By John Rousmaniere
“How
did Carina do all that?” A lot of people have
been asking this question at the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club since Rives
Potts’s 48-foot sloop finished the Bermuda Race on Tuesday morning
and, that evening, became the winner of the St. David’s Lighthouse
Division.
That
refers to two things. First there’s Carina’s domineering
victory margin of more than three and a half hours. To put this in
perspective,
in Class 4 the top 10 places fit under a tent of only three hours, with
first-place Windborn’s margin over second-place Lapin
exactly 11 seconds. Then there’s this: Carina had all
that margin (and more) in the bank when she was half-way down the race
course. When she exited the Gulf Stream, her lead was 60 miles.

Rives
Potts bringing Carina around to the winner's
berth at the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club
Ask
Carina skipper Rives Potts why she did so well, and in his genial
southern drawl he’ll speak of a good boat, a good crew, and good luck.
That she is a good boat has been beyond dispute since she was launched
in 1969. Jim McCurdy, her designer, knew how to make boats strong,
handsome, and fast – and with a good rating, too. In 2008 a small
cousin of Carina’s called Selkie, sailed by Jim’s
daughter Sheila with me (among others) in the crew, almost won a true
thrash of a Bermuda Race.
The
first time I saw Carina in action was in a light-air overnight
race on Long Island Sound in 1969. Under her father-son command
team of Dick and Richard Nye she took the lead right off the starting
line, but lost it and a lot more during an enforced stay on a sand bar
off Port Jefferson. After she eventually was extracted by the rising
tide, Carina steamed by us in a well-sailed Cal 40 as though
we were standing still.
Good
boats don’t necessarily enjoy good luck, but the odds for good fortune
are better when they are sailed by a good, aggressive crew. The Nyes
were famous for being both good and aggressive. “We used to swing
for the fences quite a bit,” said Richard, who was known to surprise
his crews by sailing off at right angles to the rhumb line in search
of favorable current.
Rives
Potts is not that much of a risk taker. Carina’s progress in
the recent Bermuda Race, as shown by his iBoattrack line, indicates
that he had a distinct plan in mind and improvised when he had to. As
most of the other boats worked to the west after the start, he footed
off for speed, staying near the rhumb line. When Carina fell
among the calms that left many boats motionless for hours, he didn’t
panic. He would call what happened next “an accumulation of good
decisions
and good luck. You always know you’re going to sail into a hole in
this race. The question is whether you can get out. Sometimes the stars
will turn out right.” So will quick action. “We saw a wind
line and tacked over to it on port and got away.”

Carina navigator Patricia
Young: “We just went with the wind we
had."
Carina’s
navigator Patricia Young gave three reasons for the boat’s success.
The first concerned those initial strategic and tactical decisions.
“We just went with the wind we had rather than going as far as the
optimizers said we should.”
Young’s
second reason concerned how Carina managed a long line of black
squalls that blew up into the thirties. “We changed to the no.
3 at the right time and we rocketed.” Reports from other
boats indicate that some crews were not as well prepared to handle these
gusts, and that the larger boats didn’t have these winds at all.
Patricia
Young’s third reason for the boat’s success had to do with the crew’s
morale. “Everybody participated. This was a total team
effort.” Those who know Rives Potts will tell you that his teams
are bonded by their captain. “If Rives can win this thing,
I’ll be very happy,” America’s Cup and offshore racer Jerry Kirby,
Rambler’s tactician, said on Monday. “He’s one of my heroes.”
Raised
sailing on Fishing Bay, Virginia, near the mouth of the Rappahannock
River, Potts graduated from Virginia Military Institute. Boat-crazy,
he worked on America’s Cup campaigns, did a lot of ocean racing, and
ended up running a boat yard – one of whose boats was Carina.
Along the way he had sailed enough and known enough good sailors like
Rod Stephens to persuade him that fundamentals are crucial. “I
discovered
there’s nothing new in boats. Different materials, maybe, but no new
ideas.”
That
reliance on basics and team effort made him adept at Bermuda Races.
Carina has won a trophy in every one of the six races she sailed
from 2000 to 2010, winning her class four times and the race once.
And she has done it with due attention paid to morale and creature
comforts.
This year’s crew consisted of members of four families –Potts, his
two sons, and a nephew; three Crumps; two Gahagans; Patricia Young and
her husband Paul Hamilton; plus a friend. Their last-night meal
this year was family style: spaghetti and meat sauce, raspberry crumble,
ice cream.
By
then Carina and her happy crew, who had so successfully made
their own good luck, were many hours ahead of the competition and within
striking distance of winning the boat’s second Newport Bermuda Race
in 40 years.