Skandia Cowes Week - Day 4 Round-up
18:53 Tuesday 10 Aug 2004
Magnus Wheatley
After
yesterday’s drenching and thunderstorms,
the 897 boats competing on day four of Skandia
Cowes Week were greeted with clear skies, baking
sunshine and a stable Force 2-3 South Westerly
breeze. It was close to perfection as the flag
officers of the Royal Yacht Squadron took charge
of the day’s proceedings with Principal
Race Officer John Grandy and Chief Race Officer
Rear Admiral Paddy O’Riordan firing the
canon on time for the first start of the day,
the 1720 and Laser SB3 combined class.
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| A
group of nurses out racing on their Sonar
'Disco' during Skandia Cowes Week. Skandia
Cowes Week has been running since 1826.
Photo © Matt Dickens 2004
|
However
these ever competitive sportsboats had other ideas
to the schedule causing their second general recall
of the week after the ebb tide and a fair bit
of bravado swept the bulk of the fleet over the
line at the outer, Alpha buoy. With the inshore
fleets delayed therefore, the multihulls got underway
on the Black Group line with the wind touching
10 knots as they set out on a Western Solent course
of some 22 miles in length.
Finally
the 1720 and Laser SB3 fleets got away to a clean
start 10 minutes later and unsurprisingly it was
the overall White Group leader and triple World
Laser Champion Glenn Bourke sailing the SB3 Musto,
that proved to the fleet his credentials by taking
his third win in the series. After his second
place yesterday, Bourke is proving almost too
hot to handle in the fleet with only Colin Simonds
sailing Doolalli offering any resistance. In the
1720 class ex Sigma 38 Skandia Cowes Week champion,
Stephen Porter sailing Polyphagus, extended his
overall lead in the class with a 1 minute 26 second
win from Richard Clay’s Finn M’Coul.
The
competition for top spot in the overall standings
in the White Group is looking very much like being
a head to head between the aforementioned Glenn
Bourke and Cowes based Sonar sailor, Duncan Bates
in Billy. Bates scored another convincing win
today taking the winners gun by exactly 1 minute
30 seconds and is waiting for Bourke to slip up
to scoop the title. It will go to the wire but
these two are the stand-out performers in the
inshore classes.
Another
name that is dominating Skandia Cowes Week in
more ways than one is the hugely popular Hunter
707 crew of Charlie Fish. Having made a massive
impression back in January at the sister event
of Skandia Cowes Week, Skandia Geelong Week, Charlie
Fish have stepped up their efforts for this year’s
title scoring another race win today. With discard
applied they are head and shoulders ahead of the
fleet but an OCS in Saturday’s race means
they can ill afford any more slip ups. The fleet
though is pushing Iain May’s Charlie Fish
crew hard with Adrian Barden’s Wolseley
UK and Tom Davidson’s Doh! taking second
and third places today respectively.
Back
from the depths for a very popular race win today
was Jamie Sheldon’s RS-K6, Courageous. After
being involved in a collision with the Class 2
Beneteau 44.7 of Adam Gosling, Yes! Team Murphy
& Nye, in Saturday’s opening race it
was a remarkable feat of salvage and boat-building
to get Courageous back on the water after she
was struck cleanly behind the chainplates and
sent to a watery grave in the Eastern Solent.
Terry Wilkinson’s The Red Macgregor squeaked
into second place just 12 seconds ahead of Alex
and Becca Willard in Cru Classe after a very tight
race.
In
the Offshore Black Group fleets there were some
interesting tactical decisions to be made as the
fleets mainly hugged the mainland shoreline after
the tide turned at 1255. Certainly one of those
fleets was the enormous, combined fleets of the
Sunsail 37 and Sunsail 36 Classes. The outstanding
performer of the week in the Sunsail 37’s
is the Williams F1 team who have chartered sail
number 78 for the week and are currently lying
fourth overall in the Black Group after a second
place to GE Capital (Sunsail 76) in today’s
racing.
In
the Sigma 38 Class two stars of GBR sailing, the
brothers Andy and Ian Budgen sailing The Project
showed a clean pair of heels off the start line,
sailing in clear air to eventually record a 36
second victory over Neil Aitchison’s Dragonfly.
With their biggest rival, John and Jackie Edwards
Red Macaw only registering a fourth place today,
the battle for the overall title is certainly
hotting up.
However
one class that is virtually sewn up already is
the X332s with David Pinner from Ipswich sailing
Kiss taking his fourth win from four races by
nearly 8 minutes and leapfrogging Red Macaw to
the top spot overall in the Black Group. There
was a minor incident in the X332 fleet at the
finish for fourth placed Pittolo Bill of Ian Smyth
who had been holding a comfortable third place
on their downwind run against the tide to the
Squadron line. Chancing his luck on an inshore
course, Smyth grounded on the rocks that lie just
north of the Squadron and watched helplessly as
Rick Waterhouse cruised into third spot sailing
Elixir as Pittolo Bill extricated herself from
her predicament!
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|
The
biggest fleet of boats at Skandia Cowes
Week, the X Boats with 79 entered start
off of the Royal Yacht Squadron at the 178th
Cowes Week. Designed in 1908 by Alfred Westmacott;
three new boats are being built this year
and added to the fleet. photo © Dan
Towers 2004
|
The
Contessa 32 Class had some big separation but
some thrilling racing right to the finish as the
Rouse, Vanner and Richards owned Blanco jostled
with John Corden’s Fresh Herring on the
final downwind leg to the finish. Ray Mitchell’s
Confusion kept a watching brief in third place
and these three were a class apart from the rest
of the fleet. Blanco eventually took the winner’s
gun and the Philip Pollock trophy in the closest
finish of the day by just one second.
The
Committee Boat once again stationed off Lee-on-Solent
played host to Classes 1-4 IRC, the IRM big boat
class and the Mumm 30’s. However it was
a tough day in the Eastern Solent as the zephyrs
of breeze died before filling from the South,
the South-East and eventually settling in from
the South-West. In the glamour division of IRM,
Kit Hobday’s Bear of Britain avenged their
earlier results of the week with a slender 16
second victory over Charles Dunstone’s Farr
45, Nokia whilst Peter Harrison’s Chernikeeff
2 had a tricky day eventually finishing in a lowly
fifth place just ahead of Nick Hewson’s
Team Tonic.
Class
1 IRC produced another win for the Russian entry
of Serguei Shevtosov, Follow Me, which took a
big corrected time win of nearly 13 minutes from
Peter Ogden’s beautiful Swan 601, Spirit
of Jethou that has yet to win a race having only
been launched two weeks prior to Skandia Cowes
Week.
Notable
victories elsewhere came in both the Etchells
and Dragon fleets with Ante Razmilovic sailing
Swedish Blue sealing his overall lead of the regatta
(after discard) in the Etchells fleet with a 45
second win over Mark Downer’s Moonlight.
Meanwhile Graham Bailey, sailing Aimee in the
Dragon fleet secured his second win of the regatta
and rocketed up the leader board with a comfortable
victory. Bailey will be pushing hard all week
to better his third place overall in last year’s
Skandia Cowes Week and needs to avoid any incidents
after scoring an NOD in Saturday’s race.
In
the International Flying Fifteen Class, Rupert
Mander, sailing Men Behaving Badly once again
proved that he’s the man to beat with his
third victory of the week by a stunning 3 minutes
57 seconds. Off the start line it was noticeable
that Mander and his crew were the hardest hiking,
keeping their boat flat and powering in search
of clean air. Barry Rolfe in Friendly Fire gave
chase and secured second place but it’s
hard to see anyone catching Mander as the week
progresses.
Finally,
the hugely competitive XOD Class saw Solent stalwart
and ex-Olympian Stuart Jardine take the Harold
Hayles Bowl by a massive 1 minute 25 seconds and
further cement his lead in the Class for a record
breaking fifth Captain’s Cup. Ex Fireball
World Champion Kim Slater sailing Kyperini bounced
back from yesterday’s OCS to take second
place from Bill Dunsdon’s Skiffle with the
big guns of Mark Jardine (Kathleen) and Peter
Baines (Palassie) down in fifth and sixth places
respectively.
The
forecast for tomorrow shows increasing breeze
as the low pressure system moves east with rain
showers expected over the next 36 hours. The breeze
will fill though and that’s good news for
the sailors and is expected to top 15 knots from
the South to South East. Fingers crossed for another
great day of sailing tomorrow at Skandia Cowes
Week.