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GJW Direct 2024 Dinghy

RS700s at RS Sailing Summer Championship

by Jerry Wales on 23 Jun 2017
Hello There - RS Sailing RS700 Summer Championship 2017 Sportography.tv
According to Mark Rushall (June 'Yachts and Yachting') Hayling Island Sailing Club is a venue sailors seem to love or hate. Probably loved by HISC members but the strong tides, sand banks, the waiting for the wind to arrive and the long queues getting off the island are aspects just about tolerated by visitors.

But, Aristotle famously said after his visit to Hayling Island Sailing Club “The whole is greater than the sum of its parts”, and so it is. The reason why over 200 boats, more than 300 sailors (across all the RS classes) and probably over 400 people in total came to the 2017 RS Sailing Summer Championships is because an event at HISC is always a memorable one for all the right reasons.



The RS700s shared the same course area with the RS200s, the RS400s and the RS800s. The RO did a great job of managing so many boats on what was a light wind enforced smallish course area. But race management, managing your way around the other fleets would be an important aspect of the tactical considerations.

The overall race results tell one story: that the event was all but one race short of a white wash for Jerry Wales sailing the first of the new upgraded RS700s to hit the water. He won five of the six races. A satnav error (or was it early onset Alzheimer’s, to be honest I don’t remember) told him to head for the leeward gate/finish being used by the RS200s and RS400s on the outer loop while in the lead of race four. That turned out not to be the shortest way to the RS700 finish and dropped to fourth.



The blow by blow analysis of the racing tells another story. As forecasted we were blessed with an eight to twelve knot gently oscillating Southerly wind on Saturday combined with glorious sunshine, conditions to give the lighter and less lighter sailors a chance of success.

The first beat of each race was even more critical than it would normally be. It was the only part of each race that our tactics did not need to consider the other fleets (until the approach to the first mark).



The key feature of race one was a dominant left shift about a minute after the start. Those who could tack off onto port spent the best part of the first beat being lifted up to the first mark. Those who carried on a little longer on starboard found themselves on a port lay line that had them approaching the mark under a wall of RS400s with their spinnakers up – slow. Wales was one of those who tacked off on the left shift and led 2013 National Champion Robbie Bell and Colin Dacey round the first mark. From then on it paid to ignore the shifts and head hard right. Generally, it paid to over-stand the starboard lay line to guarantee a lane clear of the RS400s. With few passing lanes available the top three finished in the order they rounded the first mark.

Race two and a left shift just before the start allowed Robbie Bell to pull off a very classy port tack start and had a healthy lead at the top mark. Being that much closer to the back end of the RS400 fleet his rounding of the leeward mark and the first part of the second beat was compromised which let Wales take the lead. Demonstrating the importance of a clear lane rather than optimising the shifts, Bell tacked off early, into the disturbed air of the RS400s which let Wales lead round the top mark and allow Colin Dacey through as well. The race finished in that order.



No wind and an hour’s postponement on Sunday (it’s Hayling!). Will they, won’t they? They did (send us out). A crawl out to the race area on the last of the ebbing tide and a further wait for a stable wind.

It arrived: just. A stable 5/6 knot breeze allowed three good races, if those conditions were to your liking. The pattern of the racing followed that of Saturday. Pick the shifts up the first beat and then hard left to stay clear of the other fleets.

The conditions were to the liking of the blue hulled upgraded RS700 of Jerry Wales who led most of the way round the day’s three races (with the exception of the navigation error).



The day’s top sailor was Stephen Hermanson who showed great class and boat speed to post three second places. The lighter condition clearly to his liking. Not though to Robbie Bell who slipped down the order posting a fifth, tenth and a DNF.

Pete Purkiss picked up the race win in the first race of the day (race four) and a very consistent series elevated him to second overall.

Colin Dacey who was always on the money just pipped Robbie Bell for third overall.



All the racing was started under the U flag which meant no individual recalls. In the absence of any general recalls, there were no recall signals on any of the 24 starts (four classes, six races), how weird was that! If you had strayed over in the last minute you were probably blissfully ignorant until you saw the day’s results (or read the board on the back of the committee boat). I am not sure which is worse thinking you might be over (and you’re not) or having no idea (and you were).

A big thank you to HISC for a really good event, to the club members for allowing us to overrun your club for the weekend and to RS for their event sponsorship (and some great boats).

Thanks, are also due to Emma McEwen (of RS800 fame) for the hand-crafted event bowl prizes. It’s the little things done with love that make such a difference.

The highlight for me was actually seeing Martin Wadhams doing something useful (I’d heard it sometimes happened) doing a fantastic job helping us pull our boats across the sand. Proper RS support.

Next event the Europeans in the Czech Republic.

Overall Results:

Sailed: 6, Discards: 1, To count: 5, Entries: 19, Scoring system: Appendix A
Rank Tally Num Sail Num Helm Club R1
17 Jun
R2
17 Jun
R3
17 Jun
R4
18 Jun
R5
18 Jun
R6
18 Jun
Tally Penalty Total Nett
1st 211 1053 Jerry Wales Windsport 1.0 1.0 1.0 (4.0) 1.0 1.0   9.0 5.0
2nd 210 1042 Pete Purkiss Brightlingsea SC 3.0 (7.0) 4.0 1.0 3.0 3.0   21.0 14.0
3rd 205 1027 Colin Dacey Snettisham Beach SC 4.0 2.0 3.0 (6.0) 4.0 4.0   23.0 17.0
4th 196 875 Robbie Bell Snettisham Beach SC 2.0 3.0 2.0 5.0 10.0 (20.0 DNC)   42.0 22.0
5th 203 1020 Stephen Hermanson QMSC (12.0) 10.0 8.0 2.0 2.0 2.0   36.0 24.0
6th 201 984 Adam Golding HISC (8.0) 5.0 6.0 7.0 5.0 5.0   36.0 28.0
7th 204 1023 Ian Nolan Snettisham Beach SC 5.0 8.0 5.0 (12.0) 7.0 7.0   44.0 32.0
8th 192 720 Richard Wadsworth RNSA/Stokes Bay SC 10.0 6.0 11.0 3.0 6.0 (20.0 DNC)   56.0 36.0
9th 197 1046 Miles Roebuck Oxford SC 9.0 (20.0 DNC) 9.0 10.0 9.0 9.0   66.0 46.0
10th 209 1041 Matt Conner QMSC 11.0 11.0 10.0 14.0 11.0 (20.0 DNC)   77.0 57.0
11th 202 1011 Simon Letten HISC 7.0 4.0 7.0 (20.0 DNC) 20.0 DNC 20.0 DNC   78.0 58.0
12th 199 970 Simon Redfearn Brightlingsea SC (15.0) 13.0 12.0 11.0 12.0 10.0   73.0 58.0
13th 194 808 Spike Daniels HISC (20.0 DNF) 20.0 DNC 20.0 DNC 8.0 8.0 6.0   82.0 62.0
14th 195 871 Mark Nicholson HISC 13.0 12.0 13.0 9.0 (20.0 DNC) 20.0 DNC   87.0 67.0
15th 207 1035 Roger Taylor HISC (17.0) 16.0 15.0 15.0 14.0 8.0   85.0 68.0
16th 206 1031 Hamish Griffiths HISC 14.0 14.0 14.0 16.0 13.0 (20.0 DNC)   91.0 71.0
17th 198 958 Andrew Brown HISC 6.0 9.0 (20.0 DNF) 20.0 DNC 20.0 DNC 20.0 DNC 3.0 98.0 78.0
18th 200 982 Roland Smith QMSC 16.0 15.0 (20.0 DNF) 13.0 20.0 DNC 20.0 DNC   104.0 84.0
19th 193 758 Simon Hawes QMSC 18.0 17.0 (20.0 DNC) 20.0 DNC 20.0 DNC 20.0 DNC   115.0 95.0
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