Worrell 1000

Worrell 1000 is a 1,000-mile beach catamaran race between South Beach, Florida and Virginia Beach, Virginia. The motto of the race is: "Iron Men, Plastic Boats."

History

The origins of Worrell 1000 can be traced to a bet in a bar at the Worrell Bros., a Virginia Beach resort restaurant. The bet was between the owners of the bar, brothers Michael and Chris Worrell.[1] The bet was that it was impossible to sail a sixteen-foot catamaran from Virginia Beach to Florida. On October 1, 1974, Michael Worrell and his crew Steve McGarrett left the Virginia Beach oceanfront with hopes of reaching Florida in one piece. Although they did not win the bet they still sailed through two hurricanes and had to make multiple boat repairs. After twenty days, they had to stop in Fort Lauderdale, Florida due to their catamaran being in poor condition.

Later, Worrell thought of turning the 954-mile journey into a regular regatta. The inaugural race, called "Worrell Bros. Coastwise Race", took place in May 1976. Four teams participated in the race. For that first race, limited to 16-foot hobie cats, there were very few rules. The participants could sail day and night, but they were supposed to come ashore and phone the restaurant once every 24 hours. The course was flipped with the start in Fort Lauderdale and the finish in Virginia Beach, to take advantage of the prevailing winds. The only team to finish the first race was that of Worrell and crew Guerry Beatson.

In 1979, Michael Worrell sold his half of Worrell Bros. to his brother Chris, who shortened the name of the race to Worrell 1000.[1] In 1985, the rules were changed to allow any boat within 20-foot length, 8-foot beam, instead of just hobie cats. In 1987, the rules were changed to allow unrestricted beam.[2] There was no race from 1990-1996, but it returned in 1997 as a production class event. Since 2000, the Inter 20 catamaran manufactured by Performance Catamarans of Santa Ana, California is the only boat allowed. Recent Regattas have been canceled to sponsors not covering their financial commitments,[3] however, each year the race is planned.

Year Boat Type Entrants Winner Notes
1976 Hobie 16 4 Michael Worrell & Guerry Beatson.
1985 20 foot rule Randy Smyth first year 20' x 8.5' boats
1986
1987 rule updated to permit unlimited beam (Winners - Roy Seaman/Jack Etheridge)
1988 updated 20 foot rule (Winners - Rick Bliss/Stephan Najmy) Last leg cancelled, only Bliss/Tartagliano completed race to Va Beach. Only three boats arrived intact at Hatteras (Bliss/Tartagliano, Onsgard/Casto, Seaman/Miller). Controversial end to first (non-Worrell promoted) prize money awarded race to non-finisher (Australia).
1987
1989 Randy Smyth 2nd - Australia; 3rd - Team Russia; 4th Loctite (Onsgard/Casto) 5th - Tartagliano/Najmy Only 5 finishers.
1990-1996 no race
1997 Randy Smyth "production class event"
1998 Randy Smyth
1999 15 Randy Smyth
2000 23 only 15 of 23 teams completed race
2001 NACRA Inter 20 first one design race since Hobie 16 era
2002
2003 cancelled attempt to create $1 million prize

[4]

Death

According to the website, Michael Worrell died on June 5, 2010.

Fees and prizes

The grand total for the prizes rewarded is US$1,000,000.[5] The prize for first place is $400,000 second place $200,000 and third place $100,000. To cover the prizes the entry fee was raised by 8,000 dollars to 20,000 dollars in 2003. The entry fee covers the boat with sails, hotel accommodation along with safety gear.

Race Strategy

Team Spit Fire, one of the competitors in the 2001 race, offered some words of advice and things they learned during the race:

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "About the Worrell 1000 Race". Worrell 1000. Retrieved 2007-05-11.
  2. Michael Worrell. "The Race Director Looks Back". Worrell 1000. Retrieved 2007-05-11.
  3. "Worrell 1000 cancelled for 2003". TheBeachcats.com. 2003-03-29. Retrieved 2016-09-06.
  4. "Cat Sailor: Hall of Fame". Catsailor.com. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  5. Twain Braden (May 2003). "1,000 miles on a cat pays $1 million". Ocean Navigator. Archived from the original on 2007-04-16. Retrieved 2007-05-11.

External links

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