J/111 Wins IRC 1 Overall!
(Cowes, Isle of Wight, England)- The famous Around Island Race, an epic
50 nautical mile adventure that is also the original "America's Cup race
track", was run this year with nearly 2,000 entries from all over the
world (1,908 to be exact). And, the brand-spanking new J/111 SHMOKING
JOE really did "smoke" the fleet around the 50 nm race-track, and with a
no-guts, no-glory approach nearly pulled off the overall win for the
Gold Roman Bowl-- missing it by just 11 minutes!
Weather is always a major factor in a race of this size and stature.
Saturday's forecast was particularly important given the vast number of
yachts starting off the Royal Yacht Squadron's famous starting line in
front of Cowes' equally famous waterfront walk- "The Parade". Although
some of the smaller
boats felt it best to withdraw owing to threats of bad weather, the
bulk of the record-breaking fleet of 1900 plus yachts turned up to take
part in this historic event, the fourth largest participation sporting
occasion in the UK. Some 16,000 sailors faced wind speeds of up to 28
knots and there were huge swells up to 20 feet to contend with off the
Needles and at St. Catherine's as the record-breaking fleet undertook
this most famous westabout Island circumnavigation on Saturday. In
short, the race was a blast through waves upwind to the infamous
Needles, then flying downwind at enormous surfing speeds down around St
Cats to the Forts and a final near fetch home to the start/finish line
off Cowes-- one of those rare races where the weather Gods simply
provided epic conditions and record speeds around one of the world's
best "round island" races.
At the end of it all, it was an "epic first voyage" for the brand
spanking new (barely 24 hours old in the water) J/111 called SHMOKING
JOE sailed by sailed Phil Thomas and Duncan McDonald-- they not only
managed to finish first overall in IRC1 division and 1st in IRC Division
1A, they were also 6th overall in a fleet of 400+ IRC boats! Read more
about their story in the riveting account outlined below in the
J/Community section by Paul Heys- an able and willing deck-hand aboard
that maiden voyage. Just behind them in IRC 1A was the French J/122
NUTMEG IV sailed by Francois Longnone finishing 4th and 14th was the
J/133 JERONIMO sailed by Julian James.
In
IRC 2 overall, it was seemingly over-run by J/105s and J/109s for top
honors. As it broke down the J/105 NEILSON REDEYE sailed by Pip Tyler
was winner of IRC 2B and 19th overall in IRC 2. The J/105 JELLY BABY
sailed by William Newton, 2nd in IRC 2B and third in IRC 2 overall.
From there it broke down into the divisions 2A, 2B and 2C.
For IRC 2A, 2nd was the J/109 BLUE JAY sailed by Alan and Lis Bennett,
4th was the J/109 JELENKO skippered by Jonathan Bevan, 5th WAS J/109
TEAM VOLVO 2 sailed by the famous Sakia Clark, the 470 UK Champion and
in 6th was the J/109 TEAM VOLVO 3 sailed by Nick Dempsey, the RSX World
Champion. Some serious competition in that division!
In IRC 2B, it was basically a J/105 and J/109 division, with J/109s
racing in one-design configuration-- and it was a clean sweep of the top
five! The winner was the J/105 NEILSON REDEYE followed in 2nd by the
J/105 JELLY BABY, 3rd the J/109 JAHMALI, 4th the J/109 OFFBEAT and 5th
the J/105 KING LOUIE.
IRC
2C saw the J/92s' and the J/97 racing for class honors. After
surviving the 20 foot waves off The Needles, lying in 3rd was the
J/92s HULLABALOO, followed in 6th by the J/92s J'RONIMO and in 7th the
J/97 JIKA JIKA.
In addition to the IRC honors listed above, the J/109s sailing in OD
configuration were also scored as a class. The leader of the J/109
class was JAHMALI, 2nd OFFBEAT, 3rd JIBE, 4th JUMUNU FOUR sailed by
Alistair Ray and 5th BLUE JAY raced by the combination of Alan and Lis
Bennett.
The J/24 and J/80 one-design classes clearly had a pretty wild and
woolly day for the smaller boats. Leading the J/80s was JUMPIN JENGA
skippered by Colin Simonds, 2nd was TEAM BALTIC led by ace Henry Bomby,
3rd was the appropriately named (for the day) WILD WALLY sailed by
Robert Walters, a respectable 4th was BRITISH KEELBOAT ACADEMY steered
by Robin Elsey (ex-RYA Youth Laser Squad) and 5th was JASMINE skippered
by Douglas Neville-Jones. The J/24s had a "head-bangers ball",
smashing, bashing and crashing around the course all in good order to
demonstrate yet again how tough this 35 year old design can be. Leading
the J/24 crowd home was Dave Lush's A-PLAN, followed by JAM's Tim
Brouard and in third was CLEWLESS's Tom Coe and Simon Lewis. For more Round Island Race sailing information. A fun YouTube sailing video of the Round Island Race.