Sunday, 21 December 2008

Gilmour's Path to Match Race Success


Gilmour en route to success in the Monsoon Cup 2008. Image copyright Sander van der Borch.

by Tracey Johnstone

Peter Gilmour’s pathway to Monsoon Cup champion in the ninth and final event of the 2008 World Match Racing Tour was littered with distractions and surprising results.

As late as October Gilmour and his TBest event management team were still bedding down the event details. In his role as Race Advisor, Gilmour led the team through two months of frantic preparations ultimately delivering a brilliant event both on the water and on the land.

Taking off his event management cap, Gilmour then put on his match racing cap as he faced down 11 international match racing teams in the deciding event of the 2008 ISAF Match Racing World Championship which carried the extra pressure of a one and half points scoring system.

“Because it’s the final event of the year I think most of the teams get very wrapped up with winning the worlds or positioning themselves for 2009 for a tour invitation card, whereas I was focusing on the event. As the week wears on a lot of their nervous energy and thinking time, goes into that,” Gilmour said.

Gilmour and his Yanmar Racing team had little time to prepare themselves for the Monsoon battle coming together from various parts of the world for the five-day event and they had, unlike many of the other Monsoon Cup teams, previously only competed in two tour events of the 2008 World Match Racing Tour; the Korea Match Cup and Match Cup Sweden.

In the Round Robin stage Gilmour and his Yanmar Racing Team won only five of his matches; against Mathieu Richard, Johnnie Berntsson, Ben Ainslie, Keith Swinton and Nurul Ain bt.Md Isa.

“Ben Ainslie probably surprised me for not getting through. I thought he was going to go well. He had a fairly good team there. It also surprised me that both Adam (Minoprio) and Torvar (Mirsky) did so well. You expect one of them, but for both to go through to the semis and beyond, is exceptional.”

Both Mirsky and Minoprio trained hard before the start of the Monsoon Cup. Mirsky entertained Mathieu Richard and Ian Williams in Perth for a training camp, while Minoprio competed in the New Zealand national match racing championship. Gilmour however continued to spend most of his time on the land managing the Asian and Malaysian Match Racing Championships, and overseeing the final details of the Monsoon Cup preparations.

“One of the things I’ve noticed in match racing is sometimes when you do an event immediately the week before and somebody comes in afresh, more often than not the fresh sailors do better. The thinking, the effort, the work does drain on people. The most dramatic example of this is the America’s Cup!”

Up against four teams, all with five wins each, vying for the remaining three quarter-final stage qualification, Gilmour slipped into the next stage on a count-back. His challenger was world number two, Sebastien Col. Col’s French Match Racing Team/K-Challenge team pushed Gilmour at every point of the matches, but with steely determination and a jury decision going his way, Gilmour came out of this stage up three matches to Col’s two.

The semi-final stage was against another Australian, Torvar Mirsky. By this stage Gilmour and his team seemed to have found their stride leaving behind the distractions of collecting the committee boat anchor chain in previous pre-starts and the dramatic jury technical decision. He won three straight matches to move into the final.

In the final stage, matched against the much-younger New Zealander Adam Minoprio, Gilmour stamped his dominance on the event by using his understanding of the tricky local sailing conditions and ensuring perfect timing in the pre-starts to win three matches against Minoprio’s one.

Gilmour’s success in the Monsoon Cup came from two very important approaches to his program. Firstly there was his crew who “did a great job of working hard to say look, come back and concentrate on the sailing as well” and then there was his ability to mentally and physically focus at the key moments of the event.

“The closer it gets to the finals the greater the capacity there is to take on and take in all the inputs and be very clear in what you need. It’s just an experience thing that really comes to that. I try to be better at the back end than at the front end.

“You just try to think more clearly, to really process the thoughts in a clearer fashion. You can’t get away from the history of what has gone before you at the event, whether it be the umpiring decisions or the little learnings that you might make on the racecourse. So you have to try and compartmentalise all of that and say what’s important, what’s not and think about it from that perspective.”

The Future

Gilmour is already planning his 2009 sailing year. With the assistance of the Team’s new sponsor, Yanmar Corporation, they will be competing in the 2009 World Match Racing Tour. It’s three years since Gilmour participated full-time in the World Tour. “I think that in both 2005 and 2006 I did pretty much the full tour as well. It will be interesting.”

Then there is the organisation of the 2009 Monsoon Cup which Gilmour and his other team will spend the next 11 months planning.

His other focus will be on pushing for more Asian teams to be represented on the World Match Racing Tour. “The Monsoon Cup is at midway point in its life cycle and it’s great to see we had a full field of eight teams doing the Malaysian Championship. It is important to extend that interest into getting some real teams out on the world tour. It will require dedication, a bit of passion and commitment. The example of the (Monsoon Cup) young guns is a good one.”

Gilmour sees the Warren Jones International Youth Regatta as an excellent breeding ground for future World Tour participants. “I think one of the great things of the Warren Jones Regatta in Perth is the fact that the youth age group is extended up to 25 years old. So the event captures those kids when they’re 16, 17 and 18, and nurtures them until they’re well and truly adults. So you see them now with a purpose and direction rather than just sort of crazy teenagers. It’s very exciting.”

It is this sort of youth match racing development program model that could be seen being delivered in the future through yacht clubs in Asia. “There has to be a certain amount of local help and support. It’s an incredibly cost efficient program for youngsters to do, where they can all travel to a place like Perth from Malaysia, go and do a regatta and participate in it and you don’t have to buy any sails, any boats, anything.”

The dates for the 2009 Monsoon Cup are 2nd-6th December.

World Match Racing Tour

Olympians and America's Cup Sailors at A-Cat. Worlds


James Spithill sailing his A-Cat. Image copyright Sail-World.com/AUS.

by Rob Kothe

World Sailing excitement is set to explode on Lake Macquarie, NSW, in a few weeks when Belmont 16 Foot Sailing Club hosts the 2009 A-Class Catamaran World Championships.

Known worldwide as A-Cats, the wet and wild action starts with the Australian A-Cat Nationals on December 28th, followed by the A-Cat World Championships from January 2nd to 9th 2009.

The World Championship fleet will consist of 95 to 100 boats, with sailors from 12 countries competing. While many events split big fleets in two, these one crew catamarans will sail together as a single fleet and with their shimmering Mylar and Kevlar sails, will be an impressive sight as they head upwind.

The 2009 World Championship fleet is one of the best in recent years, with a host of World Champions, Olympic Medallists and America's Cup sailors taking up the A-Cat challenge.

Australia is the dominant nation worldwide on the A-Cat scene and 2008 Olympic Tornado silver medallist Glenn Ashby has won the A-Cat World title a record five times, the first time in 1996. He will start as a favourite to win the 2009 World's. However, this World Championship brings challengers from every quarter.

Ashby will be facing all his long time A-Cat rivals. The very strong Australian brigade includes Steve Brewin, the 2001 World Champion and 2008 European champion; Andrew Landerberger, the 1996 Australian Tornado Silver Medallist and fifth in this year's Europeans and 1984 Tornado Olympic Bronze medallist Scott Anderson. A-Cat World Champion in 1986, Anderson continues to sail at podium level regatta after regatta.

Around 40 international entries have been received and amongst these are many of the top ranked sailors, including Luc du Bois (SUI), third in the 2008 Europeans, Manuel Calavia Arias (ESP), the top ranked European behind Ashby and Anderson at the 2007 Europeans and second behind Brewin in the 2008 Europeans, Sjoerd Hoekstra (NED), fourth at the 2008 Europeans, Donald Beike (GER), sixth at the 2008 Europeans, UK and Belgian champion Chris Field (GBR) and well know America's Cup sailor Kiwi yacht designer Mike Drummond, who finished in the top ten in the 2007 A-Cat Worlds.

Attention will also fall on a number of high profile international monohull sailors who appear to have strayed to the multihull scene.

The youngest ever America's Cup skipper, Australian match racer James Spithill, started in monohulls but has been working hard on the multihull scene, while continuing to be a top class monohull skipper.

As one of BMW Oracle America's Cup helmsmen, he was suddenly thrust into the multihull world with the giant BMW Oracle 90 foot catamaran and as part of his new multihull program he has been sailing the two crew Formula 18 cats and the very fast Extreme 40 cats. In October Spithill came eighth at the 2008 North American A-Cat titles.

Two interesting entries come from the monohull sailors and Australian Olympians, Tom Slingsby and Nathan Outteridge.

Slingsby, who hails from Gosford on the News South Wales Central Coast, is the dual Laser World Champion. Outteridge, a Lake Macquarie sailor, is the 2008 49er World Champion whose high-speed skiff capsized on the last big wave in Qingdao. He was just 15 seconds from winning an Olympic gold medal.

Ashby feels that his Australian Olympic teammates may surprise with their results, despite their lack of Cat racing experience. He said that Slingsby and Outteridge were definite contenders because of their Olympic experience, as well as their impressive training sessions.

'You'd certainly have to count Tom Slingsby and Nathan Outteridge in the mix because they're both come off an Olympic campaign - certainly they've both grown up in that neck of the woods.

'I've sailed both with Nathan and Tom myself, (on Lake Macquarie) about a week ago and did three days with them. They've just been sailing up there with Scott Anderson who is a very good yardstick for them. Their sailing skills and their tactics are of course of a very high standard. I think they'll certainly surprise a lot of the international guys with how well they'll be sailing their boats when the Worlds come around,' Ashby said.

Outteridge says he and Slingsby have been training hard, but the conditions will have to be right for them to do well. 'If conditions are light and shifty then our tactical experience will help us, but it's a very steep learning curve and if the summer sea breezes are honking then it will be the experienced cat sailors who will shine,' he said.

'Actually I've found the A-cats quite similar to the 49ers, sailing hot angles with little tacking. But for Tom it's just so different from the Lasers. It's a lot of fun for us both,' Outteridge remarked.

Vicky Engert from Belmont 16 foot Sailing Club commented today, 'High-speed racing cats are popular boats worldwide and the conditions at Belmont should be superb for sailors and spectators alike.

'These racing cats are taking the world by storm. Generally a small amount of breeze is sufficient to have the craft at a 45" angle with only one hull skimming across the water. They're adrenalin plus! So for patrons and guests, Belmont Bay will be a sea of colour and excitement over the summer break. The Belmont 16's deck will be the best place to watch the action on and off the water.'

Commodore Troy Dobinson is looking forward to the event. 'We are very proud to be able to host another World Championship and showcase our club and our amazing lake. We are looking forward to some sensational summer sailing,' he concluded.

A-Class Catamaran Worlds 2009

Friday, 19 December 2008

New Zealand sailor in lead at Sail Melbourne Regatta

by Zoe Hawkins, Yachting New Zealand

24-year old North Shore sailor Mike Bullot is leading the Laser Full Rig division of the prestigious Sail Melbourne Regatta, which is part of the ISAF Sailing World Cup.

Out of five races, Bullot, from Murrays Bay Sailing Club, has secured two wins and a second. Once his worst race, an eighth place, is dropped, he sits on 13 points, one point ahead of Matias Del Solar of Chile, and ten points ahead of Milan Vujasinovic from Croatia.

New Zealander David Weaver sits in fifth place in the same class, and another seven New Zealanders are in the top half of the 39-strong Laser fleet after six races.

In other divisions, David McDiarmid and Andrew Archibald are sitting in third place in the 49er class after nine races. Antonio Cozzolino is second in the RS:X Men’s class after five races, Sara Winther is sixth in the Laser Radial after six races, and Kate Ellingham is fifth in the RS:X Women and Youth class after five races.

Racing was called off on the first day, with many classes unable to get in a start. The second day was also reasonably light and the third presented 10-15 knots of wind at Melbourne’s Port Phillip Bay.

Racing concludes on 21 December.

Sail Melbourne

Monday, 15 December 2008

Team Ceeref wins the battle; Banco Espirito Santo wins the war


Fantastic breezy fleet racing for the RC44s off Lanzarote. Image copyright Gilles Martin-Raget.

by Andy Rice

It was a punch-up between Team Ceeref and Banco Espirito Santo for fleet racing honours in the Puerto Calero RC44 Gold Cup, and also for the 2008 season title. Nothing was certain until the boats had crossed the line in the final high-wind race in Lanzarote.

Lanzarote, December 14 2008 – Having dominated proceedings all week in the Puerto Calero RC44 Gold Cup, Igor Lah nearly let victory slip from his grasp as Team Ceeref struggled to make sense of the big windshifts that tumbled off the mountains of Lanzarote in gusts that sometimes blew up to 27 knots.

Meanwhile the Slovenian’s closest rival - both at this event and for overall honours in the 2008 RC44 fleet racing season - was having a much better time in the tricky, puffy conditions. Owner of Banco Espirito Santo, Patrick de Barros credited Russell Coutts for making sense of the 40 degree shifts as the Portuguese boat picked up a 1,2 in the first two heats while Team Ceeref struggled with a 3,4.

The Portuguese were now within striking distance of the Slovenians for winning the event in Lanzarote, and were looking more secure in the defence of their lead in the 2008 rankings. Going into today, de Barros held a slim 3-point advantage over Lah in the season points scoreboard, and Ceeref had been the class act of the past week. Now de Barros had a bit more breathing room, and if he could win the final race with Ceeref last then perhaps he could steal the Gold Cup trophy too. With the strength and variable direction of the northerly wind, anything was possible.

Unfortunately Artemis had to bow out of the final race as keel problems forced Torbjorn Tornqvist to head home early. The battle for the remaining five boats was intense, with the whole fleet nose to tail at the leeward mark. Islas Canarias Puerto Calero led round that mark and while the other four boats tacked inshore, Daniel Calero kept on driving out to the right. When Calero tacked back to converge with the fleet, he was well ahead. The local spectators were getting excited at the prospect of a surprise win by a young and inexperienced team over some of the best professional sailors in the world.

The Canaries crew sailed a beautiful beat to lead handsomely around the final windward mark. However the chasing pack poured down behind them in a huge gust. At this stage Team Ceeref was way back in last place, and looked in danger of losing the Gold Cup if Banco could find their way through to first. But Ceeref tactician James Spithill called for an early gybe with the new breeze as the Slovenian boat hit 22 knots boatspeed in a gust of 27 knots. BMW ORACLE Racing was next to gybe and these two boats were locked in a high-speed battle for the lead. Ceeref prevailed, surging across the finish line in first place and securing victory in Lanzarote, to go with their match racing victory three days earlier.

Banco Espirito Santo was second in the fleet racing, followed by Team Aqua who edged third place by just a point from BMW ORACLE Racing.


RC44 season winners - Team Banco Espirito Santo. Image copyright Gilles Martin-Raget.

Any disappointment that Patrick de Barros had for not winning the Puerto Calero RC44 Gold Cup was easily compensated for by his season victory. And Daniel Calero was happy despite having lost that last race which seemed to have been his. He is hugely encouraged by his team’s progress over the past week, and will be training harder than any team in the two months before the fleet returns to Lanzarote in late February.

They said:

Patrick de Barros, owner, Banco Espirito Santo: “Mission accomplished, thanks to Russell, and a fantastic crew. It was a great season, and today was very exciting. Russell did a great job, the boat was fine, we didn't blow anything up, everything went well."

Igor Lah, owner, Team Ceeref: “Patrick was dominant today, so congratulations to him, fortunately we won the last race. In sailing you need some skill and a bit of luck. That's what we had on the last run to the finish. I think it was exciting, racing here is great. No matter about the result, the sailing is so nice, I really look forward to coming back.”

Daniel Calero, owner, Islas Canarias Puerto Calero: “It was extremely good fun. I wasn't frustrated by losing the last race. We chose the good side of the run, but then a big gust came from the left, nothing we could do, and we were happy to finish like this. We had a lot of fun this week. We have learned so much in this regatta.”

Mark Mendelblatt, tactician, BMW ORACLE Racing: “The races we had a third and second in, we were last in both of those at some stage. And the race we were last in, we were leading at one point. With these boats and this kind of wind there were quite a few passing opportunities.”

Chris Bake, owner, Team Aqua: “I think we sailed phenomenally well today, other than ending up in the wrong spot downwind on a few occasions. In these races we were second round the windward marks, only to lose it on the downwind. But we had great boatspeed upwind, and managed to position ourselves much better on the start. This was a great venue, fantastically well organised.”

Torbjorn Tornqvist, owner, Artemis: “Life has its ups and downs. Sailing has its ups and downs, that's for sure. Yesterday was a good day, today not so good. The boat broke down, we had to retire. That was disappointing. But the positives were that this was our first event as a team, and we were able to sail competitively in challenging conditions. I'm going to take away the experience of a very fun boat, and look forward to come back better prepared in February.”

Russell Coutts, tactician, Banco Espirito Santo: “It was an awesome week for sailing, you just don't get much better than that. It came down to almost the last race of the season to decide the series. I'm really happy with the season. Obviously we've got to get the boats a bit more reliable, having more breakdowns than I'd like, so we'll be working hard to iron out all those things for next season.”

Fleet-Race, Puerto Calero, final results after 10 races (including the DHL Trophy):

(Name of team, helmsman, results, points)

1) Team Ceeref, Igor Lah, 1,1,2,1,2,4,4,3,4,1 - 23 points
2) Banco Espirito Santo, Patrick de Barros, 5,4,3,3,3,1,3,1,2,3 - 28 points
3) Team Aqua, Chris Bake, 2,2,4,4,1,6,5,2,1,5 - 32 points
4) BMW ORACLE Racing, Larry Ellison, 4,3,1,2,5,2,6,5,3,2 - 33 points
5) Artemis, Torbjorn Tornqvist, 3,7,7,7,4,3,1,4,6,7 - 49 points
6) Islas Canarias Puerto Calero, Daniel Calero, 6,5,5,5,6,5,2,7,5,4 - 50 points

2008 Fleet-Race Season (top six boats only)

(Name of team, nationality, helmsman, points)

1) Banco Espirito Santo (Portugal), Patrick de Barros - 154 points
2) Team Ceeref (Slovenia), Igor Lah - 159 points
3) Team Hiroshi (Italy), Armando Giulietti - 180 points
4) Team Aqua (United Arab Emirates) Chris Bake - 182 points
5) BMW ORACLE Racing (USA), Larry Ellison - 242 points
6) Sea Dubai (United Arab Emirates) DIMC - 276 points

RC44

RC44s: Artemis goes the distance to take the DHL Trophy


RC44s in close fleet racing off Lanzarote. Image copyright Gilles Martin-Raget.

by Andy Rice

You can’t just turn up in the RC44 class and expect to win, but 13th December saw the new owners come to the fore in the Puerto Calero RC44 Gold Cup in Lanzarote. Torbjorn Tornqvist steered Artemis to victory in the long distance race for the DHL Trophy, and local owner Daniel Calero came second.

Saturday saw the RC44 fleet compete for the DHL Trophy, the long distance race which on this occasion was a 15-mile race along the coast to Arrecife Airport and back to Puerto Calero. Dean Barker called some good wind shifts up the windward leg to the first turning mark near Puerto Calero, allowing Torbjorn Tornqvist to steer Artemis into a small lead ahead of the chasing pack.

However, Patrick de Barros is the proven master of the long distance format in the RC44 fleet, and gradually the Portuguese owner steered Banco Espirito Santo to within striking distance of Artemis on the final reach to the finish. Just as it looked like these two might be in for a photo finish, one of the Portuguese crew lost his footing and suddenly de Barros was forced to tack round and fish his man out of the Atlantic.

It was a quick man-overboard recovery, and no one was harmed, but it did allow Artemis to race home to an easy victory, with local boys on Islas Canarias Puerto Calero sweeping past to second place ahead of Banco. Daniel Calero was delighted after a frustrating week of gear breakdowns and poor crew work. Today his team showed real signs of improvement and they could well be a force to be reckoned with by the time the fleet returns next February for the first event of the 2009 RC44 season.

Even if Patrick de Barros was upset not to win the day, his third place at least secured him a comfortable overall season victory for the DHL Trophy. He also had a good outing in the two windward/leeward heats which took place before the long distance race.

In the first race it didn’t start at all well for de Barros as he was called back after breaking the line by little more than a second. Russell Coutts now had his work cut out as tactician, but managed to grind Banco back into the pack, eventually claiming third across the line. This race should have been Artemis’s for the taking, as Tornqvist led nicely into the leeward mark. Instead of rounding it, though, the Swedish boat smacked the mark, forcing Tornqvist into a penalty. In so doing, he failed to keep clear of BMW ORACLE Racing and by the time he had completed all his penalty turns the Swede was back in last place, although Artemis would eventually pull back to fourth at the finish.

Team Aqua was the boat to profit most from this leeward mark mayhem, with Chris Bake stealing the lead up the final beat and taking the winner’s gun ahead of Team Ceeref.

In the second race, Aqua had a brief spell at the front of the fleet on the first beat, but with the 18-knot wind flicking from side to side in dramatic fashion, the United Arab Emirates lead was shortlived. In fact Aqua would eventually slide to the back of the fleet through no major error other than falling out of phase with the wind shifts. It was Larry Ellison’s turn to lead around the windward mark as BMW ORACLE Racing surged down the run ahead of the pack. Towards the top of the final beat, however, Coutts had found some good shifts and Banco Espirito Santo sneaked around ahead of the Americans. De Barros did a gybe-set out to sea, Ellison continued shoreside, but the Portuguese move proved to be a winner. A good day for de Barros and his crew.

Not such a good day for Team Ceeref, with Igor Lah just turning in average set of scores. Fortunately for him, no one else has managed to find much consistency. So going into the final day of competition the Slovenian boat still holds a useful points advantage over a tight-knit bunch of three - Banco Espirito Santo, BMW ORACLE and Team Aqua.

Tomorrow the Puerto Calero RC44 Gold Cup concludes after the final three fleet races, with the prizegiving due to take place later in the afternoon.

They said:

Patrick de Barros, owner, Banco Espirito Santo: “In the inshore racing we had a third and a first, we're very pleased. We were very fast downwind, the crew did a fantastic job downwind. On the long distance we lost one of our crew overboard. We tacked back and grabbed him, threw him back in the boat. We were racing with Artemis for the lead at the time.”

Igor Lah, owner, Team Ceeref: “A tough day. The distance race is not our speciality. We tried to do our best but it didn't work out. I don't know why, something doesn't work. In the other races it was an average day. We didn't lose a lot, so everything is still open.”

Mark Mendelblatt, tactician, BMW ORACLE Racing: “Apart from Ceeref, it's probably pretty darn close between us. Whoever does the best job is going to get second. We don't want anything horrible to happen to Ceeref, but anything's possible. Hopefully tomorrow we're going to come out blazing.”

Daniel Calero, owner, Islas Canarias Puerto Calero: “I feel very good. The motivation was really high among the crew. That counts for a lot in a boat. In my opinion, 90% of the performance of a boat is motivation. After days of try and fail, try and fail, try and fail, finally we are getting somewhere. We didn't fail too much today. We really enjoyed the long distance race.”

Torbjorn Tornqvist, owner, Artemis: “Good moments and bad moments. We had a good start in the first race, but we came too close to the leeward mark and hit it, and had to do a turn. It's not a fun thing to do, but these things happen. It's a new boat, our first regatta. Finally in the coastal race we got a good start, found the groove, we did a good race tactically, didn't make any mistakes. The RC44 - it's a fun boat to drive and I enjoy it a lot.”

Chris Bake, owner, Team Aqua: “We got the first race right, crew work was good, we were back to our old selves. To do well in these boats, everything has to go right. If you’re slow off the start, or slip up at a mark, or get out of phase with the wind, then you're toast. In the second race our two upwinds were just sailed badly, going in the wrong direction for too long in the wrong breeze.”

DHL Trophy:

1) Artemis
2) Islas Canarias Puerto Calero
3) Banco Espirito Santo
4) Team Ceeref
5) Team Aqua
6) BMW ORACLE Racing

Fleet-race, provisional results after seven races (including the DHL Trophy):

(Name of team, helmsman, results, points)

1) Team Ceeref, Igor Lah, 1,1,2,1,2,4,4 - 15 points
2) Banco Espirito Santo, Patrick de Barros, 5,4,3,3,3,1,3 - 22 points
3) BMW ORACLE Racing, Larry Ellison, 4,3,1,2,5,2,6 - 23 points
4) Team Aqua, Chris Bake, 2,2,4,4,1,6,5 - 24 points
5) Artemis, Torbjorn Tornqvist, 3,7,7,7,4,3,1 - 32 points

RC44
6) Islas Canarias Puerto Calero, Daniel Calero, 6,5,5,5,6,5,2 - 34 points

Igor Lah steers Team Ceeref to near perfection in the fleet racing


Team Ceeref leads the way in the breezy fleet racing off Lanzarote too. Image copyright Gilles Martin-Raget.

by Andy Rice

After James Spithill steering Team Ceeref to victory in all 10 match races of the Puerto Calero RC44 Gold Cup, on 12th December, owner Igor Lah continued that winning streak in fine style, taking three of the four fleet races, and finishing second in the other. Can anyone stop the Slovenian team?

The wind just never seems to stop in Lanzarote, not that anyone’s complaining in the RC44 fleet. Why would you, when you’ve got 20 knots of breeze against a stunning backdrop that looks like you’ve landed on another planet?

If there is any cause for complaint, it’s that Igor Lah and James Spithill have a stranglehold of this event, and they appear to be almost as dominant in the fleet racing as they proved to be in the match racing series. Off the start line of the first race today, Team Ceeref made a bad start and were forced to tack on to port as the fleet sailed away to the Lanzarote shore. However the Slovenian boat found a good right-hand windshift after a couple of minutes, Spithill called for a tack and Igor Lah’s crew turned a losing position into a lead, which they would hold to the finish.

Team Aqua were lying second at the first mark, had a poor downwind leg and dropped to fourth at the leeward mark. With the leading bunch going left up the final beat, Cameron Appleton liked Aqua’s angle on port tack on the seaward side of the course. Owner Chris Bake banged the corner and came right back into the fight, rounding just behind Artemis in third place at the final turning mark.

On the final run to the finish Artemis broke the gooseneck fitting on the mast, and they managed to nurse the boat across the line in third, having yielded second place to Team Aqua. It was an all-too-short outing for Artemis owner Torbjorn Tornqvist who was forced to retire from racing for the remainder of the day as the crew of the Swedish boat set about fixing the carbon gooseneck in time for tomorrow.

Although no other team could match Ceeref for consistency, everyone had their moment at the front at some point. Best of the rest was BMW ORACLE Racing, with Larry Ellison steering his boat to victory in race three, aided by new tactician Mark Mendelblatt. Russell Coutts, who had been Ellison’s tactician for the match racing, switched over to Banco Espirito Santo for the fleet racing. The Kiwi tactician found some good shifts on the shore side of the course but couldn’t fully unravel the mysteries of the shifty and gusty race track. Owner Patrick de Barros said there didn’t seem to be any way up the middle of the course. It was a matter of picking your side and throwing all your chips on one corner, and hoping that you’d picked the right one.

The combination of shifts and gusts made for an interesting time downwind. Islas Canarias Puerto Calero were competitive against the more experienced teams on the upwind legs, but poor crew work let them down on many of the offwind legs. They shredded four spinnakers in the course of the day, and owner Daniel Calero joked that he would be introducing corporal punishment to the crew tomorrow, hoping that the threat of the cane would stem the flood of boat handling errors.

Tomorrow the fleet racing contest continues with two windward/leeward races followed by the long distance race for the DHL Trophy.

They said:

Igor Lah, owner, Team Ceeref, after winning three of today’s four races: “We'd like to come again to Lanzarote! We made no mistakes, and everything was perfectly done, and then it was very simple. If everything works, and you have no technical problems, then life becomes easy. That's what we have been practising for all year. James tells me where to go and I go there. If you have simple instructions, it is much easier.”

Mark Mendelblatt, tactician, BMW ORACLE Racing: “Winning a race today, that felt really good, to break the run of losses in the match racing. It’s just going to be tough to beat the Ceeref guys. We've got to find a way to sail a little bit better, but overall we had fun today and sailed well. I've sailed with some of the guys but I've never sailed with Larry or BMW ORACLE. They left it up to me to call the tactics, and I made some good calls, and made some bad ones, but overall it went very well.”

Patrick de Barros, owner, Banco Espirito Santo, talking about a difficult day: “We had one or two races when we really up there, but we had a bad call on a tack at the weather mark, we got squeezed, we had to gybe out, and we lost the race there. It's very difficult to gain in these conditions. You either have to go full left or full right, it seems you really have to stay out of the middle of this race course. Russell makes the decisions, I just try to do my best at the wheel.”

James Spithill, tactician, Team Ceeref: “It was good fun, a lot of passing lanes, a lot of opportunities out there. It’s great sailing these things downwind. We had a couple of runs where we were getting 22 or 23 knots out of the boat. Just sensational.”

Cameron Appleton, tactician, Team Aqua, on the hazards of spinnaker handling: “A small tear can lead to a big tear. It's been a big day for spinnakers, and it's not going to stop after today!”

Daniel Calero, owner, Islas Canarias Puerto Calero, seeing the funny side of a difficult day: “I hate spinnakers, I always like to break them. Today we broke four spinnakers, and I'm not talking about little rips, I'm talking about four spinnakers, totally destroyed. The language on the boat was very friendly, very polite. ‘Excuse me, would you mind helping me take down this spinnaker please?’”

Daniel Calero, on how he plans to encourage the crew tomorrow: “I have a thin piece of wood [a cane] and I'm going to slap the crew on the backs of their hands. I think that should improve the crew work. If it doesn't, then at least I will feel better.”

Torbjorn Tornqvist, owner, Artemis, on his brief but enjoyable outing in race 1: “It was very good sailing, exciting. But I couldn’t say it feels like home yet [steering the RC44]. Far from home, in fact!”

Fleet-race, provisional results after four races:

(Name of team, helmsman, results, points)

1) Team Ceeref, Igor Lah, 1,1,2,1 - 5 points
2) BMW ORACLE Racing, Larry Ellison, 4,3,1,2 - 10 points
3) Team Aqua, Chris Bake, 2,2,4,4 - 12 points
4) Banco Espirito Santo, Patrick de Barros, 5,4,3,3 - 15 points
5) Islas Canarias Puerto Calero, Daniel Calero, 6,5,5,5 - 21 points
6) Artemis, Torbjorn Tornqvist, 3,7,7,7 - 24 points

RC44

Team Ceeref score a perfect 10 in the match racing


James Spithill steers Team Ceeref to victory in the RC44 match racing. Image copyright Nico Martinez.

by Andy Rice

James Spithill delivered another match racing master class 11th December, winning all five of his matches for the second day running in the Puerto Calero RC44 Gold Cup. This means that Igor Lah’s Team Ceeref win the 2008 Match Race Series by a dominant margin.

More wind and more drama on the Atlantic race course for the concluding day of match racing at the Puerto Calero RC44 Gold Cup. Before the start of racing, BMW ORACLE Racing broke the gooseneck fitting on their mast, preventing owner Larry Ellison from competing in today’s five heats.

The first big match of the day was between Banco Espirito Santo and Team Aqua, with Cameron Appleton bringing his customary aggressive pre-start tactics to bear against Mark Mendelblatt helming for the Portuguese team. Appleton trapped Mendelblatt in coffin corner, leading off the port end of the start although still finding himself with a fight on his hands from Mendelblatt. In the end, however, Aqua pulled clear and won their match.

Appleton also got the better of Dean Barker in the pre-start, just as he had in their match on the previous day. However Barker was unflustered by his early mistakes and kept Artemis in the match, rounding bow-to-stern with Team Aqua around the top mark. They went round the bottom mark overlapped, with Appleton claiming the inside but failing to round up quickly enough, according to the umpires who gave him a penalty.

With the wind blowing around 20 knots and the RC44s planing at more or less windspeed, Appleton felt there wouldn’t be time for him to complete his penalty just before the finish line, so instead he elected to gybe on the final upwind leg. Appleton hoped that he might just be able to keep Team Aqua’s nose in front, but the Swedish boat rolled over the top of the United Arab Emirates team and Barker stole the win back from his Kiwi rival.

While Mendelblatt had suffered at the hands of Appleton earlier in the day, the American helmsman got the better of James Spithill in the pre-start, relegating Team Ceeref to the unfamiliar position of being last off the start line. The Australian helmsman initiated a tacking duel against Banco Espirito Santo, trying to wriggle clear of Mendelblatt’s close cover. Half way up the beat, Spithill went for the duck, bearing away behind the Portuguese transom and breaking into clear air to the right of the race track. The two boats separated, and when they converged it was Igor Lah’s Slovenian crew who had found the better wind on the right. Spithill was back in control and his clean sheet remained intact.

Meanwhile in the other match of flight 9, Artemis was leading Daniel Calero’s local team on his chartered RC44, Islas Canarias Puerto Calero. The Spanish team’s lack of RC44 experience showed when they trawled their spinnaker in a poorly executed hoist. Helmsman José Maria Ponce rounded the boat up into the wind, as the crew fought to get the big blue fishing net back on board. Eventually one of the crew stripped down to his Speedos and dived into to free the halyard from the head of the wayward sail. Calero quipped that they had always meant to go trawling, as the fishing in this area is excellent, so he claimed.

Calero retired from that race with the ‘fishing’ incident, but the Spanish team got their act together for the final match against Banco Espirito Santo. The Portuguese crew led the locals all the way round the race track until the final hoist, when a small tear in the spinnaker resulted in the sail exploding just seconds after the final hoist of the day. The Puerto Calero team seized their moment, rolled over the top of the wounded Portuguese and won their first match on the water, to go with the bye which everyone earned against the absent BMW ORACLE today.

So it was a good day for the new team in the RC44 fleet, but an excellent one for Igor Lah, James Spithill and the whole Team Ceeref crew. They sailed a perfect day, winning the match racing event in Lanzarote and securing the 2008 match race season by an emphatic margin from BMW ORACLE Racing, who finished second in the year’s rankings.

Tomorrow the fleet racing contest begins, with three races scheduled.

They said :

Igor Lah, owner, Team Ceeref: “James proved that he's the best in this class. The whole team has worked hard all year. We try to practise a lot. Everybody works as one.”

Michele Ivaldi, tactician, Team Ceeref: “We've been match racing a long time. This crew is pretty strong. We can use few words to make a long plan. The way the crew is working on the boat and the way we're talking is very advanced. It's a quiet boat, especially when things go well, there's not much yelling needed. The same people have been sailing in position for more than a year and a half. Good crew work is the key, and winning is a big credit to everyone on the crew.”

Cameron Appleton, helmsman, Team Aqua: “We've sailed the boats the longest, and the class increased the length of the rudders recently, so now you can do a little bit more manoeuvring than you used to on the boats. We were trying to put the other guys off by being really confident with our boathandling in the pre-starts. It can work against you, but every time we race Deano there are plenty of fireworks.”

Dean Barker, helmsman, Artemis, looking forward to fleet racing: “Torbjorn [Tornquist, owner of Artemis] arrives in Lanzarote late tonight. He hasn't sailed on these boats in more than four or five knots of wind. It will be all on.”

Daniel Calero, owner, Islas Canarias Puerto Calero: “Banco Espirito Santo broke their spinnaker on the last downwind leg. We were lucky because the other day we were the boat breaking everything, but today it was good for us.” On trawling their spinnaker after a bad hoist: “That area is really good for fishing. The first two races were bad for us, so we said, ‘Let's fish a little bit and then go to the owner's dinner!’”

Mark Mendelblatt, helmsman, Banco Espirito Santo: “We controlled the Spanish all the way round but we ripped our chute on the last run. It had a bit of a tear as we hoisted and it blew up about 50 metres later. We tried to luff them on the way to the finish but they got over the top of us and they beat us. I'm enjoying these boats, and would have liked to do a better job for Patrick, but tomorrow it's calling tactics for a different team, BMW ORACLE. I want to do well for my team, but I'll be cheering for Patrick too.”

Match-race, final results after 10 flights:

(Name of team, helmsman, No of victories / defeats, points)

1) Team Ceeref, James Spithill, 10/0 - 10 points
2) Team Aqua, Cameron Appleton 7/3 - 7 points
3) Artemis, Dean Barker, 6/4 - 6 points
4) BMW ORACLE Racing, Larry Ellison, 3/7 - 3 points
5) Islas Canarias Puerto Calero, José Maria Ponce, 2/8 - 2 points
6) Team Banco Espirito Santo, Mark Mendelblatt, 2/8 - 2 point

RC44