Please select your home edition
Edition
Noble Marine 2022 YY - LEADERBOARD

World Match Racing Tour Fremantle - Overall

by World Match Racing Tour 7 Mar 2016 11:45 GMT 2-7 March 2016

Williams the conqueror

Reigning World Champion Ian Williams swept aside Hans Wallén 3-0 to win the final of the World Match Racing Tour Fremantle, the opening event of the 2016 World Match Racing Tour season.

Even though the GAC Pindar skipper has won a record six world titles on the Tour in the days of slow keelboats, the level of his domination in high-speed M32 catamarans took even the British skipper by surprise.

Williams was keen to put the praise on his three hard-working crew mates, the engine room of GAC Pindar - Mark Bulkeley, Garth Ellingham and Brad Farrand. "There's always a lot of focus on the skipper, but this really is a team sport. It's pretty obvious which way to point a fast boat like an M32 so my job is relatively easy, it's what the guys do in front of me that really counts."

In the morning, the wind was gusting unpredictably off Bather's Beach for the Semi Finals. Denmark's Nicolai Sehested was expected to give Williams a tough battle having been the class act of the previous day's high-wind racing. At the start of the first match Sehested was penalised for starting too early by the umpires. "Actually both Williams and ourselves were over but the message didn't get through correctly from the race committee to the umpires," said a frustrated but philosophical Sehested. "We shouldn't have been penalised but we were and that was the race gone right there." Sehested appealed the call but to no avail.

The start of match two, and moments after the start Williams' gennaker unfurled too soon - the result of a bad furl during an aggressive pre-start between the teams. Sehested surged into a seemingly unassailable lead until his gennaker started unfurling on the first beat - again the result of operator error at the leeward gate. Match two, and match point to Williams.

Finally in match three Sehested got his groove on, surging away to a good lead until - disaster - he capsized at the leeward turning mark. "I did a normal turn but I hadn't noticed that our boards weren't in their correct position," said Sehested. "The leeward one was up and the windward one was down, and the lift from the windward board tipped us in. Frustrating, but that's sailing. We gave Ian two of those races on a plate. But overall we're pleased with how we sailed this week. A new team, we're fast, and we'll come back strong for the next event."

So Williams was through to the Final 3-0. There was a good battle on the other side of the Semi Final draw, although Hans Wallén's experience in the M32 catamaran proved too much for Yann Guichard who lost 3-0 to the Swedish crew.

In the Petit Final, the race for 3rd overall, Guichard beat Sehested 2-1.

For the Final later on in the afternoon, when the breeze had turned to an offshore moderate wind, Williams looked more in control during the pre-start maneuvering and generally got the better of Wallén from early on in each match. The exception was match three when an unforced error by Williams during the pre-start entry resulted in penalty on the British team. However the Swedish advantaged proved short-lived as Williams found a different path down the first run and surged into a lead that he would extend all the way to the finish.

With 20 international teams from all kinds of grand prix sailing backgrounds, it wasn't meant to be like this. Williams was expected to be there or thereabouts, but not to dominate quite like he did. Going back two days to the start of the match racing phase of the competition, Williams lost his opening match to the young Sam Gilmour, son of Williams' past nemesis - the legendary Peter Gilmour. But that would prove to be the only loss in 13 matches on the way to the Briton lifting the trophy.

Asked why he had been so dominant, Williams offered this: "If there's one thing that I think I've always been good at throughout my career, something I've been very focused on, is looking at ways of improving different parts of what we do, always trying to learn and move things on." With that in mind, and this being the first time we've seen M32s being raced on the World Match Racing Tour, Williams was also asked how his team of day one in Fremantle, just five days ago, would have performed in the Final. "No chance. You can see how much the quality of the sailing and the racing has moved on with each day here. We're so much better than we were, and of course we're going to need to keep on improving throughout this year. We can't afford to stand still."

Wallén probably wasn't expected to make the Final, but the Olympic silver medallist was rightly proud to have done so. "We are happy, only frustrated that we couldn't give Ian more of a fight. In these moderate conditions and stable wind direction there were very few passing lanes," said the Swede.

Williams raised the trophy aloft and accepted a winner's cheque for USD 33,000, his team's share of a USD 200,000 prize purse. Now the game moves on to three other international venues before the big finale this July, the World Championship Finals in Marstrand, Sweden. The winner's prize is USD 1million, so the teams will be practicing hard over the next four months to close the gap to the new standard set by Williams this week in sunny, sensational Fremantle.

Adventures of a Sailor Girl interviews (from Nic Douglass)

Ian Williams of GAC Pindar took the last event of the "old" tour, and the first event on multihulls here in Fremantle. Check out my interviews with Yann Guichard of Spindrift Racing (third), Nicolai Sehested of TRE-FOR Match Racing (fourth), Hans Wallen of Wallen Match Racing (second) and Ian Williams, six-time winner and defending champion.

WMRT Fremantle 2016 Results:

1. Ian Williams (GBR) GAC Pindar $US 33,000
2. Hans Wallén (SWE) Walleén Racing $US 23,000
3. Yann Guichard (FRA) Spindrift Racing $US 18,000
4. Nicolai Sehested (DEN) Trefor Match Racing $US 18,000
5. Matt Jerwood (AUS) Redline Racing $US 12,000
6. Murray Jones (AUS) Full Bants Racing $US 12,000
7. Taylor Canfield (ISV) US One $US 12,000
8. Mattias Rahm (SWE) Rahm Racing $US 12,000
9. Phil Robertson (NZL) Waka Racing $US 5,000
10. Evan Walker (AUS) KA Match/ CYCA $US 5,000
11. Steven Thomas (AUS) Royal Perth YC $US 5,000
12. Keith Swinton (AUS) Black Swan Racing $US 5,000
13. Eric Monnin (SUI) Albert Riele Swiss Team $US 5,000
14. Sam Gilmour (AUS) Neptune Racing $US 5,000
15. Chris Steele (NZL) 36 Below Racing $US 5,000
16. Nicklas Dackhammar (SWE) Dackhammer Racing $US 5,000
17. Sally Barkow (USA) Team Magenta 32 $US 5,000
18. Brett Burvill (AUS) Edge Racing Team NYC $US 5,000
19. Joachim Aschenbrenner (DEN) Royal Danish YC $US 5,000
20. Mark Whittington (AUS) South of Perth YC $US 5,000

For full leaderboard visit wmrt.com

Related Articles

Scotty Dickson wins 14th Career Ficker Cup
Perfect conditions for the event at Long Beach Yacht Club Long Beach's champagne conditions and superior racing by eight world class skippers over three days ended with Scotty Dickson claiming his 14th Ficker Cup over 24 years! Posted on 22 Apr
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