| Scotchmans
Hill Series: This is a 'Must Do' Regatta
Last night, Michael Spies'
Beneteau 44.7 First National Real Estate sealed the Scotchmans Hill
series with consistent performances across the first six races and
so she did not need to race the 15.5 mile final race, around fixed
marks on Corio Bay. However as part of the strong Cruising Yacht
Club of Australia team, she needed to do well to help the team triumph
in their tight battle against the Sandringham squad.
Today, she finished in eleventh place and, as the team results are
yet to be finalised, we will have to wait a little longer before
the 'ultimate team' is announced.
Today First National
Real Estate's sister ship, Alan Whiteley's Beneteau 44.7 Cougar,
had an excellent start and kept moving in the light conditions to
win race seven on handicap. Alan Woodward's Beneteau 40.7 Reverie
was second, with Timothy Nellingan's 2 Top Cats, third.
After seven races in the overall Scotchmans Hill series, First National
Real Estate was the official handicap winner, with Cougar leaping
into second place with today's good result, ahead of Phil Coomb's
DK46 Dekadence, who suffered back in tenth place today. Fourth overall
was Steve and Mary Chiodo's Sydney 47 Gomez.
As the fleet rolled into the Royal Geelong Yacht club marina, there
was a period of frantic activity as some of Sydney boats prepared
to leave.
Last year's series winner, Matt Allen's Ichi Ban fuelled up with
diesel, delivery sails and food and left for Sydney within a hour
of finishing. Close behind her was First National Real Estate.
These two boats are amongst the leaders in the highly competitive
Sydney Blue Water series, which includes the Sydney to Southport
race, the Rolex Sydney to Hobart race and the Sydney to Mooloolaba
race. The reason for today's rush is a 500 mile ocean passage between
Corio Bay and the 10am Saturday morning startline of the Sydney
Harbour to Lion Island and Botany Bay race.
Dockside Michael Spies, the Sydney to Hobart race record holder,
the 2003 Rolex Sydney to Hobart winner and two weeks ago the Sailing
South Regatta winner, was wearing a grin with the confirmation that
he was the new Skandia Geelong Week champion.
'Skandia Geelong
Week is now a 'must do' regatta on the Australian circuit. Good
sailing conditions, a top quality national fleet and outstanding
shore side facilities. And most enjoyable of all, the event is really
engaged with the community.'
Team
Skandia showing the flag
When Grant Wharington's
supermaxi Skandia was de-keeled in Bass Strait no one imagined that
the Mornington sailor would bounce back quite so quickly.
While his 98
footer won't be back on the racetrack until May, needing a new deck,
keel, mast, sails, engine and electronics, Wharington is not sitting
on his hands.
Less than a
month after his little 'incident', the Skandia crew is sailing in
the Skandia Geelong Week regatta on Corio Bay.
The veteran
Volvo 60 (Newscorp from the 2001 Hobart race) owned by Brighton
yachtsman David Gotze, has become the Skandia V60 sailing in the
Scotchmans Hill series at Skandia Geelong Week, and is being scored
as part of the Brighton Yacht Club entry in the Teams Event.
Wharington sailed
as a djuice helmsman in the 2001-2002 Volvo Ocean Race and Barney
Walker has twice sailed the 'round the world course', and so they
have been pushing the aging sixty footer around the cans.
As expected
Sean Langman's AAPT, a lighter longer skiff held out the Volvo 60
for the first six races in the series, but this morning Wharington
threw a scare into the AAPT camp. On a reaching fixed mark course
around Corio Bay Skandia had her best point of sail. She set out
for the first mark on the line towards Point Henry, arriving a boat
length ahead of AAPT and after the spinnaker set Skandia was three
big boat lengths ahead of her rival.
She set out
for the northern end of Corio Bay, towards the Geelong Grammar School
tower, and held her lead for the next 20 minutes.
Around the corner and
heading south Skandia found a private parking
space, but then AAPT did just the same thing.
Ichi Ban had
already moved into third place, after weaving past Phil Coombs DK
46 Dekadence and Geoff Boettcher's Hardy's Secret Mens Business,
the Reichel Pugh 46.
On the lightest
of zephyrs AAPT edged forward, then Ichi Ban did the buffalo boy
routine and sailed around the outside. But AAPT rallied and won,
keeping her perfect regatta record intact.
Wharington mused,
'We did not expect to beat Sean on the water, the older Volvo boats
are just set up for short course racing. But we need to keep our
crew race hardened and we really just wanted to be out there and
having fun.'
Clean
sweep in Scotchman's Hill Division 2 for Skandia Courage
The 2005 Skandia
Geelong Week fleet is certainly the strongest in the event's history,
with boats from every Australian state and territory.
Today, one of
the most famous yachts in Australia won the Scotchmans Hill series
in Division 2, with a clean sweep.
Don Freebairn's
Skandia Courage, best know as Koomooloo proved she was all class
with a fine handicap win on Corio Bay. Koomooloo won the Hobart
race in 1968, the year she was launched by Denis O'Neil, and twice
represented Australia at the Admiral's Cup.
Last month she
was the second oldest boat in the Rolex Sydney to Hobart fleet and
was leading the fleet on handicap after the first night before she
prudently retired into Eden, in the heavy conditions.
Magnificently
restored and looking as pretty as she did in 1968 she rates well
under IRC these days, as she showed when second in IRC at Hamilton
Island's Race Week in 2000. Her convincing Skandia Geelong Week
Division 2 win illustrates just why the IRC handicapping system
is so popular, as it levels the field for the newest plastic, fantastic
race boats and for teak and mahogany veterans alike.
Skipper Mike
Freebairn, was grinning broadly after the final race. 'It was a
great series for us, 'the old girl' loves flat water racing.'
Aboard Skandia
Courage-Koomooloo were owners Don and Margaret Freebairn, daughter
Vanessa and son Mike with Paul White, Peter Sherwood and Steve Zaphir
who are all from the Wynnum Manly area in Brisbane with Williamstown
local John Grima, completing the crew.
Second in the
series was Shane and Maryvonne La Peyre's and Al Doggett's Skandia
Passion, otherwise known as Vapour Trail. This Farr 1020 is one
of five racing out of the Sandringham Yacht Club in Victoria.
Just as Passion
is one of Skandia's core values, the Skandia Passion-Vapour Trail
team are passionate about sailing. In 2003 they sailed 3,200 nautical
miles (6,000 km) to Hamilton Island and back, to race.
Gastroenterologist
Dr Leslie Norton sailing in his first major regatta had a fine result,
finishing third in the series with his Bavaria 38 Match, Mrs Over
Newton.
'We had a lot of fun
here this week. We enjoyed this regatta so much we
have decided to sail at Skandia Cowes Week later in the year.'
Sports
Boats: No longer a bridesmaid
Paul Heyes has not missed
a Geelong regatta for the past 17 years and for the last 11 years
he has sailed in the fast and wet Sports Boat division. In his first
effort in 1994 he won the Sports Boat titles but another win has
eluded him; he's been the perennial bridesmaid with six seconds
in the years' since his initial victory.
Last year Paul and his
Max Power team broke through at another venue, winning the Sports
Boat National Championships at Queensland's Airlie Beach as part
of the Hog's Breath Race Week regatta.
Going into today's final
race his Thompson 7 was one point ahead of last year's Geelong Week
Sports Boat winner, Chris Williams Team GUE, another T-7.
Heyes has one of the
best crews around. His mainsheet hand Brett Scott, just won the
5.5 Worlds in the Evolution division, while Peter Van Niekerk is
an Alinghi America's Cup trimmer and won the recent International
5.5 World Championship with the legendary Jochen Schuemann.
But still Heyes was nervous;
worried his string of seconds might continue. But the jitters disappeared
when Power Max floated across the finish line first in race six,
ahead of Steve Battley's Road Warrior, with her closest rivals Team
GUE third.
Max Power won the final
race, with loud whoops and hollers as she got the gun, from Cameron
Rae's Grange Security. Team GUE was third across the line and second
in the regatta.
Sydney 38: A night at the pub for the London Tavern
On the outer harbour today, the intense tactical battle continued
in the eleven race series of the Sydney 38 Nationals at Skandia
Geelong Week 2005.
While Leon Christianakis'
Cydon is still leading the fleet, today belonged to Stephen Ellis
and his London Tavern team.
Race eight started in
soft conditions, building from seven knots. Again the breeze was
oscillating.
Ellis picked
the shifts to perfection to win by almost two minutes, ahead of
Lou Abraham's Challenge and John Savage's 38 Degrees South.
Cydon was seventh, while
Martin Hill and Lisa Hill's Estate Master was buried in eleventh
place, with Shining Sea one place further back. Tony Wall's Acuity
lost significant ground with a fourteenth.
In Race 9 in a soft easterly
breeze, London Tavern was again on fire. She had clear air from
the gun and it was only on the last run that she looked in any danger,
as Steve Kulmar's Shining Sea surged.
Suddenly Cydon loomed
back onto the scene and a luffing battle ensued between the second
and third boats, allowing London Tavern to take the gun 30 seconds
ahead of Shining Sea, with Cydon a skinny four seconds further back,
in third. Fast finishing Calibre (Geoff Bonus') just 11 seconds
behind her, took fourth place.
With two races left,
the first starting at 9:30am on Australia Day, Wednesday morning,
Cydon on 32 points now leads from Shining Sea on 45 points with
London Tavern on 46 on count back, from 38 Degrees South.
Dockside, Ellis was savouring
the day. 'The top guys in the fleet have just spent more time on
their boats than we have, so we are been finding our feet, as we've
come along.'
'While I used to steer
Buon Giorno, my nephew Brett is steering now and I am doing tactics.
Its working well, he's a former Laser Champion and has done two
Admirals Cup campaigns, one with Steve Kulmar on the Mumm 36 Sea
and the second with Bob Steel on Quest, so he has quite some experience
and we communicate well.'
'We are looking
forward to tomorrow, but tonight there might be a few quiet little
drinks.'
Skandia
Geelong Week Media Team. |