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Magic Marine RS300 Winter Championship overall

by Steve Bolland on 17 Mar 2015
Magic Marine RS300 Winter Champioship Kay Peters
Magic Marine RS300 Winter Championship - You know how in ‘Rocky’, Stallone prepares for a fight by punching slabs of raw beef? Well, last weekend was as cold as that meat locker he was in. I guess we should have expected that, heading east with a full-on north-easterly blowing straight in from Scandinavia. However, despite the return to artic-like conditions it was fantastic to see 21 competitors signed up for the Magic Marine RS300 Winter Champs at Hykeham SC over the weekend of 14/15 March. The furthest-travelled award would normally have gone to those coming from Kent or Somerset but they were well and truly trumped on this occasion by Mark Taylor and Alistair McLaughlin making the trip all the way from Prestwick. Fair play.

Hykeham, with a growing fleet of RS300s there, provided an impeccable welcome and this, coupled with the obvious enthusiasm within the class at the moment, provided the perfect back-drop to a great weekend of racing.



The breeze, fortuitously blowing pretty much down the length of the lake, allowed two good beats, a handful of reaches and a long run back down to the start area that transpired to keep the racing tight and provided quite a few ‘moments’. The limited width of the lake kept everyone together, especially on the first beat of each race with the whole fleet seemingly arriving together at the windward mark, the excitement exacerbated by the starboard mark rounding.

The force four with some dramatic gusts on Saturday caught out quite a few, the ensuing turmoil being of Greek economic proportions at times (nearly). Not least amongst these were the co-Chairmen both going in to windward in pretty much the same place in race one (particularly slippery bit of water, that). Steve Sallis got hit by a big gust while leading race two.

That gust came at him in cubic metre lumps and it gave those of us following him a great view of his stern lifting out of the water as the bow went in. We shared your pain, Steve, we really did. Also failing to cover himself in glory, having taken over the lead following Sallis’ mishap, was Matt Jenkins who not so much ran aground in the shallows as dredged a substantial section of the lakebed. We shared his pain too.



By Saturday evening the whole fleet was in a state of distress following three full-on races. The soup and pork rolls prepared by the club after racing provided just enough energy for us to get to our feet and study the overnight results which revealed that consistency was key. Duncan Jenkins from Aldenham showed us that getting in three decent results rather than mucking about falling in/running aground/knocking yourself out (Jimmy Ruddiman) was the way forward. A couple of beers at the club and then a short walk to the pub (table for 26) and more fuel intake rounded off a memorable evening.

Mercifully the wind, although in the same direction, had dropped a little overnight allowing our aching limbs a bit of respite. This didn’t stop more muppetry though. Luke Pepper, while on his way to victory in race five managed to lose his GoPro off his boom. Apparently such mishaps are Normal For Luke. Luckily Steve Bolland, following behind, had only to make a slight deviation to pick it up in one swoop and then proceeded to amuse himself by taking selfies as the race progressed. The additional weight was the main problem though. I would definitely have won that race without the GoPro on board.



There were no doubt many more incidents but the racing remained so close throughout, gaining or losing three or four places upwind or down was as easy as falling off a 300, that registering anything other than what was happening in your immediate vicinity was nigh on impossible.

I suppose you want to know the results? Have a look below if you’re really that interested. Of much more importance is that we all had a great time – top racing, top evening out on Saturday, new friendships made and older ones renewed. Roll on the Sprints at Rutland on 11/12 April.

 Results:

Rank SailNo Club HelmName R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 Total Nett
1st 411 Bristol Corinthian YC Steve Bolland -8 2 1 1 3 2 17 9
2nd 328 Sheffield Viking SC Tim Keen 2 1 (22.0 DNF) 7 5 1 38 16
3rd 518 Hykeham SC Luke Pepper 4 5 -8 5 1 4 27 19
4th 335 Bartley SC Sam Knight 5 3 -10 2 2 7 29 19
5th 454 Aldenham SC Duncan Jenkins 1 4 5 6 -7 5 28 21
6th 323 Sheffield Viking SC Matt Jenkins 3 -8 2 8 6 3 30 22
7th 476 Hykeham SC Steve Sallis 6 7 4 3 4 -9 33 24
8th 500 Stewartby SC Pete Ellis -12 9 6 4 8 8 47 35
9th 540 Bartley SC Richard Le Mare 9 -12 3 10 11 6 51 39
10th 321 Hykeham SC Andy Bayliss 10 6 7 9 -13 11 56 43
11th 383 Shotwick Lake SC Stuart Hopson 7 10 9 11 9 -12 58 46
12th 433 Rollesby Broard SC David Houghton -15 11 13 12 12 10 73 58
13th 422 Bough Beech SC Alistair Wood 13 15 11 13 10 (22.0 DNF) 84 62
14th 417 Stewartby Water SC Dan Treloar 14 13 12 -17 14 13 83 66
15th 336 Prestwick SC Mark Taylor -16 14 15 15 16 14 90 74
16th 515 Hykeham SC John Peters 17 -18 16 14 17 17 99 81
17th 342 Southport SC Ian Hopkins -19 17 14 18 18 15 101 82
18th 519 Bartley SC Ben Julian 21 16 (22.0 DNF) 16 15 16 106 84
19th 490 Prestwick SC Alistair McLaughlin 11 (22.0 DNF) 22.0 DNC 22.0 DNC 22.0 DNC 22.0 DNC 121 99
20th 426 Glossop SC Jimmy Ruddiman 18 (22.0 DNF) 22.0 DNC 22.0 DNC 22.0 DNC 22.0 DNC 128 106
21st 352 Girton SC Matt Kirman 20 (22.0 DNF) 22.0 DNF 22.0 DNC 22.0 DNC 22.0 DNC 130 108
North Sails Performance 2023 - FOOTERVaikobi 2024 FOOTERFlagstaff 2021AUG - Oceanis 40.1 - FOOTER

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