looking forward to seeing the performance data as Bella Mente went well off the breeze.
From a team side we continue to develop. We have a great group with a lot of talent, so allowing everybody to flourish is critical. I can’t say enough about the effort put forward by our team on the bow and in the middle of the boat. Their execution of sail changes was immaculate. Between Moose (Mike Sanderson), Soapy (Ian Moore) and Ado (Adrian Stead) we got more right than wrong in this race, but we still have a lot to refine. All in all, I think I can speak for the entire team when I say we are very optimistic about the future.
RORC 600: Day 2 Update
Team Update:
Bella Mente Racing currently holds the lead position (corrected time) in IRC Z, IRC Overall and CSA Overall as it goes into the latter half of the 2015 RORC Caribbean 600. The team is approximately 280 miles into the 600-mile coastal race and sailing south toward Guadeloupe at a speed of 11.4 knots. The leg around the island of Guadeloupe is known for casting a wind shadow, which can be a game changer for competitors. The team’s goal is to make it around with as little loss as possible.
How to Follow:
For event daily reports, visit http://caribbean600.rorc.org
Track the fleet real time at http://caribbean600.rorc.org/Tracking/2015-fleet-tracking.html
Follow Bella Mente during the event on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Instagram, Hashtag: #BellaMenteRacing
Follow RORC Caribbean 600 on Facebook and Twitter, Hashtag: #RORCRC600
More About RORC Caribbean 600
The 2015 RORC Caribbean 600 started off Fort Charlotte, Antigua on Monday February, 23. The 600-mile course circumnavigates 11 Caribbean Islands starting from Fort Charlotte, English Harbour, Antigua and heads north as far as St Martin and south to Guadeloupe taking in Barbuda, Nevis, St Kitts, Saba and St Barth.