Please select your home edition
Edition
Ovington 2021 - ILCA 1 - LEADERBOARD

British Cadet Team at the Cadet Worlds in Melbourne - Overall

by Neil Collingridge 3 Jan 2023 07:23 GMT 26 December 2022 - 2 January 2023

So, whilst we awoke on the final day to the knowledge that Team GBR had the World Champions in Toby and Kemmel, there was work still to be done for the rest. The excellent PRO had moved things forwards by an hour but when we got to the Club it was blowing dogs off chains straight out of the City in the North. 30 knots plus didn't augur well for a final race.

Stephen gathered his team and the coaches - do your guys want to sail? If we can, we will. In the meantime, the Bay Winds website was showing that down at the bay entrance 50kms away the wind had already swung to the south and was blowing 20knts straight up the chuff. So began a drawn-out game of patience. At around 13.00 all the other sites on the website had a southerly except ours... surely it will come? And so it did. As soon as the flags on the clubhouse lawn drooped the D flag was raised and Cadets started to launch.

In the Top 10 Will and Annabel on second held a 5-point lead on the Aussies in 3rd place so they needed to stay close to them. Mish and Rhona (6th overnight) had opportunities to gain or lose - they certainly couldn't afford another shocker, same really for Ed and Alex who'd sat 9th overnight. And elsewhere all the GBR boats wanted a good last race - promo fleet included. For many this was their last ever race in a Cadet after careers which in some cases have spanned 9 years and multiple World Champs. Toby and Kemmel didn't sail (very sensibly) but as you'd expect didn't want to miss out on the action so were afloat in a rib watching on and supporting their teammates of course. Now they know what its like for the Parents!

So, off the fleet went on a straightforward windward / leeward on course Alpha. 2 laps, 12kts at times, tricky shifty and with current pouring out of the Yarra River on the right. Round the windward the Aussies in 3rd overall - Groves and Thomas - were leading by a huge margin. Will and Annabel were in the chasing pack but had work to do still. Mish and Rhona and Ed and Alex meanwhile were really struggling having got pinned to far to the left and then not getting far enough right. Up the second beat all these boats, everyone in fact, were working hard - giving their all to the end. Will and Annabel were through to 4th by the second windward - that would ultimately be enough by the finish to secure a fantastic and well-deserved 2nd overall. And Mish and Rhona and Ed and Alex were taking places upwind - probably around a dozen to round the final windward in the Top 10. They had really had to dig deep but finishing together in 7th and 8th - that was enough to move Mish / Rhona up a place to 5th overall and for Ed and Alex to hold at 9th in the Top 10. GBR Champions and second overall, 3 out of the top 5, 4 in the top 10, all halfway around the world at a foreign regatta where the home fleet had such strength in numbers. Fantastic performances. But everyone played a role here - Sarah and Holly (21st), Amelia and Hettie (23rd), Tom and Ava (25th), Robbie and Dylan (26th), Sofia and Immy (27th) and Amelie and Maddy (28th) - everyone of them should be proud... they all had their moments, and they will all return the better for the experience. It's a marathon not a sprint.

And whilst the attention has been elsewhere, we shouldn't forget the Promo fleet. Also, very competitive and stuffed full of Aussies. Our 3 GBR boats were the only foreign competitors. Again, they all had their moments - perhaps the benefit to them at their earlier stages of their Cadet careers will be all the greater. Gwen and Josh (14th), The "TomToms" (16th) and Oscar and Dom (19th) all again had their moments and Tom and Tom finished their race series with a 9th to boot.

So back to the shore to wait for Toby and Kemmel who had transferred into a spare Cadet so they could come into the dock with Union flag displayed. They have sailed an extraordinary series. They made hay when the wind blew on the first two days but sailed so so well through the rest of the week when their advantage was rather less obvious. At the finish they were deserved champions.

Great speeches from both of them, a wonderful Prize-giving and a team all pulling together to pack the container ready for its ultimate return to the Shotley peninsula. Thanks also to our honorary Pom, Rhett Gowans - he was a great find and loved helping to stick one on the Aussies - he'll be back where he belongs for the Ashes in the summer though! Some of us are finished in Cadets now but for the rest the next World Champs are only just over 6 months away in Nieuwpoort, Belgium - just wait till you see those waves rolling up and down the North Sea... Pevensey on steroids.

More information on the event website, cadetworlds2022.com.au

Related Articles

Cadet Alf Simmonds Memorial Trophy at Plymouth
50 entrants, 4 spanking new boats, 3 fleets and 1 new squadron If this weekend's Alf Simmonds Trophy told us anything about the UK Cadet Class it is that it is on the up; fifty entrants, four spanking new boats, three fleets and one new squadron joining the Cadet Circuit. Posted on 9 Apr
Cadets at Fishers Green
Epic capsizes, gear breakages, near misses, supersonic speed, 100% fearless gybes 14 boats arrived at a very windy Fishers Green SC for the regatta fleet open, an open meeting for young Cadet sailors to learn their craft without the added pressures of sailing in a big fleet. Posted on 28 Mar
Cadet Open at Frensham Pond
Tactics and tacking duels among shifty breeze 31 boats took part in the Frensham Pond Cadet Open on Sunday 17 March. Some had joined the regular Saturday morning training, this time run by dinghy racing legend (and former Cadet sailor) Nick Craig, fresh from yet another World Championship crown. Posted on 21 Mar
Banjo Shoreline Crown Series overall
Tasmanian sailors were tested in all conditions on the River Derwent in Hobart Tasmanian sailors were tested in all conditions on the River Derwent in Hobart in the 20th anniversary of the Crown Series Bellerive Regatta last weekend, with wild conditions on Friday night, glamour sailing on Saturday, and confusing breezes on Sunday. Posted on 26 Feb
Banjo Shoreline Crown Series Bellerive Race day 1
Wild winds one day and champagne sailing the next The 20th anniversary of the Banjo's Shoreline Crown Series Bellerive Regatta got off to an eventful start with crews having to contend with winds fluctuating from 5 to 30 knots combined with 60-degree wind shifts throughout the twilight race. Posted on 24 Feb
Crown Series Bellerive Regatta official launch
Commodore Cordell said the excitement is building for the anniversary event Sailors, sponsors, community and club members joined Bellerive Yacht Club (BYC) Commodore Jeff Cordell and the Hon. Nic Street MP, Minister for Sport and Recreation, today to launch the 20th anniversary of the Crown Series Bellerive Regatta. Posted on 14 Feb
Entries open for Crown Series Bellerive Regatta
Sailors from across Tasmania are gearing up to celebrate the 20th anniversary Sailors from across Tasmania are gearing up to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Crown Series Bellerive Regatta, regarded as one of the most successful sailing events on the Tasmanian sailing calendar. Posted on 31 Jan
Festival of Sails concludes with parade of colour
Some big jumps in standings across all nine divisions Festival of Sails 2024 concluded its 181st edition with a day of shifty, lighter winds that saw some big jumps in standings across all nine divisions. Corio Bay was awash with colour as the courses spread the fleet across the inner and outer Harbours. Posted on 28 Jan
Geelong Cadets heading to UK to compete in Worlds
From the waters of Corio Bay to the English seas off Plymouth From the waters of Corio Bay to the English seas off Plymouth, six young Geelong sailors are about to take on fellow young sailors from around the globe in the 2024 Cadet World Championships. Posted on 28 Jan
First Festival of Sails Youth Ambassador
Local sailing star, Evie Mcdonald appointed Young local sailing star, 17-year-old Evie McDonald from Geelong has been appointed the Festival of Sails' inaugural Youth Ambassador. Posted on 24 Nov 2023