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Winds Die Down, and Ole Wins Race to Cabo : Sailing: Elias’ yacht finishes 41 minutes in front. A sailor falls overboard but is rescued.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Antonio Elias, representing the Acapulco Yacht Club, sailed Ole across the finish line at 8:17:11 PST Tuesday night to win the biennial race from Long Beach to Cabo San Lucas in an upset.

Ole, named Citius under its former owner, has seldom been competitive among the ULDB 70s.

Three other boats followed closely--Mike Campbell’s Victoria by 41 minutes, Mike Holleren’s Starship I, 46 1/2 minutes, and John DeLaura’s Silver Bullet, 49 minutes.

Winds were light for a rare upwind finish 1 3/4 miles south of Cabo Falso, but a day earlier two boats blew out their mainsails and a sailor fell overboard as strong winds whipped the fleet toward the tip of Baja California.

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The unidentified sailor was recovered safely after falling off Mike Turi’s Fastrack from Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. Battling winds reported to be 28 to 30 knots northwest of Magdalena Bay, Fastrack dropped its sails and motored back to pick him up, then resumed the race.

The winds abated Tuesday, but for two boats the damage had been done.

The mainsail on Peter Tong’s Santa Cruz 70 Blondie from the host Long Beach Yacht Club ripped apart so badly that even watch captain Dave Ullman, who owns sail lofts around the world, couldn’t fix it.

Blondie, continuing to sail under spinnaker and storm jib alone, soon fell behind the other ULDB 70s, but was still making 9.4 knots and covered 251 miles in the 24-hour period.

Carl Eichenlaub’s Cadenza from San Diego Yacht Club lost time when its mainsail was torn twice. But it was repaired both times and remained in front of the IOR-B and PHRF-B classes, although trailing on corrected handicap time.

Several boats averaged about 12 knots in 24 hours, but the only non-sled to do so was Dick and Camille Daniels’ MacGregor 65 Joss from LBYC. Joss equaled the day’s longest run of 288 miles by Silver Bullet.

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