Please select your home edition
Edition
Henri-Lloyd Dynamic Range

World Match Racing Tour - Let’s face the music, and dance

by Aston Harald on 3 Jul 2016
Fleet in action - 2016 World Match Racing Tour WMRT
2016 World Match Racing Tour - With 20 teams about to compete at the World Match Racing Tour Finals, the sense of expectation is growing by the hour in Marstrand, Sweden. There’s a crackle of electricity in the air, a tension that you only get around a major sporting event.

It’s not often that a sailing competition attracts a live audience of more than 125,000 spectators across the week, so that might have something to do with it. But it’s even less often that you get the chance to race for $1 million, and it will be fascinating to see who copes with that kind of unprecedented pressure.

Predicting a winner at a match racing regatta is generally a fool’s game, but let’s have a go anyway! First, there are five Swedish skippers who go to Marstrand with the cheer of the crowd behind them and, in most cases, good knowledge of the waters. Nicklas Dackhammar’s experience of fleet racing the M32 makes him fast, particularly in the strong winds, but his lack of match racing could tell against him in the latter stages. Johnie Berntsson’s long match racing history is great for close battles, and he’s proving a fast learner in the M32 having only started sailing the catamaran a couple of months ago. But he still has some way to go on the cat racing learning curve.



Bjorn Hansen is similar to Berntsson, with a lack of M32 experience, but with the kudos of having won the past four events in Marstrand in the DS37 keelboats. No one rises to the challenge of Marstrand quite like Hansen although racing high-speed multihulls in the rocky confines of the island’s southern inlet changes the game significantly. For this reason Mattias Rahm is the Swede with perhaps the highest chance of success in Marstrand, having won the event once but also with an extensive M32 racing pedigree.



Last but not least of the Swedish contingent is the 55-year-old Hans Wallén who reached the final of the windy event in Fremantle at the beginning of the year. He too has done a lot of racing in the M32s, and his Olympic silver medal from 1996 suggests Wallén has the mental strength for the big occasion. “When I was younger I was nervous before the start, I’d get the butterflies,” says Wallén. “I’ve noticed that lately I've not been so nervous and that has worried me that maybe I need the nerves to make sure I'm focused and concentrating. Maybe if I reach the final in Marstrand I'll get the butterflies back.”

Like Hansen and Berntsson, the challenge for other match race specialists has been how quickly they can adapt their sailing skills from the slower pace of the heavy keelboats to the faster pace of the lightweight M32. Australia’s Keith Swinton and Switzerland’s Eric Monnin have both struggled to make their mark on the new-look Tour. Denmark’s Nicolai Sehested, on the other hand, has adapted quickly to the faster pace of competition and on his day is capable of beating anyone. The same can be said of Phil Robertson, the mercurial Kiwi who reached the final of Newport, Rhode Island, a month ago before falling to Taylor Canfield.

Match racing skills are not the only prerequisites for success on the Tour these days, however. There have been a couple of skippers with no prior match racing experience that have managed to climb far through the knock-out stages with raw speed and a surplus of talent. Yann Guichard is the only skipper to have reached the Semi Finals of all three M32 events on the Tour so far this season. The Frenchman draws on all his long and extensive experience racing multihulls at the highest level, from the Olympics to the America’s Cup World Series to racing non-stop around the world.

With a broad CV to rival Guichard’s, Iker Martinez has skippered teams three times in the Volvo Ocean Race, he’s campaigned Nacra 17 catamarans for the Olympics, and he’s won gold and silver medals at the Olympics in the 49er. The fact that the Spaniard reached the Final of Copenhagen in his first ever Tour event speaks volumes for the talent and self-belief of Martinez. Their lack of match racing experience on the Tour is a chink in their armour, but it would be foolish to discount Guichard or Martinez as possible winners in Marstrand.

Ian Williams has always prided himself on an ability to adapt himself to the demands of any keelboat on the World Match Racing Tour. Even in the new era, the six-time World Champion has also proven very adaptable to the M32, dominating the first ever M32 in Fremantle where he lost only one match in the whole regatta. The Briton hasn’t been quite as dominant since then, looking vulnerable in the lighter conditions, although his dogged determination and will to win is second to none. While Williams starts as one of the favourites, he’s playing down expectations, trying not to think about the money. “I think when you are one of 20 teams, it is not that high odds on winning it, so you don’t think about the money too much. I guess that might change if and when you get closer to the Final. I suspect it will start to affect some people and inevitably the pressure will build.”

Aside from Hansen and Rahm, Williams is the only other skipper of this year’s line-up to have won in Marstrand. Even so, if you were forced to pick a stand-out favourite, Taylor Canfield is it. The US Virgin Islander didn’t excel in Fremantle, finishing just seventh, although he bounced back by winning the next three Tour events in Long Beach, Copenhagen and Newport, Rhode Island. That bare statistic suggests Canfield should be the runaway favourite in Marstrand, but some of those victories haven’t come easy and even the cocksure Canfield won’t be taking it for granted. With so much at stake, winning in Sweden is going to require a dose of luck, and nerves of steel. Time to face the music.

The World Match Racing Tour Finals start in Marstrand, Sweden, this Monday, 4 July. For more info, please visit website.

Hyde Sails 2024 - One DesignSydney Boat Show 2025 - Apply to ExhibitHenri-Lloyd Dynamic Range

Related Articles

Rolex Fastnet Race IRC Four preview
The pinnacle of grass roots sailing has 97 entries The very largest yachts, including the 100ft Ultim foiling trimarans and 60ft IMOCAs are an essential part of the spectacle of the Fastnet Race, however a critical element in the race's enduring appeal is that this is predominately a grass roots event.
Posted on 14 Jul
Long Beach Olympic Classes Regatta day 2
Classic Long Beach conditions return The weather conditions at the Long Beach Olympic Classes Regatta shifted noticeably today, delivering the classic Long Beach breeze that many expect from this world-class venue.
Posted on 14 Jul
NYYC International Women's Championship update
Third group of skippers includes Nicole Breault, Dominique Proyoveur, Laura van Veen While there is no nationality requirement for the crews that will compete in the 2026 New York Yacht Club International Women's Championship, a number of teams are embracing the opportunity to wave their respective national flags at the debut edition.
Posted on 14 Jul
The Sardinia Cup set to return in 2026
The competition will make its long-awaited return to the waters of the Costa Smeralda The Yacht Club Costa Smeralda (YCCS) is pleased to announce the return of the Sardinia Cup, one of the Club's most iconic regattas and a renowned international sailing event.
Posted on 14 Jul
How inclusive is sailing?
Largest global survey aims to find out The Magenta Project has today launched the 2x25 global survey, marking the start of the most ambitious equity and inclusion review ever undertaken in sailing and the wider marine industry.
Posted on 14 Jul
Aegean 600 - Snakes and ladders in extremis
Event was the sixth in the IMA's annual Mediterranean Maxi Offshore Challenge If the previous two Aegean 600s were among the most brutal offshore races on record with storm force winds and violent gusts, conversely this year's fifth edition of the anti-clockwise lap of the Aegean Sea was largely the lightest.
Posted on 14 Jul
2025 Long Beach Olympic Classes Regatta kicks off
The first week of the OCR includes five Olympic classes The highly anticipated 2025 Long Beach Olympic Classes Regatta officially commenced on Saturday, 12 July, marking the beginning of Olympic campaigns since the venues were announced.
Posted on 14 Jul
Dufour 44 set to make waves at 40th HIRW
Hamilton Island Race Week offers the ultimate blend of competitive sailing and island festivities Dufour Yachts is proud to announce its official sponsorship of Hamilton Island Race Week 2025, Australia's premier offshore regatta.
Posted on 14 Jul
How Transpac's first finishers earned the podium
The first teams to reach Diamond Head are as varied as they are inspiring From a maxi-sled to a doublehanded keelboat and a 68-foot catamaran, the first teams to reach Diamond Head are as varied as they are inspiring.
Posted on 14 Jul
A challenging and memorable 5th edition AEGEAN 600
Bright lights and gleaming trophies were not the only indication of a successful edition At Saturday night's Awards Ceremony of the 2025 AEGEAN 600 the bright lights and gleaming trophies were not the only indication of a successful 5th edition of this challenging offshore race organized annually by the Hellenic Offshore Racing Club (HORC).
Posted on 13 Jul