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2015 British Etchells National and Open Championship overall

by Rob Goddard on 9 Jul 2015
left, Andrew Palfrey, middle holding plate is Willy McNeil flanked by Toby Mumford and Mark Yeabsley - 2015 British Etchells National and Open Championship Rob Goddard
2015 British Etchells National and Open Championship – 20 boats came to race in the central Solent as part of the build-up to the 2016 Etchells World Championships, and this event provided useful information and practice for not only the competitors but also the Royal London Yacht Club who will host the 2016 Worlds.

As well as the British, teams came from Ireland, USA, and Hong Kong to compete for the Open Championship but it was local sailor Shaun Frohlich sailing Exabyte who won overall taking two of the three cups on offer (the British National Championship and the Open Championship), with Willie McNeil sailing Hancock winning the ISAF CAT1 non-professional championship trophy.

PRO Bob Milner took the fleet to the Hillhead shore to race in the four to five SW Breeze for Saturday’s four races, the first race victory going to McNeil leading from start to finish. McNeil sailed to the hard right of the course on the first beat in order to miss the last of the flood-tide which paid dividends leaving him a large enough lead that on the second lap he covered the fleet, whereas Frohlich sailing with the fleet was held up by the same boat infringing him at two of the marks, and scored an eighth, his worst of the regatta.

As the day progressed and the tide turned the traditional Solent chop developed, but during the transition period it was difficult to decide between wind or tide benefit. Jeremy Thorp sailing Phan got it right though winning race two and scored a third in race three, but due to a pre-start incident in race four Thorp who was up to that point leading the regatta retired from the race, while Frohlich had started his bid to win the regatta taking victory in both races three and four, and while in race four Frohlich started by the committee boat Matt Reid’s Mano won the pin and with the two teams respectively arriving first and second at the top mark it helped demonstrate what fair line settings Bob Milner and his team had laid.

Sunday morning the wind had dropped such that a two-hour postponement was posted and when the boats arrived on the Hillhead/Knoll Bank course, the tide change was again in transition and with the wind at 10 knots it was Tom Carruthers the USA challenger sailing his new boat USA 1000 Betsy, who set the pace and played the wind shifts to take the race, with Exabyte in hot pursuit finishing second, while Phan was tangled back in the pack and with only one discard allowed found that they now had a ninth to count.

Going into the last race, race six, only Willy McNeil’s Hancock could threaten Frohlich’s regatta. Exabyte needed a sixth or better to take the championship if McNeil won the race, but with the wind that had built to 20kts, Frohlich after a clean start, sailed fast for the port lay line and the stronger westbound tide on the first beat putting him up with the front of the pack, and while Jeremy Thorp won the race, second place was enough to give Shaun Frohlich sailing with Duncan Truswell and David Bedford a very deserved overall victory of the event. Willy McNeil sailing with Toby Mumford and Mark Yeabsley finished third overall and won the ISAF CAT1 non-professional trophy. Jeremy Thorp’s team of Stuart Childerley and Mark Andrews were second overall on Phan.

After the event a jubilant Frohlich said that their strategy for the event was to “start clean, even if away from the best end of the line as they were confident in their boat speed to post consistent results, and using their tidal knowledge to good effect, particularly when the tide was ebbing upwind for extra speed and downwind in the waves where surfing was possible especially on the right hand side of the track”.

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