Jerry Schostak, family and friends celebrating the Mackinac victory of Fujimo FBF, last year. Great Lakes boaters are preparing to set sail for the "big race" LARRY PALADINO Special to The Jewish News 26 Friday, July 11,1986 If Jerry Schostak should ever de- cide to change the name of his boat, perhaps "Checkmate" might be appropriate. The prominent Southfield real estate magnate looks upon the prestigious Port Huron to Mackinac yacht race — and indeed all sailboat races — as a "chess game," with the challenge being, among other things, the strategy needed to win. And certainly he knows about such things, having skippered his new, custom-designed, 50-foot sloop Fujimo FBF to the overall victory in last year's race. He and his 13 crew members, including three of his four sons, intend to compete again in this year's race on July 19, as well as in the similarly challenging Chicago- to-Mackinac race a week later. The winner is not necessarily who's the biggest, who's the strongest, who's the fastest," Schos- tak said, "but rather, in addition to a bit of luck, who strategizes the race in terms of weather, competi- tion, all the circumstances. Sailboat racing is much like a chess game. It takes an enormous amount of study, preparation strategy, and that's what I find to be the challenge." Winning in the Port Huron- Mackinac race wasn't something un- familiar to Schostak. In 1982, his 44-foot Fujimo, predecessor to the current one, finished first in Class A. The same boat in 1973 was the Class B winner, and in 1967 Schos- tak was on the winning Class F boat owned by Dr. Ray Jacobs. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Sailboat racing is a "family af- fair" for the Schostaks, the senior Schostak said, adding jokingly about his sons, "I consider myself fortunate they let me come along for the ride." Over the winter the new Schos- tak boat was first in its class in the Southern Ocean Racing Association Conference, a series of six races around Florida, held in February. Fujimo FBF also won a spring series on Long Island Sound, Schostak said, and competed in a series of five races at Newport, R.I., called the Onion Patch series, culminating in the 650 mile Newport-to-Bermuda ocean race on June 13. Last year's Port Huron- Mackinac race undoubtedly will well serve the Schostaks, and others who competed, in future races because conditions were unusually rough. "It's becoming known as the big storm of 1985, but that's not really correct," Schostak said of the weather. "There were lovely, clear, crisp skies with all the magnificence of the Milky Way, with the Northern Lights before us. But we experienced 40-mile-per-hour winds out of the north, temperatures in the 40s and 50s, and .eight to twelve-foot seas, which is what caused the breakdown both of gear and the human element. We, like other people, had a certain amount of gear failure and crew failure." Gene Mondry, 55-year old president of Highland Appliance, is another regular Port Huron-to- Mackinac competitor. He found last , year's conditions "nervewracking, tiring, dangerous. "Under those conditions," he said, "unless you win it's not much fun. But you can have fun without winning under other conditions." Last year Mondry, who plans to race again this year, skippered his 40-foot Class C boat, Leading Edge, to a disappointing finish well off the lead. However, he won his class twice before and four times captured class championships in the Chicago race, with an overall triumph in 1982. He has been competing in the Mackinac races since the mid-50's something that didn't seem plausible after his early ventures on a friend's sailboat, merely cruising around. "I found the experience very boring," Mondry said. He told his friend, We have to do something more exciting," and, when racing was suggested, Mondry said, "Then let's do it. "We tried it and I fell in love with it," he said. There is a mystique to the race that perhaps only sail boaters truly understand. It begins with the pre- race parties that turn the docks and bars in Port Huron into a Mardi Gras set. Then, out onto Lake Hu- ron. A couple of hours into the race, the challenge takes over. Adrenaline may flow even more in the middle of the night when navigation is more demanding and the silence and blackness transform a cruise into more of an adventure.