(Miami, FL November 17th 2019) - After two days each of six races held on Miami’s Biscayne Bay, Don Wilson’s Convexity added the M32 North American Championship to his roster of accolades alongside the M32 World Championship he won in September in Riva del Garda, Italy.
With two bullets and just one finish off the podium, Wilson’s Chicago-based team led by six points at the end of day one on Saturday only to watch this dissolve to nothing initially today.
“It is a very high level,” said Wilson of the M32 racing. “You always have to be paranoid that people will try to beat you and you have to keep working really hard to make sure that doesn’t happen. We started off today with a six point lead and immediately lost it.” In today’s first two races Convexity had scored a 6-5 before returning to form, again staying on the podium in each of the remaining four races. “Fortunately we were able to come back and end it well,” mused Wilson.
For this event, Wilson’s World Championship-winning tactician Taylor Canfield was unable to take part and was replaced by Olympian and America’s Cup sailor Andrew Campbell, but otherwise the crew was the same as raced in Riva del Garda in September including Kinley Fowler on mainsail, Ted Hackney on trim and Josh McCaffery.
“It was great to come back to Miami and win the North American Championship,” concluded Wilson. “M32s are just a ton of fun to sail. It is really down to just every little movement on the helm and every little bit of sail trim - just very small differences. The way you sail the boat has a huge impact on boat speed. I’ve had more fun sailing on this boat than any other.”
Winner of day two was the defending M32 North American champion, Rick DeVos’s REV on which six time Match Racing World Champion Ian Williams was calling tactics. However their score was not enough to prevent Convexity from coming out on top overall.
As was the case at the M32 World Championship in September one of Wilson’s main contenders was his sister Jennifer on board Convergence. She finished the opening day in third place overall and was second in today’s opening race but in the following race was involved in a collision that caused enough damage to put both Convergence and Dan Cheresh’s Extreme2 out of the running for the rest of the day. Ultimately Convergence was awarded average points for her remaining races leaving her second overall.
Other surprises this weekend were the wholescale improvement of Larry Phillips’ Midtown which ended the opening day having won the second race and ultimately ending up a close third to Convergence.