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2001 Anteater
Regatta
Newport Harbor Yacht Club
December 8-9, 2001
BISHOP'S SCHOOL WINS WINDY ANTEATER REGATTA
Disney presents new trophy to 2000-01 champion Coronado
Gold Fleet Results
Silver Fleet Results
Photo Gallery
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. - Undaunted by bonechilling winds to 20 knots, a
young coed squad from Bishop's School in La Jolla outsailed 23 other
high school teams from throughout California Sunday to win Gold fleet
honors in Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Anteater Regatta.
Coach Bill Campbell's outfit turned away traditional powerhouses from
Coronado High School, Newport Harbor, University of San Diego High
School and Pt. Loma High School. Overall, there was a record total of 48
teams from 40 schools, split into Gold and Silver divisions of 24 each.
It was the first of a series of Pacific Coast Interscholastic Sailing
Association regattas through next spring that will determine the season
champion.
The ultimate winner will claim the new perpetual Roy E. Disney High
School Sailing Championship trophy, which he presented to 2000-01
champion Coronado on Sunday. The new sails used by the two-person CFJs
were paid for from Disney's earlier donation to the California
International Sailing Association of $500,000 to be spent over five
years.
The trophy is a half-model of Disney's maxisled Pyewacket mounted on a
wooden plaque. Each year's winner's name will be engraved.
The Anteater was supposed to be a two-day affair but Saturday delivered
insufficient wind to sail. Sunday more than made up for the oversight. A
cold westerly arrived early under sunny skies and built from 12 to 15
and a peak of 20 knots that sent whitecaps rolling down Newport Harbor
like bowling balls through tenpins.
With boats flipping the length of the course, the race committee soon
beached some of the Silver fleet of less experienced sailors until the
breeze subsided somewhat in early afternoon.
By that time Bishop's had the Gold fleet victory well in hand and
ultimately emerged with 45 points to runner-up Coronado's 71, followed
by Newport Harbor, 81, USD, 96, and Pt. Loma, 102.
Only four of Campbell's nine sailors in the Gold and Silver groups were
seniors and six were girls.
"The whole tenor of the team seemed to improve with more girls,"
Campbell said. "I think the boys have more fun."
Senior Andrew Campbell drove the lead "A" boat in Gold, with sophomore
Hillary Shapiro as crew. Junior skipper Frank Taylor had sophomore Beka
Clark as crew in the B boat.
The 24 schools from San Diego to San Francisco split their teams between
the Gold and Silver fleets. Pt. Loma won the Silver with 40 points,
followed by Marin Catholic, 59; El Segundo, 79; Agoura, 89, and Corona
del Mar, 97.
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