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Beadsworth leads Etchells Worlds after 2 races

by Fiona Brown on 27 Jun 2007
Etchells Worlds 2007 Paul Wyeth / http://www.pwpictures.com">www.pwpictures.com http://http://www.pwpictures.com">www.pwpictures.com

The first day of racing at the Etchells World Championship, hosted by the Royal Corinthian Yacht Club, Cowes, brought two incredibly challenging races for the forty five boat, eight nation fleet.

With rain squalls running across the Solent on a regular basis the wind was constantly shifting by up to 40 degrees and ranged in velocity from 6-16 knots. The difficulty of the conditions is amply demonstrated by the results with only three teams - GBR1361 Andy Beadsworth, GBR1332 James Howells and NZL1058 Anatole Masfen - ending the day with two single digit race results.

The Race Committee experienced its own dramas when the principle committee boat caught fire as a result of an electrical fault. Fortunately the crew successfully fought the fire without assistance before transferring to another boat to continue their duties, leaving the competitors none the wiser until the end of the race.

Overall Andy Beadsworth, sailing with Oscar Strugstad and Simon Fry, is leading having won the first race very convincingly and taken sixth in the second. James Howells, sailing with David Bedford and Oscar Mead is in second place with a 3, 5 score line while defending World Champion Jud Smith, sailing USA1351, and Anatole Masfen, sailing NZL1058, are both on 12 points with Smith scoring 10, 2 and Masfen scoring 4, 8 to place them 3rd and 4th respectively.

The first race of the series (technically Race 3 in the official schedule following the postponement of yesterday's Races 1 and 2) got underway on time and in about 12 knots from 310 degrees. On the first beat the wind began to back and a change of course was signalled at the first mark where Nils Razmilovic headed the fleet just in front of Ted Fort, Andy Beadsworth, Doug Flynn and Anatole Masfen.

On the run Beadsworth pulled up right onto Nils Razmilovic's transom and as the two came into the leeward mark there was nothing to choose between them. Meanwhile the wind had continued to go left and at the mark the committee boat was signalling a new weather mark direction of 270 degrees. Fort had dropped back into fifth place, but on the final approach Masfen and Flynn over stood and had to reach in allowing Fort to slip between the two and into fourth place.

As they took off up the second beat Beadsworth initially went right whilst Nils Razmilovic took left. About a third of the way up Nils Razmilovic was looking good but the wind still had plenty of tricks up its sleeve and by the weather mark Beadsworth had sailed a blinder and rounded with a huge lead. Fort meanwhile had moved into second ahead of Nils Razmilovic.

The wind shifts had caught lots of people on the hop and equally allowed several boats to make massive gains. Ireland's Tom Fitzpatrick and Britain's Ante Razmilovic were the biggest gainers in this shuffle rounding fourth and fifth respectively just ahead of James Howells with Masfen now in seventh.

The wind went very light as the boats started off down the run then about half way down the leg the next rain squall came through turning the leg into a tight reach. The squall also brought stronger wind which reached the back of the fleet first and within moments virtually the fleet was once again closely bunched.

'At one point we were pole forward on the forestay going no where and Richard Merriweather came storming through from 25 yards behind, passing us just 8 feet away with his pole back and 8 knots of wind to end up 25 yards ahead.' Commented Laurence Mead of this second run nightmare.

Beadsworth played a conservative game and was able to defend his generous lead round the leeward mark and up the short beat to the finish but behind him it was all to play for. Ultimately Nils Razmilovic finished second with Howells third, Masfen fourth and Ante Razmilovic fifth. Fort crossed the line in sixth only to discover that he and Flynn had both been over the line at the start and were disqualified.

The start of the second race (officially Race 4 on the results) was delayed by some three hours as the wind went round in circles under successive squalls. For the crews it was a cold, wet and miserable wait but eventually the wind settled, the committee set up with the windward mark at 260 degrees and racing got underway in approximately 12 knots. Sadly the wind did not stay stable for long and at the weather mark the committee was signalling a change of leeward mark to 130 degrees.

James Howells, sailing GBR1332 with David Bedford and Oscar Mead led the fleet away down the run with Andy Beadsworth and Jud Smith in hot pursuit. The pack was closely bunched and places were changing all the way. At the first leeward mark Beadsworth had just edged into the lead and took the left side of the gate with Howells going right. The second beat brought another massive shift and it was all change again with different faces hitting the front of the fleet every few minutes.

By the final leeward mark Australia's Noel Drennan, sailing with Mal Parker and Wade Morgan, had taken the lead and he held it through the long final beat to the finish. At the last leeward mark Graham Bailey, sailing GBR1352 with Stephen Bailey and David Heritage, was at the back of the leading group and decided extreme measures were called for, heading for the left hand corner despite the theoretically stronger tide on that side of the course.

As he came back to the fleet in the final approaches to the finish he and Smith were neck and neck with Smith gaining the upper hand on the final tack to take second place with Bailey third. Mike Sparks, sailing GBR1297 and crewed by Solent gurus Barry Dunning and Eddy Warwick slipped into fourth with Howells fifth and Beadsworth sixth.

Back ashore the extreme weather conditions during the first race were the subject of much discussion and a protest was lodged to have the race thrown out, however the jury dismissed the protest and the results of both races stand.

Tomorrow's forecast is for south westerly winds in the mid teens but with more showers also forecast conditions are likely to remain unstable. Two further races are scheduled for tomorrow with the first signal planned for 11:00.

Etchells Worlds - Positions after 2 races

1 GBR 1361 20 Dawn Raid Andy Beadsworth 1 6 7 7pts
2 GBR 1332 27 Gelert James Howells 3 5 8 8
3 USA 1351 55 Daddy's Girl Jud Smith 10 2 12 12
4 NZL 1058 25 Feng Shui Anatole Masfen 4 8 12 12
5 GBR 1333 49 Swedish Blue Ante Razmilovic 5 15 20 20
6 IRL 1015 37 Matatu Dubh David Burrows 11 9 20 20
7 HKG 1051 41 Quest Mark Thornburrow 12 12 24 24
8 AUS 1150 22 Dragon Lady Bill Steele 19 7 26 26
9 AUS 1215 39 Palaver Noel Drennan 26 1 27 27
10 AUS 1250 16 Bushfire Jervis Tilly 16 13 29 29
11 GBR 1339 26 Freelance Laurence Mead 21 10 31 31
12 GBR 1267 50 Take 2 Richard Merriweather 13 18 31 31
13 NZL 1127 28 Golli Gosh Gavin Gerrard 15 16 31 31
14 GBR 1352 12 Arbitrator Graham Bailey 31 3 34 34
15 USA 1306 53 Wiki Wiki 3 Tom Hughes 6 28 34 34
16 GBR 1340 36 Matatu Nils Razmilovic 2 34 36 36
17 GBR 1067 45 Slieve Elva Sam North 14 25 39 39
18 IRL 954 17 Conjurer Alex Lacy 27 14 41 41
19 GBR 1354 23 Elvis David Franks 22 19 41 41
20 SWE 997 51 Warlord Lars Engelbert 20 21 41 41
21 IRL 1194 35 Mano Tom Fitzpatrick 7 37 44 44
22 IRL 1330 47 Snow Patrol Dan O'Grady 8 36 44 44
23 GBR 1297 119 Mike Sparks 41 445 45
24 ITA 836 30 Hobe El Bahar Marco Cimarosti 17 29 46 46
25 GBR 1331 29 Hex James Hudleston 9 40 49 49
26 AUS 1244 21 Dr. Evil Jake Gunther 23 26 49 49
27 GBR 1329 48 Stampede Julia Bailey 32 22 54 54
28 Blue Genes 54 GBR 1039 15 Ben Cooper 30 24 54
29 GBR 962 42 Ragtime Rob Goddard 28 27 55 55
30 GBR 1193 46 Snatch Andrew Oddie 39 17 56 56
31 USA 1327 43 Raging Rooster Peter Duncan 33 23 56 56
32 GBR 1165 54 Wobbegong Doug Flynn 46 11 57 57
33 Count Boris' Secret Rendezvous AUS 872 18 Nick Knezic 18 39 57 57
34 IRL 1251 52 White Pointer Richard Grey 25 33 58

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