Please select your home edition
Edition
Rooster 2023 - LEADERBOARD

Fireball Frostbite Series 1 Round 5 at Dun Laoghaire Motor Yacht Club

by Cormac Bradley 5 Dec 2016 16:59 GMT 4 December 2016
Hermine O'Keefe (L) and Louise McKenna (R) respond to receiving their Dun Laoghaire Fireball Frostbite mugs © Frank Miller

Olympians join the fray.......but Clancys win the day!

While the forecast on XCWeather had looked good from the late part of Friday afternoon through to Sunday morning, the reality on the water was that it didn't deliver. Instead of a healthy 14 – 19 knots of South-Easterly, we got less. While the bulk of the first race offered trapezing conditions upwind and off-wind in the harder puffs, the second race was characterised by a breeze that started to fade.

After the five-lapper of last Sunday (27th), the Race Committee reverted to type – based on an online poll – and gave us two three-lap trapezoid races. The South-Easterly part of the forecast was "about right" and saw the committee boat just outside the approach to the marina, a weather mark up towards the East Pier wall, No.2 just inside the end of the East Pier, No.3 inside the end of the West Pier and No.4 about 50/60m astern of the committee boat. Fireball numbers were down marginally from last week's high, with a number of notable absentees, but at least one of those loaned out his boat to two of our Olympians. Phil Lawton and Ger Owens (470) sailed 15061 in the absence of Noel Butler and Stephen Oram, but with Phil helming.

The early starts of the PY and Laser fleets suggested that the tactic would be to go left initially off the line and then tack onto port to take a long hitch up the middle of the harbour. The Clancys (14807) didn't appear to fancy that as they were the first to go off on port and it paid dividends as they rounded the weather mark first and like Butler & Oram do on most Sundays, they sailed in their own wind until quite late on in the race. Behind them Louise McKenna & Hermine O'Keeffe (14691) backed up all the recent talk of their regular season accomplishments by rounding in second place in close company with Neil Colin & Margaret Casey (14775), followed by Frank Miller & Grattan Donnelly (14713), Lawton & Owens, Alistair Court & Cormac Bradley (14706), Mary Chambers & Brenda McGuire (14865) and Peter & Michael Keegan (14676).

While the beats would prove to be "tricky" all afternoon, the legs between 1 and 2 and 2 and 3 were similar. Possibly as a consequence of being parallel to the pier wall, the wind was playing fun and games with those trying to fly spinnakers – ranging from almost too tight to fly, to powering off in the gusts. Contrary to Adam Bower's best advice, spinnaker poles were tight against the forestay in many instances.

At mark 3 the decision was whether to gybe or not. And there were no clear indicators! On the second and third lap of the first race, this correspondent and Alistair Court lost places by gybing immediately, only to see those outside them go past. Yet, in the first lap of the second race, the reverse happened when an early gybe allowed Court & Bradley to ghost past the first and second boats who had gone wide. 3 to 4 was an easier spinnaker leg.

On the second beat McKenna was reeled back in by the chasing pack which now consisted of Lawton, Colin and Court and while Court had closed the gap on the two boats ahead of him on the beat, he scored again on the top reach when he caught up to McKenna as well. Colin got further ahead by gybing to go "inside the trapezoid", Court held a straight line course to Mark 3, but Lawton and McKenna went wide to the harbour mouth and sailed around Court to have the sequence at the bottom Mark as Clancy, Colin, Lawton, McKenna, Court, Miller, Chambers, Keegan. Lawton then stepped up a gear on the last lap to dispense with the chasing pack and to close significantly on the Clancys who hadn't seen a Fireball at close quarters since the start. While the Olympian got closer, he didn't get quite close enough.

The Race Committee swung the course northwards for the second race and the hope was that the varied conditions at the top of the course might improve. However, with hindsight, it appeared that 2 – 3 was still being influenced by its proximity to the wall and that leg didn't evolve into a more comfortable 3-sailer.

The start was a scramble at the pin with Clancys trying to command the pin but being over the line in their attempt. There may have been at least one other OCS at that end but the principle culprit was Court and Bradley who broke the line in the minute before the start signal and didn't comply with the consequent "round the end" penalty. They sailed off with the X flag flying convinced that the debacle was at the pin. Team Clancy did go back and found themselves in the polar opposite to the first race – fighting their way back through the fleet.

The "rabbit status" thus fell to the ladies, Louise & Hermine who rounded ahead of the Olympians and Court & Bradley who felt that at last they had got a beat right. Their situation improved further when having gybed immediately at 2, they went into the lead when McKenna and Lawton went off towards the harbour mouth. However, by the approach to 3, the latter two had gybed back, set a course inside Court & Bradley and all three rounded 3 overlapped with Court on the outside. That was as good as it got for Court and Bradley who eventually found themselves fighting off the Keegans for 2nd last place after Chambers & McGuire had passed them out. Chambers & McGuire then went behind when someone illegally slammed the door shut on a mark rounding with Chambers adamant that she had an inside overlap.

Team Clancy progressively worked their way through the fleet and Lawton & Owens were also in the groove until late on I saw them taking turns. Colin usually revels in the more fickle conditions that were manifesting themselves as the race progressed. There didn't seem to be any tell-tale signs on the water as to which way to go up the beat, but Neil managed to get himself into third by about the half-way stage of the race.

McKenna & O'Keeffe were also enjoying the lighter conditions and showing their transom to the heavier all-male combinations. Miller & Donnelly had one fouled spinnaker hoist which didn't do them any favours but they were nipping at those ahead of them all the same. Team Clancy went into the lead on the last lap and my recall is that they were closely followed over the finish line by the Olympians. A good day for them!

The two all-lady combinations won the Frostbite Mugs, Louise & Hermione for the first race and Mary & Brenda for the second.

DMYC Frostbite Series 1: (after 1st discard)

PosHelm / CrewSail NoR1R2R3R4R5R6R7R8Pts
1Noel Butler/Phil Lawton & Stephen Oram/Ger Owens15061111111228
2Conor Clancy/Owen Laverty & James Clancy1480724243131117
3Neil Colin & Margaret Casey1477513242253321
4Louise McKenna & Hermine O’Keeffe/Cormac Bradley146913377544430
5Frank Miller & Ed Butler/Cormac Bradley/Grattan Donnelly1471313568626538
6Alistair Court & Gordon Syme/Cormac Bradley147061313135435952
7Louis Smyth & Joe O’Reilly/Glenn Fisher1500713733711131357
8Cariosa Power & Marie Barry148541368687131361
9Peter & Michael Keegan146761385131388762
10Mary Chambers & Brenda McGuire1486513131399117668
11Darragh McDonagh & Crew1505813131313136131384
12David Turner & Peter Doherty14362131313101013131398

Related Articles

The oldest video footage of Fireball dinghies
A look back into our video archive We delve into the past, and round-up all videos which show sailing at in the Fireball class of dinghy. Posted on 21 Apr
Viking Marine DMYC Frostbites series 2 overall
Final races run in contrasting winds The last Sunday of the Viking Marine sponsored Frostbites arrived with a forecast of contrasting conditions, blustery winds for the morning, followed by winds of between 5 and 7 knots during the projected race time with a 90 degrees swing. Posted on 27 Mar
Viking Marine DMYC Frostbites series 2 day 17
Increasing wind strength reduces St Patrick's Day sailing to a single race The St Patrick's Day Frostbites saw the lowest turnout of boats in Series 2 thus far - maybe just the weather forecast for the day which showed the early part of the afternoon to be manageable, but getting heavier later on. Posted on 21 Mar
Viking Marine DMYC Frostbites series 2 day 16
Another two races in the bag, in Dun Laoghaire Despite a horrible forecast of wind which caused Howth's Round the Island Race to be cancelled (on the Saturday) and huge seas in Dun Laoghaire on Saturday, the dinghy Frostbites, sponsored by Viking Marine took place on Sunday afternoon. Posted on 12 Mar
Viking Marine DMYC Frostbites series 2 day 15
Weather permits three races, at last! After a week that saw snow fall over large parts of Dublin and further afield on Friday, Sunday was, by comparison, a pleasant spring day with sunshine and a gentler breeze that the previous Sunday. Posted on 5 Mar
Viking Marine DMYC Frostbites series 2 day 14
Some experienced competitors found the challenge a bit too robust Yesterday's Frostbites in Dun Laoghaire Harbour were a test for organisers and competitors alike. The forecast suggested a N-Easterly breeze. Wind strength had been predicted in the high teens gusting into the low twenties and that too manifested itself. Posted on 28 Feb
Viking Marine DMYC Frostbites series 2 day 14
Change of Race Officer and a very shifty day Races 13 & 14 of the Viking Marine sponsored Frostbites in Dun Laoghaire Harbour saw a change of Race Officer with DMYC Commodore, Ian Cutliffe, taking over the reins of race management from Cormac Bradley who had the day off. Posted on 21 Feb
Fireball Worlds overall
Gillard and Thompson take out the title with a race to spare British Fireball sailors Tom Gillard and Andy Thompson have been crowned World Champions at the 2024 Fireball Worlds in Geelong, Australia. Posted on 16 Feb
Fireball Worlds day 5
Gillard and Thompson on match point heading into final day British Fireball duo Tom Gillard and Andy Thompson will take a seven-point lead into the final two races of the 2024 Fireball Worlds in Geelong tomorrow, as they look to be crowned world champions for another time. Posted on 15 Feb
Viking Marine DMYC Frostbites series 2 day 13
After a weather enforced hiatus of three Sundays, racing returns to Dun Laoghaire After an adverse weather enforced hiatus of three Sundays without sailing, a reduced Frostbite fleet took to the waters of Dun Laoghaire Harbour to resume activity in the Viking Marine sponsored Frostbites hosted by Dun Laoghaire Motor Yacht Club. Posted on 14 Feb