(Melbourne, Australia)- Without taking anything away from the excellent
Nationals in Adelaide earlier in the year, the Vic States have been
warming up to be the real contest of the year. And so it was.
Twenty-seven boats at Sandringham YC! And, yet again, the “Black Prince
of Sandringham” took it from the “Young” Sydney Fox with the canny
scotsmen third. What that means in plain English is that Dave Suda
(VIC) was 1st, Steve Girdis (NSW) took 2nd and Doug Watson (SA) finished
3rd.Performance handicap was won by Dave MacKay from Cronulla, our own Stephanie Strong took out second in the Sidetracked youth boat and Steve Girdis was third. Hugo Ottaway, the real Mr J24 and deep thinking scribe takes on the finer details.
“This year’s 2015 Victorian J24 Championship may be remembered by the “could have been champions” as a regatta of lost opportunity. Despite only achieving 4 races due to a 40+ knot squally Sunday, the championship reached a milestone in Australian J24 sailing. Of note is the following: starting at the top, 27 entries including every J24 at Sandringham Yacht Club, 6 entries from NSW and 4 from S.A. Oldest skipper 70+ youngest 23. Two youth boats, four female skippers, two all female crews. A Jury and Race management of National and International standing and possibly up to 50% female participation.”
There many hard luck stories in any fleet, probably about 26 of them in this regatta! But look who we are up against. Hugo continues …
“To
ease the pain of the masses, the calibre of the leading bunch reads
like a who’s who of sailing. Our winner, David Suda sailing Pacemaker
from Victoria has won two J/24 and one International cadet National
titles. Second, Steve Girdis (NSW), three J/24 National titles and 5th
in the Osaka worlds. Third, Doug Watson (SA) 2nd in the J24 Nationals
and 4th in the Sigma 33 Europeans. Fourth Hugo Ottaway (VIC) one J24 and
one International Cadet National title, then fifth God himself, David
McKay (NSW) one 16 foot skiff and two Moth WORLD TITLES, one J24 ,
Etchells 22 and 18 foot Skiff National title and 1969 Yachtsman of the
year award. Sixth, Simon Grain (VIC) four New Zealand Tornado Catamaran
National titles.”“I am sure as I go down the list there are many others amongst us who also boast similar achievements, however we very rarely acknowledge the pedigree of fellow sailors, to win either a state or national J24 title is tough, hard to come by and first rate.”
So what are the hard luck stories, well the first would be the whole regatta with the sailing on Sunday closed down. That meant we had a series, but no drop and there were many who needed it – badly. Myself for one, going left nicely all day and then going right in the last race – wrong! John Neville, our hard working Vice Pres who has been sailing like a demon all summer, last seen burying his head in a beer in despair after scoring the unlikely bottom double. Next time John! Half the fleet overlaying the top mark in the first race! Holes in the wind in the second race that left the top boats wallowing in nothing within spitting distance of the finish line while boats behind them sailed by – spitting chips maybe! And from Hugo, “finally the best gag of all, watching the class president start at full speed one minute early on a black flag, with no one else around….. great stuff.”
I could go on, but one of our newest owners does, Mike Bond shares his experiences:
“The
J24 Vic States had been on the agenda for 6 weeks and we were all very
keen to participate after having bought Code Violation. We had only been
out once or twice as a team so things were going to be interesting come
the first race. In true beginner style we missed the first race
completely due to poor clock work. I took the blame for that one as I
was the only one wearing watch. The second race was our best of the
series and I do believe we were coming 7th around the top mark however
we ended up 14th with some poor kite work and some bad tacks. The third
race wasn’t great either, we had a good start but just couldn’t maintain
boat speed. The last race we came dead last which in the end was quite
amusing. We took the wrong side of the course (behind Simon) and got
blitzed. All in all, it was great fun and we were a bit disappointed we
couldn’t sail on the Sunday due to poor weather conditions but after the
2nd beer we were fine. Special thanks to Simon Grain and the crew on
Jet for all their help as well as Hugo Ottaway and David Suda.” That’s
the kind of fun the newest guys are having.The conditions were great sailing for the first two races with a westerly around 12 knots, boats powered up on genoas and the race track full of boats. After the second race the wind died, the sun came out and lunch was served with sails down while we drifted in the tide waiting for wind. The last two races were held in a sputtering and dying westerly as we watched a black roll cloud gather it’s skirts on the southern horizon. The fleet finished and just made it back to the marina as a 40+knot front blew through minutes later!
Back
in the bar, we were very lucky to be able to watch our if only’s on the
Yachtbot site – no consolation to some, but very interesting for most.
YachtBot and CYCSA had been stupendously generous to us both in terms of
their time and resources (CYCSA loaning us the trackers for nix and
YachtBot set us up as a Pro level registration for free also) If you
want to see more or the racing replay, go to www.yacht-bot.com and
choose a race, or link directly to the races at
www.yacht-bot.com/races/6958 to 6961. Our thanks go out to all our
sponsors, Monjon Security in particular for your continued support again
this year, Sailor Sunscreen and Iguana Design. To all our volunteers
both on the class committee and SYC, a big thank you for your efforts.Also a huge thank you to all the interstate competitors who made the effort to come to the regatta, your contribution to our fleet makes the difference to the flavour of the competition.
Hugo
wraps up a few more stats to finish “Other points to note, three
different brands of sails in the top five, both youth boats supplied
with new and almost new sails courtesy of their owners, about 25 new
sails measured in for the regatta. 135 competitors from 4 states. What I
think makes this a great class is the generosity of the members,
$800.00 raised during the regatta to help Luke Mathews (Trimmer off
Pacemaker) and his family who is recovering from a very bad road
accident.”The class BBQ and free beers, as always pulls everyone together after the racing and enjoyably the stage show that is the prize giving, with a forthright intro speech by the irrepressible Doug MacGregor (VicPres) and the brilliant John Neville doing the raffle draw had everyone in stitches and rounded off a great, if short regatta for both the locals and the visitors – you should have been there if you weren’t !
We don’t say goodbye to our interstate friends for too long, the next regatta is the Macquart Marine Short Course Regatta at Cronulla in NSW on Queens Birthday long weekend, 6-8 June this year. This was brilliant last year (see pics on the CSC site). The NSW States normally held in early November (dates TBA) and then the 2015-16 season biggie, the Nationals at Sandringham on the 4-8 January 2016, where we planning a regatta to attract a fleet of over 30 boats – this one you do not want to miss!
Chris Furey has again taken some great pics of the J24 States in Melbourne on the weekend. See them on the Australian J/24 class website here.