Please select your home edition
Edition
Sailing Chandlery 2024 LEADERBOARD

World Match Racing Tour Match Cup Russia - Day 4

by World Match Racing Tour 4 Aug 2017 23:09 BST 1-6 August 2017

Russians say you need some luck on the Neva River, and not just when sailing cats. But even with the vagaries of format, wind and currents, the cream rose to the top today as the SUPER 16 became 8 in the WMRT Match Cup Russia in St. Petersburg.

The sailors shared star billing with their M32 catamarans. "It's great to be back on the beach, it's what these boats were half-designed for" a confident Phil Robertson (CHINAone Ningbo) said, before heading out to overturn his 2-1 deficit to Steve Thomas (RPM Racing) from the day before in almost the opposite conditions to the big winds and chop in Neva Bay on Thursday.

The conditions were tricky, especially with a southerly wind on this stretch of the River Neva. It was very shifty and puffy. The current is also a big factor, and can be as much as 3 knots.

The M32s took it all in their stride and looked spectacular in the heart of St. Petersburg launching off the beach at the foot of the walls of the Peter and Paul Fortress, with the Winter Palace and Hermitage Museum to the south, Vasilievsky Island to the west, and the sailing so close to shore that spectators did not miss a beat.

New Zealander Robertson and his crew had sailed here three times before and made it look like their own backyard as they scored two wire-to-wire victories to win 3-2 having been 2-0 down. It was a mark of their excellence that unlike most other teams, they never stalled.

"Stevie put up a good fight, we're pretty pleased to come back from 2-0 down, but more relieved than anything," Robertson said.

His team's skill could not have been emphasised faster on the water as Pieter-Jan Postma was not such a "Flying Dutchman" as he parked up seven seconds before the start line and lost his second race against unseeded Swede Kim Kling. Postma prevailed 2-1 - races were reduced to around 6 minutes and it was first to two, rather than three to allow time to complete the SUPER 16. But he will have to learn fast because he is facing Robertson, the Match Racing World Champion and favourite, in the quarter-finals tomorrow.

Lucky for Postma learning fast is what he does. He has progressed with breathtaking speed after making his debut on the tour this year, taking the unusual path from Olympic Finn sailing. Postma got the better of Robertson in the Group fleet racing, so there will be extra edge tomorrow.

Yann Guichard (Spindrift Racing) got a taste of the current too. As the top seed from qualifying he faced Poland's Lukasz Wosinski (Delphia Sailing Team), who completed his 2-0 victory in the second Sail-Off and then promptly hooked a buoy marker in the pre-start and gave Guichard their first race. Wosinski won the start in the second race only to stall and rolled by Guichard sailing round the final mark.

"There was 1-2 knots of current, but that's huge when you only have 5 knots of wind, " Guichard, a multihull specialist over every distance from around the world to around cans, said. "It was especially downwind when it really gusts. I watched people struggle with that. You have sail a bit higher with that current. In multihulls you need to generate your own apparent wind."

Guichard will face one of Perth's many young fliers, Sam Gilmour (Neptune Racing) who also won 2-0 against America's Markus Edegran with a slick crew display. Guichard and Gilmour met in both Match Cup Australia in March and GKSS Match Cup Sweden, with the French skipper, Guichard, winning both times.

Ian Williams (GAC Pindar), Britain's six-time Match Racing World Champion also looked solid winning 2-0, albeit with some confusion between the skippers over a penalty against Austria's Nico Delle Karth. He will face Denmark's Jonas Warrer (Aarhus Innovator) who came from a race down to beat Sweden's Nicklas Dackhammar, who had finished above Warrer in the group fleet race qualifiers, 2-1. Warrer lost all three starts - it was a problem in the fleet racing too - but made up for it with positioning, boat speed and slicker manoeuvres in some of the tightest races of the day.

Matt Jerwood (Redline Racing) was the only skipper not on the water after beating Sally Barkow on Thursday, and he had to watch another close match to see who he would face. Sweden's Måns Holmberg (Gothenburg Racing) came from behind to break local hearts by beating Russia's Viktor Serezhkin (Gazprom Team Russia) 2-1. In a match that had two collisions more see-sawing than a children's playground, Holmberg charged back in the last race, getting the puff after a penalty could have sunk a lesser team.

The quarter-finals will start at 10:00 (local time, 07:00 UTC) on Saturday with more favourable south-westerly winds of 9-11 knots, gusting 14 forecast.

Sail Off

Sail-Off 1: Evgeny Neugodnikov (RUS), Team Tavatuy 2 - 0 Evgeny Elfimov (RUS), M1Cloud
Sail-Off 2: Lukasz Wosinski (POL), Delphia Sailing Team 2 - 0 Evgeny Neugodnikov (RUS), Team Tavatuy

Super 16

PAIR 1: Yann Guichard (FRA), Spindrift Racing 2 - 0 Lukasz Wosinski (POL), Delphia Sailing Team
PAIR 2: Pieter-Jan Postma (NED), Sailing Team NL 2 - 1 Kim Kling (SWE), Caprice Match Racing Team
PAIR 3: Ian Williams (NED), GAC Pindar 2 - 0 Nico Delle Karth (POL), Chilli Racing
PAIR 4: Matt Jerwood (AUS), Redline Racing 3 - 0 Sally Barkow (USA), Team Magenta 32
PAIR 5: Måns Holmberg (SWE), Gothenburg Racing 2 - 1 Victor Serezhkin (RUS), Gazprom Team Russia
PAIR 6: Jonas Warrer (DEN), Aarhus Innovator 2 - 1 Nicklas Dackhammar (SWE), ESSIQ Racing Team
PAIR 7: Steve Thomas (AUS), RPM Racing 2 - 1 Phil Robertson (NZL), CHINAone Ningbo
PAIR 8: Sam Gilmour (AUS), Neptune Racing 2 - 0 Markus Edegran (USA), E11EVEN Racing

Follow all the action on 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