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Brewin Dolphin Commodores' Cup 21. - 28. Juli 2012
http://commodorescup.rorc.org/ - Übersicht
27.07.2012
Snakes and Ladders Round the Isle of Wight
Day 6: Friday 27 July, Cowes, Isle of Wight
Team GBR Red's Ker 40 Keronimo heads towards The Needles in the Isle of Wight Race
today
Brewin Dolphin Commodores' Cup Credit: RORC/Rick Tomlinson
Today the race management of the Brewin Dolphin Commodores' Cup bravely pushed ahead
with the scheduled course anti-clockwise around the Isle of Wight.
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Credit: RORC/Rick Tomlinson
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The seven teams in this international event for amateur crews got their money's
worth. The race proved to be one of the most dramatic laps of the Isle of the Wight
we have followed, including some monstrous snakes and ladders, for some boats the
most wind their crews had seen all week and the whole gamut of conditions (or up
to 18 knots at least) culminating in the latter two thirds of the fleet being becalmed
on the final approach to the finish.
Despite this, day six of the regatta was the first where one team managed to put
in a consistent performance with all three boats in RYA Team GBR Red finishing
in the top five. From being 10 points ahead at the start of the day, they are now
55.5 points ahead of the GBR White. This leaves them in good shape going into tomorrow's
final double points scoring inshore race.
Starting at 0830 to catch the last half of the ebb tide, the race got underway from
the Squadron line in very little wind, before the breeze filled in half way down
towards the Needles. Rounding South West Shingles buoy, Andrew Pearce's Ker 40
Magnum III was leading sistership Jonathan Goring's Keronimo, but with the Benelux
team's First 47.7 Moana, the longest boat in the race, holding her own in third
place on the water.
Passing the Needles and heading down the southwest side of the island there was
a significant split in the fleet. While the majority headed inshore, Magnum III
and the French team's Beelzebuth 3 reindexed offshore.
As Keronimo's tactician Kevin Sproul observed: "It was a really strange thing that
happened. We had loads of breeze in under the cliffs, but nothing a few 100ms off
and nothing out to sea. We reckon it must have been coming right over and dumping
straight on to the water under the cliffs. It was a very unusual situation and the
guys who were obviously coming along behind us saw what was happening to us." Most
of the fleet closed in on Keronimo, but avoided the hole by staying to seaward.
Suddenly the mighty Ker had all the lowest rated boats in the fleet alongside her,
fortunately including their own GBR Red teammates on CNBC.
As the boats inshore were trapped in wind holes, Magnum III made massive gains offshore
and approaching St Catherine's Point, she was almost two miles ahead of the competition.
In this fleet such a lead would normally be considered unassailable.
On board Keronimo they could do nothing but watch Magnum's progress until she disappeared
off south as they concentrated on defending their position from those catching from
behind. Sproul observed: "We saw Magnum going out to sea - she went to leeward,
we knew we couldn't get down there and it looked like they had good pressure on
port tack all the way, while we were running out of wind. The last time we saw them
they were well ahead."
Meanwhile after passing St Catherine's Point, Magnum III was beginning to struggle
offshore.
Tactician Andy Beadsworth said they had made the decision to avoid the south coast
of the Isle of Wight to ensure they stayed out of the wind shadow in the northerlies
to the extent that they set a waypoint two miles off St Catherine's. "It looked
terrible for a while, but we stuck to our guns and got offshore and eventually it
came super good for us and we must have been two miles ahead."
But as Magnum was edging along a band of light wind, the breeze filled in for the
inshore boats approaching St Catherine's. They found themselves enjoying not only
more pressure, but also sailing a substantially shorter course as matters worsened
on Magnum. "We ended up being headed, so we were diverging even more while they
were all being lifted. Having set ourselves up two miles offshore, we ended up four
miles away from them at one point. We went from first to last in a very short period
of time. I've had a lot better days..."
While the boats off St Catherine's were making good progress in winds of up to 18
knots, the most Magnum III saw for the duration of the course was 12 and in less
than an hour, the GBR White big boat was firmly in last place.
Coming into Bembridge, Keronimo was holding the lead on the water, with the Ker
40 sisterships Peninsula Signal 8 and the Benelux team's Baraka GP in hot pursuit,
along with the 11 year old Moana, sailing the race of her life, still mixing it
up with the brand new speedsters.
On to the northeast side of the island and exiting the bay at Seaview bound for
a port rounding of No Man's Land Fort, the Benelux Ker 40 slipped past Keronimo.
Of this move Baraka GP crewman Dirk de Graaf said: "About a mile from the Forts,
we found a patch of wind and sailed over Keronimo. That was the lucky shot of the
day. So that was pretty cool and we had some tough bits here at the end because
we had wind and no wind, a header and a lifter and no wind..."
Despite Mother Nature throwing everything at them, from there to the finish, Baraka
GP managed to hang on to first to win the handicap battle between the Kers.
Towards the finish the race appeared to be favouring the smaller boats. However
this all changed at the finish when after the first three boats made it in, the
wind off Cowes died completely. As a result on handicap the Ker 40s Baraka GP and
Keronimo ended up on top, with the French team's Grand Soleil 40 Beelzebuth 3 putting
a solid performance to end the day third with GBR Red's two other boats, Dignity
and CNBC completing the top five.
Star performer of the day was certainly the Benelux team's Moana, the First 47.7
owned for the last 11 years by the Goubou family from Ghent, including father Francois,
mother Michele and sons Laurent and Mathieu. It is likely that they would have been
leading on corrected during the race, and the highlight was overtaking Keronimo
on the water, until the park-up at the finish. But still they finished sixth on
handicap.
Helmsman Mathieu Goubou said of their day: "We had a great start and that made a
big impact on our race because it was a story of the rich getting richer, but then
we also had a lot of re-starts between the Needles and St Caths, where it was very
very difficult sailing and the pack compressed. We had to be very careful to look
on the water to see what was happening. It was really difficult for us because we
are very heavy and we need a lot of time to accelerate. But we had 15-18 knots of
wind heading up to the Forts although coming back into the Solent got more and more
painful."
The Benelux team's boats all finished in the top ten and this has caused them to
pull ahead of the Hong Kong team overall.
This complex day on the water ultimately belonged to RYA Team GBR Red which holds
a powerful lead going into tomorrow's final race, but in the Brewin Dolphin Commodores'
Cup, as past experience has painfully proved, there is no such thing as an unassailable
lead. ENDS/...
RESULTS:
Team Name
Team Points
Team Place
GBR Red
222.5
1
GBR White
278
2
France
284
3
GBR Blue
310.5
4
Benelux
317.5
5
GBR Black
321
6
Hong Kong
352
7
Team Benelux Baraka GP celebrate their win in today's Round the Isle of Wight Race:
Credit: RORC/Rick Tomlinson
Moana, Team Benelux, Francois Goubau Credit: RORC/Rick Tomlinson
Xcentric Ripper (Team Benelux), EFG Bank Mandrake (Team Hong Kong) and Team Ambush
Quokka 8 (Team Hong Kong) passing The famous Needles off the Isle of Wight
A Royal Yacht Squadron Start for the 40nm Round the Isle of Wight Race
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