Adversity training was how one captain summed up the 34th running the of the Governorโ€˜s Cup yacht race Saturday. sponsored by St. Maryโ€™s College of Maryland, was called a โ€œgood hard raceโ€ with a washing machine start and a slow finish. The annual race attracted 150 boats this year with a course from Annapolis to St. Maryโ€™s City.

For the first time in Governorโ€™s Cup history, the U.S. Naval Academyโ€™s team was the first to cross the finish line, arriving at 3:34 a.m. On a new boat, Zaraffa, the Navy team beat the course record holder Donnybrook by 1 hour and 15 minutes. The USNA team was captained by Jahn Tihansky. Donnybrook, captained by Jim Muldoon, still holds the course record of 6 hours, 9 minutes, set in 1993.

In another first, an all-high school crew from Southern Maryland won in their class. Onboard Age of Reason, sailors from Leonardtown and Patuxent High Schools won the C/D class. Their boat is a centerboard model 1978 Bristol 355 captained by their coach Stovy Brown of St. Leonard, Maryland. Brownโ€™s winning tactic was to stay on the Western Shore until the tide shifted. Brown thanked the College for allowing high school sailors to practice on the Collegeโ€™s boats on Friday afternoons. The Collegeโ€™s sailing team also volunteers to coach the high school teams.

Sam Carter, a โ€™07 graduate of Patuxent High and Michael Steep of Leonardtown High were part of the crew. Carter said, โ€œIt is all about preparation at practice. We worked hard and had five sets of sails to change, but we stuck with our game plan and it worked.โ€ The high school students had to make one spinnaker halyard change just before the finish line.

โ€œThe first four hours of the race were adversity training for me,โ€ said Randall Richter of Arnold, Maryland, โ€œhere is where preparedness meets opportunity.โ€ Richter is captain of Pressure Drop, in the A-2 class. Richterโ€™s team included his son, Warren, who is a student at SMCM and member of the Collegeโ€™s offshore sailing team. The Collegeโ€™s team was not able to compete this year because their boat was struck by lighting the week before.

The race started at 6 p.m. on Friday in Annapolis with waves that built to 5 feet and a 15-20 knot wind from the south. During the evening, gusts up to 23 knots were reported. Towards dawn the winds died down, making for a slow spinnaker run up the St. Maryโ€™s River. โ€œWe try to make this race a sailorโ€™s race, and this weather was challenging for all of us,โ€ said Jim Muldoon, skipper of the Donnybrook and Chairman of the SMCM Board of Trustees.

Returning to the race for the second year was Ben Collins, of Rockville, Maryland. Collins is a Special Olympics sailor who is blind and developmentally disabled. Last year, Collins crewed on Donnybrook in calm seas with a northerly wind. After this yearโ€™s rough seas, Collins said, โ€œit was like being in a pin ball machine.โ€

Also sailing onboard Donnybrook was Megan Cooper of Montgomery County, Maryland. Cooper is a 23 year old Special Olympics gold medalist in sailing who will be representing the United States in the Special Olympics World Games in Shanghai, China, this October. This was Cooperโ€™s first offshore race and kept smiling as she was โ€œbaptized on the railโ€ in the rough seas.

David Andril of Arlington, Va, and his crew onboard Valkyrie (PHRF A1) took home the Waldschmitt Award for the best in fleet. The most competitive of the trophies, this award is presented to the winner of the class having the smallest corrected time interval between the first- and fifth-place finishers.

Michael Brennan from Potomac, Md. and captain of Sjambok (PHRF A0) won the Alumni Trophy. To be eligible for the Alumni Trophy, two or more members of the boat&r