Back to news

NEWS

Mistral conditions in Cagliari 30th June 2011

“I'm interested to see how mixed up the results will be,” were the words of Cameron Appleton before the fleet racing kicked off at the RC44 Cagliari Cup today. With 15 teams now competing and no discards allowed every point counts and there is no room for mistakes.

After yesterday’s gentle start to the event the forecasters got it spot on for today’s racing: A building breeze throughout the day that could turn into a Mistral by the afternoon. As the fleet set off out of Cagliari Harbour this morning the winds were around 15 knots. They sailed their first race in 16-18 knots. By the time the gun went for the second race of the day it was 17-20 knots. But as the fleet approached the finishing line, the wind instruments were measuring gusts up to 32 knots.

The breeze was unusually shifty for its strength. In race one, series leaders Oracle Racing wanted the left, they won the pin end of the line, but rounded the first windward mark in 11th place. It was Islas Canarias Puerto Calero who got it right as tactician Jose Maria Ponce (ESP) explained. “In the first race we went right which was a good side, helped by good team work, new sails that are working very well in the strong wind.”

But near disaster struck the Spanish team as they neared the leeward gate, a ripped spinnaker left them sailing with just their jib, letting Team Aqua (GBR) and Katusha (RUS) through. The top three places didn’t change from then on and it was Chris Bake on Team Aqua that took the gun followed by Gennadi Timchenko on Katusha, Islas Canarias Puerto Calero relieved to keep third.  Oracle Racing fought to get back in the pack, gaining three places to finish eight.

With the wind increasing the call was made by the race committee to go for small kites in race two. On the start line Katusha fought for the committee, boat nailing it and starting at pace, Team Aqua opted for the middle, Islas Canarias Puerto Calero and Oracle at the pin end.

This time the left paid with Islas Canarias Puerto Calero relishing the conditions they are used to back at home in Lanzarote as they rounded the windward mark first again with. A great downwind leg by the Howe/Coutts pairing saw Oracle Racing saw them take the lead and then extend away from the fleet; making amends for their eighth place in race one.

But behind the leader the fleet had it all on; with the breeze increasing it was John Bassadone (GBR) and his Spanish team on Peninsula Petroluem who had pulled up from fourth to second, closely followed by Islas Canarias Puerto Calero, Artemis and Team Aqua. But within sight of the finish line Peninsula Petroleum broached in one of the monster gusts dropping them to fifth.

The unluckiest boat on the course had to be David Murphy’s Ironbound (USA), who broke their steering gear on the final leg of race two, sending the boat into an uncontrollable but spectacular broach as the owner explained after racing. “We broached, it was a crew mistake and we threw a chain off one of our gears, so lost all steering.”

So Team Aqua tops the standings with two races sailed, on equal points with Islas Canarias Puerto Calero.  Asked what set them apart today, Chris Bake put it down to -“Defiantly making it round safely. We’re doing well and I think what it comes down to is everyone onboard knowing what they are doing and going steadily through manoeuvres. It was great sailing though, really exhilarating.”

The Swedish entry Artemis Racing, with Torbjorn Tornqvist at the helm, slotted in a consistent fourth and third place to sit two points off the leaders in third place.

The winds are forecast to stay fresh tomorrow as racing continues in the RC44 Cagliari Cup through to the 3rd July.

 

Quotes of the day

David Murphy (USA) – Owner - Ironbound

We had quite a day out there today, the Mistral that came in over night was blowing about 15 to 25 depending where you are on the course. The boats that kept themselves up right today did pretty well. It was a very tricky day, we struggled with the boat handling today we got ourselves in a couple of bad situations and paid the price for it, we didn't have a great day.  We only had two races today and hopefully we will have three or four in the next few days that will let us get back up the table. It really is exciting sailing, some of the most exciting I have had since I've sailed with the fleet. There were defiantly a couple of points at the top mark where we all came in to the mark bunched up and it got pretty hairy.

Paul Cayard (USA) – Tactician – Katusha (RUS)

It was a great day for us, the first race we were leading for a little while and finished second to Aqua's who are a pretty good team and they passed us.  Both races we had great starts which put us in the top few boats at the top mark but in the second race we broke the bow sprit so we had some trouble going down wind and still finished sixth.

Morgan Larson (USA) – Tactician - Artemis Racing (SWE)

It was a really good day especially in these conditions, it’s nice to get a couple of races in and make a bit of a comeback, but we broke a few things . The strong winds really suit us, especially with Torbjorn on the helm, he enjoys the strong winds much more than the shifty light stuff.

Steve Howe (USA) – Helmsman - Oracle Racing

Today was good, it was pretty windy. We were lucky to sail well without any incidents but the conditions were really challenging, we struggled slightly on the first race, the boat speed wasn't as good but settled in to it for the second race. When the breeze got up today it got pretty hairy but at least we didn't lose any one overboard today!

 

Related Images

Related News

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
ORACLE RC 44 Cup Miami hits wind block

ORACLE RC 44 Cup Miami hits wind block

  • 8th December 2010

After yesterday’s wet and wild start to the ORACLE RC 44 Cup Miami, the regatta ground to a virtual halt today with a lack of wind.

Katusha (RUS 007)

  • 8th February 2011

Could it be closer

Could it be closer

  • 19th November 2011

The fight is really on to see who will be crowned 2011 RC44 World Champion in Puerto Calero. With first and second and third and fourth both tied on points,…

Team Aqua sparkles at ORACLE RC 44 Cup Miami

Team Aqua sparkles at ORACLE RC 44 Cup Miami

  • 9th December 2010

Appleton lead’s Bake’s entry to match racing season championship

Hitting the groove

Hitting the groove

  • 5th March 2011

Day three of the Oracle RC44 Cup San Diego and the teams are starting to figure out this brand new RC44 race course in San Diego Bay.

Stadium sailing in San Diego

Stadium sailing in San Diego

  • 3rd March 2011

The 2011 RC44 Championship Tour opened with a day of stadium sailing off Broadway Pier, San Diego.

Katusha closes

Katusha closes

  • 7th March 2011

The Oracle RC44 Cup San Diego ended with a fabulous victory by the Russian team Katusha, after five days of feverishly competitive sailing off Broadway Pier.

14 teams confirmed for 2012 RC44 Championship Tour

14 teams confirmed for 2012 RC44 Championship Tour

  • 2nd February 2012

New faces and one new team are confirmed in the line-up for the 2012 RC44 Championship Tour, which kicks off in Puerto Calero, Lanzarote next week (8 February 2012).

RC44 Fleet joining Key West Race Week

RC44 Fleet joining Key West Race Week

  • 18th January 2011

The RC44 class will be looking to make a big impression when it debuts at Key West Race Week next week (17-21 January)

Ironbound (USA 1)

  • 2nd February 2011

Tough to Keep it Tight

Tough to Keep it Tight

  • 4th March 2011

Day two for the Oracle RC44 Cup San Diego was classic, one design racing at its best – consistency was vital, but hard to come by...

Two new teams a new boat and some new faces join the RC44 Tour in Austria

Two new teams a new boat and some new faces join the RC44 Tour in Austria

  • 10th May 2011

At the 2011 RC44 Championship Tour opener in San Diego in March, the Paul Cayard, Bob Little combination onboard Katusha (RUS) claimed a convincing first round victory in the 2011…