THE
20, ST. JAMES’S PLACE,
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MeesPierson Yachting IRC
Championship 2004
DAY 1
An
impressive international fleet of sixty-six boats racing in four classes
enjoyed a great days racing today on the first of three days of the Mees Pierson Yachting IRC Championship, organised by the Royal Ocean Racing Club
The combination of a classic
north-westerly and a
The unstable north-westerly airstream with dramatic
and persistent wind-shifts made it a race day to remember in which only the
most skilful tacticians could hope for any sort of consistency.
The event was being closely scrutinised
by the RYA selectors for the GBR teams for the forthcoming Rolex Commodores’
Cup. The event also being used by the Irish team taking an early look at the
GBR hopefuls for the same event.
Race 1:
The first race started on a leeward
going tide on an initial wind of 330° that backed to 300° by the end of the
race.
In IRC0, Nick Hartshorn’s
Ker 11.3 El Gringo took an early lead
over Adam Gosling’s First 44.7 Yes! in IRC0 at the first
windward mark and held this position to the finish. By the end of the race, one
of the favourites for selection, Bear of Britain - who are at present top boat in the inshore trials - had passed
them both to take line honours but remained in 3rd on corrected
time. The new Ker 39, Flying Glove
sailed by Colm Barrington – part of the Irish Rolex Commodores’ Cup team -
finished in 4th position.
In IRC1 more Rolex Commodores’ Cup
hopefuls were battling it out for a place on the team - Jerry Otter’s Exabyte 2 took line honours but
took 2nd place on corrected time. Racing was close for the top boats
in the class and Andrew Pearce’s IX40 Magnum II finished close
enough to Exabyte 2 to take 1st
place on corrected time with Nick Jones’ Tarka
in 3rd place. Robert Gateshill’s
Prima 38 Bare Knuckles took 4th position.
RORC ex-Commodore Peter Rutter’s Elan 37 Quokka
is also hoping for a place in the GBR team. Competing in IRC2, she performed
well, taking line honours and winning on corrected time ahead of the second
Irish Rolex Commodores’ Cup team boat the Ker 32– Voodoo
Chile - raced by Eamon Crosbie.
Jonathan & Lisa Goring on Jeronimo
took 3rd place followed by Glide-X, an X332 sailed by
Ian Dawson.
IRC3 also had close racing as Frenchman
Nicholas de la Fourniere’s E312 Exile
took 2nd place in IRC2 beaten by White Mischief, Andy
Hind and Mark Harris’ Hanse 291. The oldest boat in
the fleet Whooper a 1939 Laurent Giles skippered by Italian
sailor Giovanni Belgrano placed third on corrected time in the first race of
the day.
Race 2:
By the afternoon the wind had picked up
to a more challenging 20-22 knots and backed to approximately 310°, still with
dramatic windshifts. There was a significant windward
going tide, but the fleet showed great skill in allowing for this with some
excellent and competitive starts – apart from an unlucky few who incurred OCS
penalties.
In IRC0, Bear of Britain
took line honours once again and was also 1st on corrected time. Flirt
was nearly 5 minutes behind them giving them 3rd place. Colm
Barrington’s Flying Glove finished some 9 minutes later, but
moved up to 2nd position on corrected time, with Nick Hartshorn’s El Gringo in 4th
place.
In IRC1, Bare Knuckles took
1st place over Magnum II, followed by Peter
Morton’s Salvo and Jerry Otter’s Exabyte
2. Donald Sharp and Kathleen McCormac had
travelled the furthest to attend the Championship, sailing their Seaquest 36 Tundra all the way from her base in
In IRC 2, it was Paul Jones sailing his
Elan 40 Passion who was first across
the line and went on to take 1st place in class. Close racing
between Quokka and Voodoo Chile resulted in Quokka
taking 2nd place after beating Voodoo Chile across the
line by only 9 seconds.
White Mischief remained ahead
of the fleet in IRC3 and Whooper beat Exile for 2nd
place. Sareema Robert
McLeod’s Fulmar followed closely behind.
Race3:
For the 3rd race, the wind
was still averaging 310°, but the tide was beginning to slacken, and had ceased
to run by the end of the starting sequence.
Bear of Britain won their
second race of the day in the final race, followed by Flirt and Flying
Glove. After three races and a good day on the water, Bear
remained at the top of the leaders board in Class IRC
Super Zero and Zero, with Flying Glove in 2nd place
followed by El Gringo, who had performed extremely well amongst
the big boats.
In IRC1, there was a general recall at the first attempt. Flag Zulu was flown
for the 2nd attempt and the race restarted cleanly with now very
cautious fleet taking nearly 30 seconds for the first boat to cross the start
line. Once again a starboard tack was favoured. Maverick 2 ended
up crossing the line in 1st place in race 3 followed by Magnum
II and Salvo. However, on corrected time Magnum II
was in 1st place after three races followed by Bare Knuckles.
A clear start for IRC2 and Capitali$m, Tim Harrington’s HOD35 won the
third race after an 8th and 7th place in the first two
races of the day. Jeronimo and Civils with Flair, Glide-X
and Voodoo Chile followed closely behind. Quokka and Voodoo
In IRC3,Exile
took line honours and 2nd place on corrected time. However, White
Mischief after two wins today and a 4th in the final race
remained in top position with Whooper in 3rd and Software
Mistress in 4th place.
There will be a prizegiving
for the first two days races at the Royal Yacht Squadron Pavilion tomorrow
evening.
Full results available on: http://rorc.org/raceresults04/index.php
Overall class results after 3 races – Day 1:
IRC Super Zero + Zero:
1.
Bear of
2.
Flying Glove – Ker 39 – Colm
Barrington
3.
El Gringo – Ker 11.3 – Nick
Hartshorn
4.
Flirt –
5.
Yes! – First 44.7 – Adam Gosling
IRC1:
1.
Magnum – IMX40 – Andrew Pearce
2.
Bare Knuckles – Prima 38 – Robert Gateshill
3.
Exabyte 2 – IMX 40 –
Jerry Otter
4.
Salvo –
5.
Tundra – Seaquest
– Sharp & McCormac
IRC2:
1.
Jeronimo – J109 –
Jonathan & Lisa Goring
2.
Quokka – Elan 37 – Peter Rutter
3.
Voodoo
4.
Civils with Flair – Elan 37 – Jim Macgregor
5.
Passion – Elan 40 – Paul Jones
IRC3:
1.
White Mischief – Hanse 291 – Andy
Hind & Mark Harris
2.
Exile – X312 – Nicholas de la Fourniere
3.
Whooper – One off – Giovanni Belgrano
4.
Software Mistress – Sigma 362 – Ian Maclean
5.
Sareema - Fulmar – Robert McLeod