Please select your home edition
Edition
38 South / Jeanneau AUS SF30 OD - LEADERBOARD

2015 Etchells WA State Championships - The wrap

by Bernie Kaaks on 9 Mar 2015
Manford rounds the top mark with only daylight behind him. He won the last race easily Bernie Kaaks
A nervous start to the final day program left points leader Michael Manford seemingly vulnerable in his quest for another State title in the Etchells class. In breeze which has just turned from east to west and was still settling, Manford took the option to go north while the majority of the fleet took to the south side. At the first rounding of the top mark, Manford had just four boats behind him. He recovered a little to finish thirteenth, but it meant that he would now have to carry an eleventh placing from race two.

Dirk Vander Struyf came to the rescue with a win in that race, followed by Raymond Smith, while Peter Chappell was forced to sit the race out due to a black flag disqualification. Manford’s other main rival, Martin Webster, scored a fifth so his position remained relatively secure.



To underline his superiority, Manford jumped out of the blocks smartly in the final race and with the breeze now settled and blowing at a steady 12 – 15 knots, rounded the top mark a few boat lengths clear and as he had done several times earlier in the regatta, pulled right away for another comfortable win.

A delighted Martin Webster took second place. Some clever recruiting resulted in international match racer Keith Swinton, sail maker Nick Davis and Chris Smith on the team. They returned remarkably consistent results throughout without winning a race, dropping a seventh place for their nett total points.

There was a log jam of three boats tied for third place. Peter Chappell, who was black flagged in race five and finished a disappointing tenth in the final race, eventually placed third on a countback. With Simon Sutherland, young gun Chris Charlwood and match racer Peter Nicholas on the crew, Chappell loomed as the one skipper who might challenge Manford for the title after the first day and he was clearly gutted by his disqualification.



Losing out in the countback calculations were Brad Sheridan, who finished the regatta with a hard fought second in the last race, and the super reliable Alistair McMichael.



There was some disquiet about sailing a State Championship on the Swan River at this time of year but Michael Manford put it into perspective well in his acceptance speech. 'It was hard work out there' he said. 'One minor mistake can punish you in these conditions as we found out this morning. But that’s the attraction of sailing on the Swan River. You get a mix of conditions and you have to work hard for a result.'

It was also pretty tough on the race officer Kim Laurence. He was patient in the shifty conditions and at the end of the day, his judgment proved to be spot on.

Hyde Sails 2022 One Design FOOTERJ Composites J/99Rooster 2023 - Aquafleece Robe - FOOTER

Related Articles

Sail Port Stephens Passage Series Day 2
Island views, balmy sunshine and sublime sailing conditions The best aspects of regatta sailing crystallised for the record fleet contesting the second day of the Passage Series (Commodores Cup). It turned-out to be a highly memorable day of threading out through the Port Stephens Heads.
Posted today at 1:16 pm
Freestyle Pro Tour Vieste preview
Set to make history once again The biggest Freestyle Pro Tour event of the year is just one month away! The world's best freestyle windsurfers will travel to Vieste in Italy for the fourth edition of the FPT Vieste.
Posted today at 9:29 am
Two more finishers in Mcintyre OGR
Spirit of Helsinki and Neptune cross the Squadron line Spirit of Helsinki (Finland) and Neptune (France) across the Line in McIntyre Ocean Globe. Maiden ETA 17:00 16th April - Can they grab Overall Race IRC Gold?
Posted today at 2:50 am
AC75 launching season
Love 'em or hate 'em, the current America's Cup yachts represent the cutting-edge of foiling Love 'em or hate 'em, the current America's Cup yachts certainly represent the cutting-edge of foiling and are the fastest windward-leeward sailing machines on water.
Posted on 15 Apr
RS Fest Miami brings RS Sailing festival to USA
Miami's party vibes embraced with an exciting racing programme RS Fest Miami celebrated the RS Sailing community in the United States over the Easter weekend, hosting the first ever multi-fleet RS regatta to take place in North America.
Posted on 15 Apr
The Ocean Race sails into Athens
For the Our Ocean Conference UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy for the Ocean hands Nature's Baton to Greece's Prime Minister's Special Envoy for Oceans and Coordinator of the conference.
Posted on 15 Apr
Cup Spy Apr 15: Kiwis work out the wrinkles
The Kiwis sailed a three hour plus session Monday - their third since launching on Friday afternoon Emirates Team New Zealand sailed a three hour plus session today, Monday. The word around the waterfront, is that they will be sailing for just two weeks, before packing up and heading for Barcelona where the serious workup will begin.
Posted on 15 Apr
Sail Port Stephens Passage Series Day 1
Light-air lottery for opener The delightful unpredictability of yacht racing in light airs ensured a nail-biting opening day for crews aboard the record fleet of 115 boats assembled for the Sail Port Stephens Passage Series (Commodores Cup).
Posted on 15 Apr
Para-D high modulus standing rigging
Parallel stranded, continuously wound, UHMWPE fibers covered with a highly chafe resistant cover Para-D is parallel stranded, continuously wound, UHMWPE (Dyneema) fibers covered with a highly chafe resistant PE cover.
Posted on 14 Apr
Cup Spy Apr 14: Kiwis up close reveal new kit
A first close-up view of ETNZ's new AC75 sailing in fresh winds. New mainsheet system revealed Emirates Team New Zealand sailed a three hour plus session on Sunday. It was the first chance to see the America's Cup Defender sailing in daylight, and with a close up of the innovative new mainsheet and traveller system.
Posted on 14 Apr