Reports From Rich Roberts
The 46th Congressional Cup scheduled next Tuesday through Saturday will be sailed on Catalina 37s, but that’s nothing new.
They’ve been sailed in the United States’ only Grade 1 Open match racing event for 20 years, and that doesn’t seem about to change.
The 10 skippers who will sail next week, with current International Sailing Federation (ISAF) rankings:
Sally Barkow,
Johnie Berntsson (9),
Francesco Bruni (24),
Simone Ferrarese (32),
Bill Hardesty,
Damien Iehl, (3)
Eric Monnin (31),
Evgeniy Neugodnikov (20),
Dave Perry (45),
If anything, the Catalina 37s have grown in popularity sinceCatalina Yachts President Frank Butler and chief engineer Gerry Douglas brought 11 of them, including a spare, to the Congressional Cup organizing
They are the only 11 ever built and they weren’t built for speed or comfort as much as for maneuverability and to last, like your father’s good old pickup truck. They aren’t high-tech fast, either, and you probably wouldn’t sail one to
Catalina 37s were built for match racing where, as long as all boats are equal, speed and comfort are less important than durability because match racing is more Destruction Derby than Tour de France. And the Catalina 37s are certainly equal.
They were conceived and constructed by with solid—not cored—fiberglass hulls, making them heavier but tougher, with virtually indestructible rigging and hardware. If they hadn’t been built that way they wouldn’t have lasted long enough to survive two generations of punishment and abuse from the world’s best—i.e., instinctively aggressive—sailors.
Scott Dickson has probably raced them more than anybody. Since migrating to
Dickson, who also has raced other boats in other international events, sees no reason to change.
“They’re a good open platform and they’re simple, which really enables you to sail a big boat with a small team, which is very challenging,” Dickson said. “The 37s are hanging on from a previous generation where you had heavier displacement and bigger boats. Displacement for match racing is a very, very good thing … [being] slow to accelerate, slow to decelerate makes it a lot more technical. You have to plan ahead a lot more.
“The other older boats that are talked about that are still very popular are the IRDs in
“Because the boats are not high tech and there’s not too many strings to play with has put a premium on boat handling and crew work—and you can’t get any better than that for match racing.”
For 10 years before the C/37s the Congressional Cup used Catalina 38s that were maintained by the builder but were privately owned loaners and therefore difficult to equalize for match racing. Nevertheless, LBYC often expresses its gratitude for “three decades of generous support of Catalina Yachts.”
Q: Did you think the Catalina 37 would still be going strong after 20 years?
Gerry Douglas: “Well, we build boats to last (smile). They still look very contemporary, and I think the key to the longevity of those boats is that they were so simple.”
Q: What would you do differently now?
Frank Butler: “Gerry, that’s a matter of opinion. I would have liked to have had one less crew on it. The more people the more weight, and it’s hard to get people to come from all over the world to bring an extra one or two.”
Q: What about asymmetrical spinnakers that are now so popular?
Q: Would that enhance performance?
Q: The 37s were designed primarily for match racing, but these days they’re also being chartered for fleet racing by crews that aren’t match racers. Does that surprise you?
Q: What has been the biggest criticism of the boats over the years?
(Silence … then…)
Q: Speaking of the recent
Q: …compared to the Congressional Cup?
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