Please select your home edition
Edition
Zhik 2024 March - LEADERBOARD

Sail Sydney 2014 at Woollahra Sailing Club - Day 1

by Lisa Ratcliff 2 Dec 2014 07:36 GMT 2-7 December 2014

Led Zeppelin the opening track

The opening day of Sail Sydney 2014 exploded with a bevy of sailing's A-Listers rolling into Rose Bay to tackle gusty 20 knot summer nor'easters and a choppy Sydney Harbour.

Finn champion Jake Lilley slept on the plane from Abu Dhabi and the ISAF World Cup Final to arrive in Sydney early this morning. As he rigged up at Woollahra Sailing Club he admitted, "Normally I have performance objectives before going racing, today my objective is to stay awake."

Jetlag didn't dent Lilley's form whatsoever. The towering Australian Sailing Squad member finished with a clean sweep of three wins from the 11-strong Finn division.

At the Moth park a quiet collection of aficionados rigged up in the morning for their maiden four races. America's Cup sailors Glenn Ashby, Kyle Langford and Tom Slingsby joined recognised Moth names Scott Babbage and former world champion Josh McKnight.

Like Lilley, Ashby spent the night travelling to make this morning's 11.30am first start off Double Bay. The Emirates Team New Zealand crewmember drove from Victoria's Mornington Peninsula "listening to Led Zeppelin and other old school rock given there were no kids in the car", stopping at Albury in the early hours for a sleep. "I thought I'd come and see the boys and it will be nice to get a few starts in before the worlds," Ashby said. "Moth sailing is awesome fun, though I spend half my time upside down."

For someone who turtles as often as he thinks, and considering he drove most of the night, Ashby managed a very respectable fifth overall on the pointscore on day one of the Moth's three-day series.

Other than race one when he sailed the wrong course in the building nor'easter, Slingsby whitewashed the next three to be second overall to Babbage, the best score he's pulled off in the Moths. "My main goal is the next America's Cup and it doesn't matter whether you are on an AC72 or a Moth, it's all learning about apparent winds, sailing on foils and where you lose time around the course," Slingsby said.

The low-key Gosford based Laser gold medallist from the London Games made some young sailors very happy this morning autographing their shirts.

The only woman racing a Moth in the opening block of competition, Annalise Gilbert, admits she struggled downwind in the bump and fresh breezes, but given she was going training anyway this afternoon she thought she "may as well sail around with people who know what they're doing". Too true.

Josh McKnight's opening bout finished prematurely when his Moth's bow mechanism sheered in race two while leading the fleet. Tom Spithill suffered a similar fate though his early retirement came from a broken tiller, also when he was ahead of the pack.

For the 49erFX combination of Olivia Price and Eliza Solly, Sail Sydney is their warm-up for next week's ISAF Sailing World Cup – Melbourne and Miami OCR at the end of January. The pair hasn't competed since the ISAF World Championship in Santander, Spain in September and were excited to return strongly and score three wins from three starts.

The 49erFXs and 49ers raced in a mixed fleet, Price commenting, "Having the boys race with us applied pressure and made us think ahead about our execution. And we were able to keep up with them, particularly in race three."

Queenslander 49er pair of Joel Turner and Lewis Brake made a clean sweep of results, relegating the Italians Ruggero Tita and Giacomo Cavilli on Trentino to second and the two Harrys, Harry Price and his crew Harry Morton, the current 29er world champion, to third.

The afternoon session and the strongest winds of the day greeted the 470s, Flying Dutchmans, 2.4mR and Laser Radials. Dual 470 Olympic gold medallist Malcolm Page is coaching and mentoring a number of 470 crews at Sail Sydney. Results for the 470s and all divisions will be available shortly here.

Entries for the ISAF graded regatta keep climbing and now stand at 343. Competition is split across two sessions, Tuesday December 2 to Thursday 4 for Olympic and Moth classes and Friday through to Sunday December 7 for invited and youth classes.

The NSW Government is a key Sail Sydney supporter along with Nautilus Marine, Gill Marine clothing, Steve Jarvin Motors, Lejen Marine, Tohatsu Outboards and Sydney Harbour Boat Storage.

sailsydney.org.au

Related Articles

Sail Sydney Day Overall
49er and Women's iQFOiL Paris Olympic quotas secured Australia added two more Paris 2024 Olympic nation quotas on the final day of Sail Sydney, with the 49er and Women's iQFOiL joining the Mixed 470 and Nacra 17 achieved yesterday. Posted on 15 Dec 2023
Sail Sydney Day Four
Australia assures 470 and Nacra 17 Olympic Quotas Day four of Sail Sydney saw athletes reaching for whatever fluids they could find and racing for shade once ashore as Sydney put on a scorching 38-degrees for the penultimate day of the regatta. Posted on 14 Dec 2023
Sail Sydney Day Three
“Classic Sydney” nor'easter hits It was a "Classic Sydney" summer's day across Sydney Harbour and Botany Bay today, with the nor'easter kicking in on a stunning 29-degree day. Posted on 13 Dec 2023
Sail Sydney Day Two: Searching for the Sea Breeze
The famous Sydney sea breeze was somewhat subdued The famous Sydney sea breeze was somewhat subdued for the second day in a row at Sail Sydney, producing a delicate 10-13 knot breeze on a delectable Sydney summer day. Posted on 12 Dec 2023
Day one Scorcher sets Sail Sydney alight
12 Olympic nation quotas for the Paris 2024 Olympics available Competition was hot on day one of Sail Sydney today, where twelve Olympic nation quotas for the Paris 2024 Olympics will be available across the ten Olympic classes. Posted on 11 Dec 2023
Olympic classes decided on Day 4 at Sail Sydney
Waterhouse and Darmanin prove to be Australia's Nacra 17 powerhouses Jason Waterhouse and Lisa Darmanin proved to be Australia's Nacra 17 powerhouses once again, their worst result a second and a DNF from 12 races putting them four points clear of New Zealand's Gemma Jones and Jason Saunders who put up an epic fight. Posted on 7 Dec 2018
Breeze arrives on day three at Sail Sydney
Sydney's traditional summer sea breeze arrives Australian Sailing Team's Jason Waterhouse and Lisa Darmanin tore their Nacra 17 mainsail horizontally during second race of day three, prompting a dash from their Sow and Pigs reef course area to Middle Harbour YC in a coach boat to retrieve the spare. Posted on 6 Dec 2018
Sail Sydney farewells Olympic classes
Australian national team and squad members win 6 of 8 fleets Sail Sydney's Olympic class section has ended with national team and squad members winning six of the eight fleets. Posted on 14 Dec 2017
Thrilling contests to decide Sail Sydney
Matt Wearn leads the strong 24-boat Laser fleet After a cracking three days, staged in perfect sunny and breezy conditions near host Woollahra Sailing Club, the Laser and 49er classes remain on a knife's edge. Posted on 13 Dec 2017
Women sailors shining at Sail Sydney
Darmanin is the only woman on the 12-person Australian Sailing Team Squad members Amelia Stabback and Ella Clark are pursuing New Zealand's 49erFX Rio silver medallists Alex Maloney and Molly Meech, while Australian Sailing Squad Rio Olympians Carrie Smith and Jaime Ryan lead the women crews in the 470. Posted on 12 Dec 2017