Please select your home edition
Edition
March to end August 2024 affiliate link
Product Feature
RS Feva
RS Feva

World Match Racing Tour Fremantle - Day 3

by World Match Racing Tour 4 Mar 2016 11:43 GMT 2-7 March 2016

Day 3 of the World Match Racing Tour Fremantle, and every day the sailors are gaining more confidence competing in the strong Western Australian breeze. Today Danish skipper Nicolai Sehested used some unusual techniques to charge into the lead in two of his three races and close the gap on reigning Match Racing World Champion Ian Williams.

After a Pro-Am racing session this morning under typically bright, blue skies, the aim was to complete the fleet racing phase of the competition. The five teams in Group A raced in the lightest breezes of the regatta on day one, but today they raced in the strongest. Williams had dominated in the lighter winds, taking all three races in his first session. Today however he struggled, due partly to problems with his gennaker furling system which was causing the big headsail to unfurl at inopportune moments. "Some exciting moments," said the British skipper who scored finishes of 5,3,3 in the five-boat group. "We had a lot of issues but I think we'll be able to brush off today. It's not much to do with tactics when it's that strong, keeping the boat in good shape around the course is the main thing."

Williams clings on to his lead in Group A, although two teams closed the gap to the leader, Sehested winning two races and local Perth sailor Steve Thomas winning the other. Thomas has a good pedigree in skiff racing, being a former 29er World Champion and an Olympic campaigner in the 49er. He is learning quickly in the M32 catamaran, whose lightweight 500kg construction makes it very fast to accelerate but also requires nerves of steel when the boats are converging on each other on the very confined race course in Bathers Bay The action takes place just metres from the Fremantle shore lined with spectators and sunbathers soaking up the Australian sunshine and the excitement of watching 20 of the world's best teams working at their limits.

The strong wind gave the Pro-Am guests an incredible ride in the morning, and the strengthening breeze and rising waves made the afternoon session of fleet racing highly entertaining for the crowds, but a little too windy for the schedule to be completed today. The M32s have been hitting close to 25 knots boatspeed with one reef in the mainsail, and there is an option to depower further to two reefs. This might make the boat more manageable but it also means the gennaker can't be used, and this is an option most of the sailors would prefer to avoid. "With two reefs the boat would be fine upwind," said round-the-world sailor Yann Guichard from France. "But downwind could be boring, just sailing slowly in a straight line. It's not what this type of racing should be about. These boats are fantastic, they are built for speed and we want to give the spectators something to enjoy."

Watching the boats charging downwind this afternoon was heart-in-mouth stuff. Sehested was pulling involuntary 'wheelies' on his M32 with the familiar national boxing kangaroo logo, the logo that powered the winged-wonder Australia II to America's Cup victory in 1983. Today Sehested was doing his own impression of a bouncing kangaroo down the bumpy race track; with both curved foils pushed fully down, the Danish M32 launched out of the water for a heart-stopping moment before crashing back into the water and charging forwards until the next wheelie. The leaping looked out of control, but somehow the young Dane managed to tame his kangaroo safely to the bottom of the course, while others decided to sail more conventionally with just one foil down – not as fast but much more stable.

Such are the kind of risk/reward scenarios that the M32 sailors face moment by moment in this high-octane, short-course racing. It's all a far cry from the more sedate keelboat racing of past years. The sailing is both mentally and physically exhausting, and also very exhilarating.

Delays to the race schedule this afternoon forced the race committee to cancel the remaining qualifying race of Group A and select the the top four teams from each of the qualifying groups to advance to the final 16. From tomorrow, the competition begins again for the start of the knockout stages, the boat-on-boat match racing combat.

Qualifying Results:

Group A Qualifiers
Ian Williams, GBR (GAC Pindar)
Nicola Sehested, DEN (Trefor Match Racing)
Steven Thomas, AUS (Royal Perth YC)
Evan Walker, AUS (KA Match, CYCA)

Group B Qualifiers
Taylor Canfield, ISV (US One)
Mattias Rahm, SWE (Rahm Racing)
Murray Jones, AUS (Full Bants Racing)
Chris Steele, NZL (36 Below Racing)

Group C Qualifiers
Phil Robertson, NZL (Waka Racing)
Hans Wallen, SWE (Wallen Racing)
Yann Guichard, FR (Spindrift Racing)
Matt Jerwood, AUS (Redline Racing)

Group D Qualifiers
Niklas Dackhammer, SWE (Dackhammer Racing)
Keith Swinton, AUS (Black Swan Racing)
Eric Monnin, SUI (Albert Riele Swiss Team)
Brett Burville, AUS (Edge Racing Team NYC/JBSC)

For results and updates, and LIVE coverage daily from 1400 (West Australia time) visit www.wmrt.com

Related Articles

2024 World Match Racing Tour season kicks off
The Ficker Cup Regatta racing starts Friday The 2024 World Match Racing Tour kicks off this week in Long Beach, California with 17 teams and over 100 of the world's top match racing sailors competing across back-to-back events. Posted on 17 Apr
Bermuda Gold Cup & Women's event doubleheader
A new Women's World Match Racing Tour Event will be held concurrently The Royal Bermuda Yacht Club (RBYC) is delighted to announce the 72nd edition of the Bermuda Gold Cup, a world championship stage of the World Match Racing Tour, to be held October 28 to November 3, 2024, on Hamilton Harbour. Posted on 8 Mar
WMRT announces 2024 championship season
24th consecutive year of the World Match Racing Tour will have 15 events The World Match Racing Tour (WMRT) today announced its 2024 championship season with a fifteen-event schedule across ten countries, concluding at the WMRT Final Shenzhen Baoan, China in December. Posted on 14 Feb
2023 World Match Racing Tour Final overall
Britain's Ian Williams clinches his seventh title Britain's Ian Williams has clinched his seventh Match Racing World Championship title with his Chinaone.Ningbo team of Jon Gundersen, Richard Sydenham, and Gerrard Mitchell. Posted on 17 Dec 2023
2023 World Match Racing Tour Final day 4
Action and upsets determine final four, Thomson makes history Action-packed and filled with unexpected turns, day four of the 2023 WMRT Final in Shenzhen, China saw the emergence of the final four. Posted on 16 Dec 2023
2023 World Match Racing Tour Final day 3
Leaders emerge in Shenzhen, China The third day of the 2023 WMRT Final in Shenzhen, China, turned into a stunning day for sailing despite a short postponement in the morning. Posted on 15 Dec 2023
2023 World Match Racing Tour Final day 2
No room for error in Shenzhen, China The second day of the 2023 WMRT Final in Shenzhen, China, carried a recurring theme of challenging light wind conditions and a slim margin for error. The start was delayed with a postponement due to light winds until the breeze filled in. Posted on 14 Dec 2023
2023 World Match Racing Tour Final day 1
Tactical opening day in Shenzhen The World Match Racing Tour kicked off its highly anticipated Shenzhen Baoan Final as the top twelve match racing teams from nine countries gathered in the Baoan District of Shenzhen, where they were met with a mix of conditions that tested their skills. Posted on 13 Dec 2023
Anticipation builds for WMRT Final in Shenzhen
The stakes are high as the winner will be crowned 2023 Match Racing World Champion With teams taking to the water for their official practice day, the stage is set for the 2023 World Match Racing Tour Final in Shenzhen, China. Posted on 12 Dec 2023
World Match Racing Tour Final preview
Top teams head to Shenzhen this December hoping for USD 200,000 prize Twelve of the world's best match racing skippers from nine countries head to the City of Shenzhen, China next month for the final event of the 2023 World Match Racing Tour. Posted on 24 Nov 2023