Monday, 7 September 2009

WMRT: BlackMatch Racing King(s) of the Mountain(s) AND Both ISAF #1 and World Match Racing Tour Leaders


Adam Minoprio, Nick Blackman, Tom Powrie and David Swete with their winners cheque in St Moritz. Image copyright Loris von Siebenthal/myImage

by Anne Hinton

Last year in St Moritz it was Mathieu Richard who was crowned King of the Mountain. This year it is the turn of BlackMatch Racing - the team that finished level on points with Richard at the end of their first year on the Tour in 2008.

The achievements of BlackMatch Racing continue to be quite remarkable. In winning the 2009 St Moritz Match Race they have added the World Match Racing Tour leader position to their current ISAF #1 ranking for match racing. Truly top of the world, not just top of the mountain!


Adam Minoprio hunts down Torvar Mirsky in the finals of the St Moritz Match Race 2009. Image copyright Loris von Siebenthal/myImage

Switzerland is also BlackMatch Racing's second World Match Racing Tour event win of the year - a feat unmatched by another other team so far this year. They won the season's opening regatta in Marseille, France, in addition to the St Moritz Match Race.


BlackMatch Racing centre stage (winners of the 2009 St Moritz Match Race), flanked by Mirsky Racing Team on the right (runners up) and third placed Bahrain Team Pindar on the left. Image copyright Loris von Siebenthal/myImage

Many congratulations to this young Kiwi team who show lots of promise for the future.

World Match Racing Tour
BlackMatch Racing

RC44s: Waka Racing Team join the RC44s

by SailRaceWin

Phil Robertson's Waka Racing Team, from Auckland, which has recently been doing rather well match racing in the USA, assisted with the preparation and launch of a new RC44 in Portorose, Slovenia. They hope to be back racing on this in Portorose very soon, after the USA match racing committments have been completed.

Waka Racing
RC44

Apologies to SailRaceWin Readers

SailRaceWin apologises for the recent suspension in service. A full service will be resumed as soon as possible.

Sunday, 16 August 2009

Star Worlds 2009: Szabo and Peters Win


Szabo and Peters (USA) win the Star Worlds 2009. Image copyright Fried Elliott/www.friedbits.com

by Lynn Fitzpatrick

George Szabo and Rick Peters (USA) won the 2009 Star World Championship with a third place finish in the final race of the series. Lars Grael and Ronald Seifert (BRA) won the race by a country mile and the Junior team from Argentina, Alejo Rigoni and Juan Pablo Percossi were second in the race.

Szabo/Peters won the Star Worlds with an average score of six points for the five races in their scoreline. The American team started to the left of a group of contenders for this year's title and played the shifts in the breeze that swung right as it faded. They bore away on the run in sixth place. After they sorted out their sheets and the whisker pole they could look around for their competition. They weren't trailing right behind. They weren't even in sight. Szabo/Peters merely had to stay clean for the rest of the race. Instead, they bettered their score and pulled into third place by the second windward mark.

Peters, who is always one for great lines said of their performance for the day and the week, "The other guys just haven't been to Varberg International Speedway enough. We were 54th the first day and we went the same way every day. We didn't change a thing."

As Szabo peeled off his spray top and guzzled down some water on the way back into the harbor, the accomplishment sunk in. Three weeks after he was born his parents had him in a Star boat and he started steering the boat when he was 16 years old. The Quantum sailmaker form San Diego said, "I've looked at all of the names on that trophy over the years and thought, 'how am I ever going to do that?'"

The team did not change their strategy over the week, nor did they change their sails. "Z4, P2," said Szabo. "Some people find their grove with other sails, but they don't find it across all wind conditions. We sailed with the same sails for the entire regatta and it worked just fine."

Lars Schmidt Grael and Ronald Seifert sailed as if they were leading everyone down to the 2010 Star World Championship in Rio de Janeiro. Talented in light air, Grael steered Seifert, with whom he has been sailing for only a few weeks, to a victory the likes of which are rarely seen. They were well over two minutes ahead of the young Argentineans, who clinched the Junior Champion title with their second place finish for the day.

Many of those who were in contention for the regatta sailed their discard race today. Peters had another message for them, "I can't believe they sailed themselves out of the race. They didn't go to last night's trophy presentation and they go what they deserve. I'll give them a hug anyway." Anticipating that all of the races for the World Championship would have been completed yesterday, VSS held a wonderful trophy presentation and dinner last night in which those collecting trophies also collected a lot of hugs from all of the club's junior volunteers who were on stage to present the awards.Anders Ekström, who had the week of his life sailing with Pelle Petterson, was the first to say how elated he was that Rick Peters won the Star World Championship. "I'm really excited for Rick. He deserves it. He has spent so many years driving Star boats around the world for everyone and has done such a great job at helping to develop his fleet. It's about time. Of course, I'm happy for George too. It has been a long time in coming for both of them."

Hamish Pepper and Craig Monk (NZL) sailed their discard in the final race and finished the regatta seven points behind Szabo/Peters. By winning today's race, Grael/Seifert moved into third place on a countback, tied with Alexander Schlonski and Firthjof Kleen (GER). "It's a good day for SDYC," said Andrew Campbell (USA), who like Szabo sails out of San Diego Yacht Club. Campbell sailed the regatta with Magnus Liljedahl. Campbell/Liljedahl were fifth for the series. Freddy Lööf and Johan Tillander (SWE), local favorites finished a respectable 6th and will have plenty of opportunities to go after Lööf's third Star World Championship title once again.

Alejo Rigoni and Juan Pablo Percossi (ARG) were the top Junior team in the regatta and finished 9th. Andy Macdonald and Brian Fatih (USA), the top Masters, placed 14th; one point ahead of Mats Johansson and Leif Möller (SWE). Ingvar Krook and Henrik Hasselgren (SWE) topped the five other Grand Master teams. Pelle Petterson and Anders Ekström (SWE) beat out Sune Carlsson and Dan Anders Carlsson (SWE) for the Exalted Grand Masters title.

Results after 6 races and one discard in the six race regatta. The regatta concluded on August 8, 2009.

1. Szabo/Peters (USA) - (54) 1, 3, 20, 3, 3 - 30
2. Pepper/ Monk (NZL) - (11) , 9, 1, 11, 5, (25) - 37
3. Grael/Seifert (BRA) - (30), 6, 14, 14, 12, 1 - 47
4. Schlonski/Kleen (GER) - 9, 17, 11, 5, (32), 5 - 47
5. Campbell/ Liljedahl (USA) - (14) 14, 4, 8, 8, (37) - 48
6. Loof/ Tillander (SWE) - 2, 5, 15, (23) 7, (54) - 52
7. Kusznierewicz/Zycki (POL) - 1, 12, (50), 18, 6, 21 - 58
8. Marazzi/De Maria (SUI) - 3, 3, (35), 1, 20, 35 - 62
9. Rigoni/Percossi (ARG) - 16, 16, (38), 15, 16, 2 - 65
10. Polgar/Kroeger (GER) - (31), 22, 7, 4, 2, 31 - 66

Star Worlds

Monday, 10 August 2009

EUROSAF European Match Racing Championships: Light winds force a late start in Middlefart


Racing in the EUROSAF European Match Racing Championships, Denmark. Image copyright Mick Anderson.

by Jess Anderson

Patience is a virtue, as any sailor knows, and as the 160 competitors were reminded as they tried to start the EUROSAF European Match Racing Championship 2009 in Denmark today.

It was hot and sunny in Middelfart, but wind was in very short supply and the race officers for the two courses had to postpone racing for nearly six hours before a Force 1-2 arrived. Fortunately the DS37 Match Racers, being used by the 16 men’s teams, and the “match 28” keelboats being used by the 16 women’s teams don’t require much wind to get them moving.

If you were going to sail aggressively in the pre-start, you had to do so without losing too much of your own momentum, as accelerating these boats from a standing start takes time, particularly when there is barely enough wind to race.


Slow going in Denmark. Image copyright Mick Anderson.

When the teams weren’t racing, they could relax by the shore, just a few metres from the start line of the men’s course. So there was plenty to see and to learn from even when the sailors weren’t racing. Having only recently returned to match racing after a two-year break, Maxim Toranov and his Russian team were watching the other races with interest. As part-time sailors doing it for fun, they were taking notes, trying to soak up as much knowledge and experience from the other teams, not least Philippe Presti’s French crew, the World No.8th ranked team who beat them in their match.

“We are learning as quickly as possible,” said Toranov. “This is only our third regatta this year, but we have been preparing for this regatta for two months.” While the Russians were using this as a learning exercise, both when racing and spectating, the French were to be found playing a tournament of table football right next to the water’s edge. It didn’t seem to do Presti’s team any harm, playing football rather than watching sailing. However there were some bruised egos from the football, with Presti’s young pitman Clement Salzes admitting : “The older guys are better at table football than the younger ones.”

Karlo Hmeljek sails on Jure Orel’s Slovenian team, who won both of their races today. Like the French, Hmeljek prefers to tune out between heats. “It’s not easy to have a late race when you’ve not been racing for a few hours. For me it’s best to try not to think too much about other matches, until it’s time to go and you switch into race mode. It’s a shame about the wind today, but that’s not the organisation’s fault. That’s sailing. Everything else is working perfectly, the boats are in good condition, the race committee is doing a good job, and the hospitality from the Danish is excellent.” Yesterday evening Hmeljek went for a run in the woods that surround the castle, Hindsgavl Slot, where most of the competitors and organisers are staying. “I got lost in the woods, but it was a nice way to get lost, and in the end I found the way back, so no problem.”

The beautiful, woodland surroundings are slightly more familiar to Susanne Ward, one of the Danish skippers competing here. “I’m not from around here, but it’s still nice to be this close to home,” said the four-time Olympian. “We’ve been here before, we know the boats, it’s good fun.” Whether she is thinking of going to the Olympic Games a fifth time she would not say though. “We’re just focusing on this regatta, not the Games. A gold here in Middelfart would be great. I think anyone can win it in these conditions. We had two good races, and won both of them. Our chances are as good as anyone else’s.”

Rita Goncalves and her Portuguese crew have never been to the Olympics. They all have full-time jobs in Lisbon, but they still take their racing seriously. Today they won both of their heats, but the full-time civil engineer is beginning to notice the rise in standard in women’s match racing since the announcement last November that it was to be the new Olympic sailing discipline. “It is getting more difficult, and we changed crew this year, so this is our first year sailing together as a team. But we are getting better and we had a good day today.”

EUROSAF European Match Racing Championships

Star Worlds 2009: A Pressure Cooker for Sailors and Committee Alike

by Lynn Fitzpatrick

H.P. Hylander was under more pressure today than each of the six teams that have a shot at winning the 2009 Star World Championship. There were zephyrs on the water in the morning when the Star fleet left the harbor and they danced around for hours.

Hylander, the PRO and Regatta Chairman, stood on the Race Committee boat with a Bluetooth phone in his ear, a radio in his hand, binoculars and a hockey puck draped around his neck. He had lots of helpers aboard the RC boat and wind scouts two miles to the south and to the west; the logical directions from which the wind would fill.

Sailors began to shed their neoprene as they baked in the hot Swedish sun.

Occasionally, Hylander's dialogue with his local weather scouts was broken up by calls to meteorologists.

Powerboats cut their engines and drifted.

Sailors took turns snoozing. No cloud formations took shape on any horizon.

When there was wind enough in the starting areas for the Stars to move, Hylander would hail the weather mark boat. Nothing.

Sailors started to hedge their bets and drift toward the Varberg shoreline.

Nothing.

One by one sails were taken down and rolled on decks.

Nothing.

Finally at 1600 the sailors were sent home for the day.

Said Exalted Grand Master, Pelle Petterson, when the racing was cancelled for the day, "This is wonderful. I get to sail a Star for another day."

A prize giving dinner is scheduled for 18:30 this evening and the final race of the 2009 Star World Championship will be sailed on Saturday or Sunday, whenever Hylander is satisfied that the 86-boat fleet can sail a fair race.

Results after 5 races and one discard in the six race regatta. Five races constitute a series. The race scheduled for Friday, August 7, 2009 was not sailed due to lack of wind. The race is scheduled to be sailed on Saturday or Sunday, the reserve days for the regatta.

1. Pepper/ Monk (NZL) - (11) , 9, 1, 11, 5 - 26
2. Szabo/Peters (USA) - (54) 1, 3, 20, 3 - 27
3. Marazzi/De Maria (SUI) - 3, 3, (35), 1, 20 - 27
4. Loof/ Tillander (SWE) - 2, 5, 15, (23) 7 - 29
5. Campbell/ Liljedahl (USA) - (14) 14, 4, 8, 8 - 34
6. Polgar/Kroeger (GER) - (31), 22, 7, 4, 2 - 35
7. Kusznierewicz/Zycki (POL) - 1, 12, (50), 18, 6 - 37
8. Mendelblatt/Strube (USA) - 8, 4, 2, 26, (35) - 40
9. Schlonski/Kleen (GER) - 9, 17, 11, 5, (32) - 42
10. Grael/Seifert (BRA) - (30), 6, 14, 14, 12 - 46

Star Worlds

Cowes Week: Light Airs on Day Six, Thursday



by Mary Scott-Jackson

Day six of Cowes Week saw mixed conditions that provided challenging racing across the 37 classes, despite an unpromising weather forecast.

"It's going to be another tricky day," said regatta CEO Stuart Quarrie as competitors were getting ready to go afloat.

The front that killed the wind on Wednesday afternoon was forecast to remain almost stationary over the race area, with sporadic shower activity moving erratically north-eastwards along the line of the front. Overnight this brought spectacular thunderstorms, with torrential rain in the early hours of the morning, which cleared before dawn to reveal a fresher day with a north-north-westerly wind of 7-9 knots, enabling starts to get away on schedule.

However, the forecast for the rest of the day was less promising. If the skies cleared up then there was a chance of some sea breeze activity in the afternoon, but this would be preceded by a calm period. On the other hand if the front produced more showers, these were again likely to kill the wind.

By 09:00 the weather radar was already showing a band of scattered showers to the south-west of the race area and an hour later these had merged and strengthened into a number of heavy downpours. But the light north-westerly was still holding firm in the central Solent.

As the start in sequence got underway the wind speed stayed up, but clicked further round towards the north, at 350 degrees. In the Daring class, Giles Peckham and Milo Carver's Dauntless has an almost unassailable lead, but Anthony Balme's Dynamite and Messrs Bilbo, Marwood and Miller's Audax have been enjoying a close battle for second place and were both on 23 points.

Starting going east, with the last of the flood tide pushing the fleet over the line, the class played safe, with even the front-runners comfortably behind the line. Kim Orchard's Dancer was closest to the line at the gun, but was unable to accelerate fast enough to match the speed of the boats coming in from behind. Division Belle led away from the line, pulling two lengths ahead of Dauntless, with Audax close behind in third. But the first leg saw plenty of place changing, and Audax was soon taken by Mike Fox's Diamond to leeward and James Tew's Darius to windward.

A number of Darings tried kites although some of these clearly figured it was a bad idea and dropped them almost immediately, although three boats held on to them as the fleet headed east towards their first mark, Sunsail Events. At the finish, Division Belle took her first win of the week, ahead of Dauntless and David Gower's Dolphin.


Victory class: Zest (Z76, Kim Taylor), Zelia (Z54, Geoff Dixon) and Simba (Z29, Duncan Evans)

Starting in the sun
By 1045 there were already showers at the Needles and the wind had backed to the north-north-east in the western-most part of the Solent. In the central Solent its strength was only marginally down, at 6-8 knots, with the direction remaining consistent, and the temperature rising as the sun broke through the clouds.
Although the Darings had struggled with their conventional spinnakers, it was a different story when the 1720s started 10 minutes later. Michael Wilson's Yknot was best-placed for the start, hoisting her huge masthead asymmetric moments before the gun. Wilson's boat flew away from the pack to take an early lead of nearly 10 boat lengths.

The two boats carrying Inflexion branding were next away from the line, with both boats hoisting as quickly as possible. The class leader after five races, Neil Angel's All Talk was lying seventh two minutes into the race, but played the puffs skilfully to pass James Flynn's Crescendo with an impressive speed advantage. It was also a bad start to the day for young skipper Richard Clay and his team on Finn M'Coul, who were well back from the front. This order was not, however, reflected at the end of the three-hour race, when the familiar trio of All Talk, Yknot and Finn M'Coul took the top three places.

By 11:30 the wind had dropped further and veered to 310 degrees. At the same time, the tide had started to run to the west so when the Sonars started, the fleet struggled to fill their spinnakers and were slow to clear the line.

The front of the Sunbeam fleet has seen one of the regatta's most intense battles develop as the week has progressed. After five races Roger Wicken's Danny and Tim Hill's Query were tied on points at the front of the class. Today most of the fleet was racing to the line well before the start, with the tide sweeping west and a relentless hole in the breeze there was barely enough wind to make ground against it.
Graham Colbourne and Bill Dickson's Honey started nearest the line, with their kite just filling with wind at the gun. Danny was next, but Query was lying further back in the pack - a mistake that may cost dearly in the overall results.

As the fleet made its way to the east, Honey split away from the other Sunbeams heading closer inshore and looking to be making good progress. But it was Jonathan Money's Penny that took her first win of the week, while Wickens took second to consolidate his overall lead.


Seaview Mermaids Sirena and Miranda. Supplied image.

Tide beats wind
The Swallow fleet had struggled valiantly to clear the line after their start - the back markers were only a few lengths clear five minutes after the start - Principal Race Officer of the White Group, Ian Lallow decided to postpone the Redwing start. These Charles Nicholson design keelboats are only allowed 200 square fleet of sail, so don't carry spinnakers.

Initially Lallow had intended to re-set the line, with classes starting to the west. But within 10 minutes of the AP breaking out, the wind had freshened by a couple of knots and by 12:20 it was back up to 7-8 knots from 325 degrees.

The breeze reduced for Squib's start, 20 minutes after the Redwings, which prompted a postponement for the Seaview Mermaids and subsequent classes, as Squibs hadn't cleared the line.

When the 80 boats in the XOD class started at 13:25, different elements of the fleet could be seen moving in different directions - those with a clear wind were moving ahead steadily, but others were being swept backwards by the tide, and it took more than seven minutes for the bulk of the fleet to clear the line.

Wind fights back
By 14:30 the front had become very active, but fortuitously at this time was centred just to the west of Cowes, with the town and central Solent remaining dry and wind keeping up, with occasional stronger gusts reaching up to 15 knots.

IRC Class 1 got away from the Black Group committee vessel in Thorness Bay on schedule at 11:00 in a light north-easterly wind, but subsequent starts were postponed for over an hour. "Just before our start it went very light, and swung 90 degrees into the north-west," explained Peter Scholfield of SeaTrack in IRC Class 3. Once it did fill in, there was a good sailing wind of 10-12 knots from the north-west, but it was very shifty."


IRC Class 2 and Daring. Supplied image.

In contrast, Black Group starts got away off the RYS line on schedule. In IRC Class 2 on the RYS line, Stewart Hawthorn's new Santa Cruz 37 was closest to the line at the start, and one of few boats to be hoisting a kite at this stage. Unfortunately her asymmetric went up with a giant twist, allowing Andy Middleton's First 47.7 Caspian Services to get away first.

John and Jill Patterson's J/122 Panacea was first of the front runners to hoist and accelerated quickly, but Michael Bartholomew's King 40 Tokoloshe was able to pull ahead into a clear lead. These two led the fleet past East Cowes on the way to West Ryde Middle at the start of a short 13.6-mile course in the East Solent.

A few minutes after the start, the only front-runner under white sails was Richard Loftus' big Swan 65 ketch Desperado, with the 32-tonne yacht maintaining a very respectable turn of speed in the light conditions.

At the finish Bernard Gouy's Ker 39 Inis Mor, was first across the line in a time just inside two hours five minutes, three seconds before the Swallow and Flying 15 fleets started on the same line. Tokoloshe was next to finish 50 seconds later, to win on corrected time by 27 seconds ahead of Gouy, with Panacea third on handicap, a further minute behind.

Cowes Week