Brazil’s OCEANPACT Wins Open J/70 NA’s!(Tampa, FL)- The Davis Island Yacht Club in Tampa, Florida, hosted forty-two teams from across North & South America for the 2025 J/70 North American Championship. Sailing in the northern reaches of Tampa Bay, the fleet was challenged by the mix of flat waters and shifty offshore breezes, plus the typical southerlies and short, choppy waters. Three of the four scheduled racing days featured nine races for teams from the USA, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Sweden, and Bermuda. In the end, Dalton Bergan’s WAR CANOE was declared the 2025 J/70 North American Champion. Meanwhile, Haroldo Soberg’s Brazilian team on OCEANPACT won the Open J/70 North American Championship. Winning the Corinthian Division was Lee Sackett’s FM. Here’s how it all went down over the four-day event.
Day 1- Sunshine and Steady Breeze Grace Tampa Bay
After a brief one-hour onshore postponement, sailors were rewarded with sunny skies, warming temperatures, and a building breeze. Winds began around 8 knots and rose steadily to 14 knots, allowing the Race Committee to deliver a three-race opening day.
The overall standings after day one saw Haroldo Solberg’s Brazilian OCEANPACT (crew of Geison Mendes, Mario Tinoco, and Gabriel Silva) in first place, having sailed a 1-11-3 for 15 points. They had the early advantage over two US teams: Dalton Bergan’s WAR CANOE (22 points) and Bruce Golison’s MIDLIFE CRISIS (26 points).
Solberg summarized, “The level here in the United States is very high. We’ll need a little luck and a lot of hard work to stay near the top.”
Brazil struck early, with Solberg’s OCEANPACT taking the opening bullet of the Championship. They were followed by Bergan’s WAR CANOE and Per Roman’s GARM. For race two, the breeze settled into a steadier rhythm, allowing Golison’s MIDLIFE CRISIS to dominate for the win. Ralph Rosa’s Brazilian MINDSET claimed second, and Joel Ronning’s CATAPULT completed the top three. Corinthian teams shone in race three. Patrick Shanahan’s BRONCO captured the win, followed by James Gary’s AYACUCHO— both fully Corinthian crews. OCEANPACT returned to the top group with a strong third, including an opportunity to port-tack the fleet.
Leading the Corinthian Division was AYACUCHO with James Gary, Edward Gary, Brendan Read, and Travis Carlisle. A standout final race placed the all-amateur team atop this leaderboard.
CATAPULT dominated the Mixed-Plus Division. Led by Joel Ronning with Jeremy Wilmot, Beccy Anderson, Stephanie Roble, and Giulia Conti, their consistency has put them in command.
In the One-Pro Division, RIFF (USA), with Boris Luchterhand, Ron Rosenberg, Emmett Beadnall, and Ryan Carson, had a strong opening day.
Day 2- No Wind!Thursday’s sailing was canceled with an “AP over A” after the sailors patiently waited a long time for any breeze to develop in the northern reaches of Tampa Bay.
Day 3- Planing Conditions- Woohoo!!Finally, the second day of sailing delivered spectacular conditions on Tampa Bay, as the teams enjoyed sunshine, steady 10–15 kts breezes, rolling whitecaps, and powered-up planing legs downwind. With the discard race now in effect after six completed races, the leaderboard tightened up considerably, setting up an exciting final stretch toward Saturday’s conclusion.
Race 4: Under bright skies and classic Tampa Bay pressure, Bergan’s WAR CANOE punched out early and never looked back, taking a clean win. Lee Eikel’s LAST CALL and Per Roman’s Swedish GARM team followed to round out the top three.
Race 5: The breeze held strong. Ronning’s CATAPULT surged ahead for the bullet, showcasing its hallmark upwind pace. Ralph Rosa’s MINDSETE claimed second, while Rich Witzel’s ROWDY delivered one of the day’s standout performances to take third.
Race 6: In the day’s final race, the Chicagoans dominated. Witzel’s ROWDY climbed another step and powered into first place. Fellow Chicagoan John Heaton’s EMPEIRIA grabbed a second-place finish, while Golison’s MIDLIFE CRISIS stayed locked in with a solid third, strengthening their overall position.
With breeze-on racing and tight margins throughout the fleet, the championship remained wide open heading into the final day. Consistency has been key, and MIDLIFE CRISIS currently held the advantage at the top of the leaderboard over the hard-charging Brazilian OCEANPACT squad and the WAR CANOE team.
Day 4- FinaleAfter four days and nine races, the J/70 North American Championship title came down to the final race. Saturday’s final three contests, sailed in planing conditions, saw a shifting leaderboard with five different teams within just eight points going into the final race. In the end, WAR CANOE won the final race just seconds ahead of OCEANPACT, but it wasn’t enough to take the overall win. WAR CANOE placed second overall, one point behind OCEANPACT.
“We felt relief as we crossed the finish line,” said Bergan, who subbed in for long-time class member Michael Goldfarb, who couldn’t make the event because of a family emergency. Bergan, Goldfarb, and crew Alyosha Strum-Palerm are all part of the “J/Pod,” a growing group of sixty Seattle-based J/70 teams.
Solberg finished fourth at the recent J/70 World Championship in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and now takes the win in Tampa.
“The J/70 Class in Brazil is improving a lot. Two or three years ago, we had only six boats. Now we have almost 20 teams, and the level keeps rising! At the J/70 Worlds in Buenos Aires, Brazilians finished third, fourth, and fifth — that shows how strong the fleet has become!!” Brazilians took two of the five spots at the North American Championship!! The Brazilians are certainly on a roll! It will be interesting to see how they fare this winter on the Florida circuit.
Finishing just four points back to take the bronze medal was Golison’s MIDLIFE CRISIS team from Southern California- Erik Shampain, Jeff Reynolds, and Ian Barrows.
Rounding out the top five was Ralph Vasconcellos Rosa’s MINDSET in fourth place with his team of Guilherme Hamelmann, Julio Carvalho, and Felipe Rondina. Taking fifth place was Ronning’s CATAPULT team.
CORINTHIANS DivisionFourteen teams competed in the Corinthian division, led by Lee Sackett and his FM team, which included Abie Griggs, Jeff Haase, and Liam Walz, representing Edgewater Yacht Club. Taking home the silver was James Gary’s AYACUCHO team, followed by Patrick Shanahan’s BRONCO crew on the bronze medal step.
MIXED-PLUS DivisionJoel Ronning’s CATAPULT earned the Mixed-Plus title with his teammates, Olympians Stephanie Roble and Giulia Conti, Jeremy Wilmot, and Beccy Anderson.
ONE-PRO DivisionFrank McNamara’s CHINOOK earned the One-Pro Division title with Malcolm Lamphere, Colin Jermain, and Joshua Pfosi.
TOP FEMALE HELM
Top female helm was won by Corinthian and Mixed-Plus entry BEAT MACHINE, skippered by Marina Lamphier with her crew of Roy Lamphier, Cassidy Chalut, and Matt Koch.
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Sailing Photo Credits- Hannah Lee Noll https://gallery.hannahleenoll.com/2025-j70-north-americans/
For J/70 North American Championship resultshttps://www.yachtscoring.com/emenu/50327
For more J/70 North American Championship host club informationhttps://diyc.org/