Please select your home edition
Edition
Rooster 2025

World Match Racing Tour crew require official M32 Match Racing Licence

by WMRT on 13 Nov 2015
Johnie Berntsson and his team test their skills on the M32 high performance catamaran in Bermuda Robert Hajduk / WMRT
World Match Racing Tour - In a ground breaking step, each and every crewman competing on the 2016 World Match Racing Tour (WMRT), including World Championship Events and World Tour Events, will be required to obtain an official M32 Match Racing Licence.

This is principally for safety, but also for insurance reasons, explains Lars Linger, long term Magnus Holmberg trimmer and 2000/01 World Match Racing Tour champion, who is running the intensive three-day training sessions that will culminate in each crewman receiving an M32 Match Racing Licence.

“Match racing in very light catamarans is a new thing,” says Linger, who has been racing with Klabbe Nylof's Audi Ultra Sailing Team on the M32 Scandinavian Series. “You can be sailing at 30 knots, so if you don’t know what you are doing, you are going to crash. It’s like motor racing or go-karts: You need a license to participate. This will teach them how to race these boats in a proper manner so that you don’t break them or crash, because sailing at 30 knots is new to everyone. And there are going to be a lot of people entering these regattas…”

Out of Puerto Calero, Lanzarote, the license training will be available until the end of January, by appointment, while in Bermuda it will take place over 5-7 January and 16-18 February. Typically each of these training periods will be attended by four crews, swapping in and out of two boats. Half of the training will be land-based theory, while the other half will be on the water, when the crews will get to grips with manoeuvring the M32 before they start racing it – upping pace and closeness of contact as they go, all the while with a coach on board.

Linger continues: “It is an intensive course with a very steep learning curve. They can adapt to it in three to four days and then be ready to race, but they need that time before going out on to the World Match Racing Tour, otherwise - as we have seen in the M32 Series – even really good sailors can go in there and get absolutely lost.”

The venues, Lanzarote and Bermuda, have been chosen because they both regularly offer the medium-strong winds in which it is necessary to gain M32 racing experience. “Above 10 knots it starts to become pretty critical how you sail these boats,” maintains Linger. “It is just to give them a feel for it, but also it is due to the insurance for the boats. We have a certificate to show that these guys have sailed the boats before. It is like a driving license.”

Mattias Dahlström, of the Race Management team, explains how licensing sailors will affect the racing: “In all sailing events keeping the sailors safe is top of the agenda. The World Match Racing Tour, aboard the M32s, will be faster than ever before and of course we take that into account when setting up the safety structure.

“The teams need to be able to handle the boat in a safe way to avoid serious incidents. The WMRT moving to multihulls represents a bigger change than shifting between different monohulls – it will mean rule changes and a different course set-up. The licensing training will highlight these differences and give the opportunity to test them on the water.”

Craig Mitchell, of the Race Management team, agrees: “We just want to know that the people racing on the Tour are not going to wreck the boats. So the licensing course is very much about boat handling and set-up and learning about what to do in the event of any incidents.

“Safety is priority number one. During racing, we’ll have all the safety equipment on site and a safety RIB with all the gear on board it to make sure that, in the event of, say, a capsize, everyone knows what to do, where you can and can’t stand, etc. The M32s have a righting system and the safety RIB will get in there to get the cat upright, and the team needs to know what they have to do during that.

“Then there’s the guest program, getting guests on and off boats. The syllabus goes through all of that to help crews get familiar with it.”
Trofeo Princesa Sofía Mallorca 2025Maritimo 2023 S600 FOOTERVetus-Maxwell 2021 v2 FOOTER

Related Articles

RORC centenary Rolex Fastnet Race
All set for another record-breaker Less than two months now remain until the start of the 2025 Rolex Fastnet Race, this year coinciding with the Royal Ocean Racing Club's centenary.
Posted today at 10:06 am
Team Racing Worlds at Newport, RI, overall
Corinthian Yacht Club puts on top notch performance to win Sustained winds in the low 20-knot range and choppy seas brought on another challenging day in the final stretch of the 2025 Team Racing World Championship.
Posted today at 4:19 am
Young Aussie squad ready to shine at Europeans
Australia's fast boat sailors are set for the 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 Europeans in Greece Australia's fast boat sailors are set to take on the 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 European Championships this week in Thessaloniki, Greece. With up to 18 races scheduled over the next six days, it's set to be a high-intensity regatta.
Posted today at 4:04 am
The call of the mighty
See the words Admiral's Cup and you immediately think approachable, real, hardcore action See the words Admiral's Cup and you immediately think approachable, real, hardcore action, braving the elements, and glory for the victorious. As an Australian, you have King Louie (the late Lou Abrahams), and the late Sir Jim Hardy as the poster boys.
Posted on 1 Jun
Southern Wind Rendezvous overall
A Perfect Conclusion to a Perfect Event The horn sounded right on time for the fourth day of the Southern Wind Rendezvous and Trophy. Blue skies, warm sun, and 6-7 knots of breeze with gusts up to 10 knots accompanied the fleet on a 15-mile course rounding Monaci and Secca Tre Monti.
Posted on 1 Jun
16th 151 Miglia-Trofeo Cetilar concludes
Mylius 60 crossed the finish line to win the IRC Over 60 maxi class It has been a long time coming after spending much of the 2024 season finishing second and even continuing this in the recent IMA Maxi European Championship, but finally Guido Paolo Gamucci's Cippa Lippa X has won a race.
Posted on 1 Jun
PONANT Sydney Noumea Yacht Race draws to a close
With all three competing yachts now officially retired The 2025 PONANT Sydney Noumea Yacht Race has concluded with all three competing yachts now officially retired.
Posted on 1 Jun
Casa Vela Cup 2025 at St Francis Yacht Club overal
Pauline Courtois and her Match in Pink Normandy team claimed a decisive victory French match racing skipper Pauline Courtois and her Match in Pink Normandy team claimed a decisive victory on Saturday at the 2025 Casa Vela Cup, held in the iconic waters of San Francisco Bay and hosted by the St.Francis Yacht Club.
Posted on 1 Jun
Team Racing Worlds at Newport, RI, Day 3
Epic breeze cuts racing short; clear division between teams sets scene for final day Sunny skies met big breeze on Day 3 but by 12:30 p.m. racing was postponed, and as the wind built to 25+, the Race Committee abandoned racing at 3:00 p.m.
Posted on 1 Jun
Ponant Sydney Noumea Race Start in Images
A light and variable breeze got the three-boat fleet away in the afternoon light It was a quiet start to the Ponant Sydney Noumea Race, with the fleet the leaving Sydney Harbour in a light and variable breeze. Grant Wharington and Adrian Seiffert's Wild Thing 100 led the fleet of three down the harbour on a close reach
Posted on 31 May