Please select your home edition
Edition
Zhik 2024 March - LEADERBOARD

RC44 Marstrand Cup – Two Vladimirs' teams vye for the lead

by Amy Cada on 1 Aug 2015
Charisma - 2015 RC44 Marstrand Cup Pedro Martinez / Martinez Studio
With one day of racing left at the RC44 Marstrand Cup on Sweden's west coast, the two Vladimirs' teams are vying for the lead. This morning Vladimir Liubomirov's Bronenosec Sailing Team was ahead by a mere point, an opening race win for Vladimir Prosikhin caused his Team Nika to regain first place, holding on to it until disaster struck towards the end of the last race, resulting Liubomirov recovering first. Currently, Bronenosec leads Team Nika by four points, but with three races scheduled tomorrow, any of the top six boats in theory still can win.

Coming ashore Prosikhin was feeling conflicting emotions. In the first race Team Nika just managed to sneak in on port tack at the weather mark as the competition bore down on her on starboard with rights – a move that had resulted in a penalty when Prosikhin had tried it yesterday. Today he was successful and Team Nika went on to take the win.

After finishing fourth in today's second race, Team Nika was lining up for a podium finish in race three until the last run towards the finish line in Marstrand Fjord, when what Prosikhin described as 'a catalogue of disasters' unfolded: A genniker twist developed during a gybe and with a boat immediately to leeward Team Nika was unable to bear away to unwind it. Eventually, they sorted it out, but Prosikhin then gybed in front of Peninsula Petroleum and bore away too early resulting in the two boats touching. 'So we got an expensive downwind penalty - we had to drop [the spinnaker] and we came into the harbour last,' he recounted. 'But we fought and gained two places back, which I am proud of.' However, their eighth-placed finish was costly.

Nico Poons' Charisma got her second bullet of the series in race two. This largely came about through a good fast start by the committee boat. 'Straight away we were a length ahead of the fleet,' said tactician Ray Davies. 'From there it is a lot easier – we just tried to keep it really simple and let the boat do its job. We sailed clean all the way around the track, but life's a lot easier when you are in front.'

Like Team Nika, Charisma's final race was disappointing, finishing seventh after a broach on the second to last gybe as the westerly wind built to 20 knots.

The last race today saw the RC44 Marstrand Cup get its sixth individual winner in Chris Bake's Team Aqua – with Swede Richard Goransson helming on this occasion.

'We did a good first beat and overtook Team Nika on the downwind,' recounted Goransson, sailing only his second ever RC44 regatta. 'After the rounding, we managed to keep our distance and once we were ahead at the top mark we were pretty much fine, but it got scary at the end because the boats behind were all coming in with a lot of breeze whereas our breeze was dying…'

Up until this race, Goransson admitted he had found steering upwind difficult. 'We are learning every day, getting better by increments. Downwind we have been fine mostly, although we had a wipe-out in a gybe in the second race today. It is nice to see finally what it is like to be ahead!'

Tactician Cameron Appleton said staying in front was no mean feat today. 'The beats were hugely difficult - the breeze had gone right and on port you were across the waves and on starboard you were straight into them and then they kicked up really steep.'

On Katusha, Russian RC44 newbie Alexander Novoselov pulled off his best result of the regatta finishing third. 'It was great fun - very nice weather, difficult conditions, lots of wind. We've been improving every day thanks to a great team and a great effort,' he said.

With Andy Horton off on paternity leave, tactician this week is British America's Cup helmsman Chris Draper, sailing his first ever RC44 regatta.

'Everybody is super smart,' says Draper of the racing. 'If you bleed a few lengths, then you're history! As a whole, the standard is insanely high. The guys at the front, drive the boats bloody well - anybody would struggle to beat them.'

Draper admitted that he was struggling on the upwind, but recovering on the downwinds. 'Alex [Novoselov] is doing an awesome job downwind, he's a downwind machine! We're getting ourselves back in there. It was good in the last race, to put a start and a first beat together and keep it simple from there.'

Tomorrow, the last day of the RC44 Marstrand Cup, will see racing start at 1130 CET.

RC44 Marstrand Cup Results



Pos Boat R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 R8 R9 Total
1 Bronenosec Sailing Team (RUS 18) 3 3 5 1 3 3 6 2 2 28
2 Team Nika (RUS 10) 5 1 1 2 2 8 1 4 8 32
3 Charisma (MON 69) 2 2 4 10 1 5 4 1 7 36
4 Peninsula Petroleum Sailing Team (GBR 1) 4 6 6 5 5 1 2 3 5 37
5 Artemis Racing (SWE44) 1 5 2 3 9 2 3 5 10 40
6 Team Aqua (GBR 2041) 10 10 3 6 7 4 5 6 1 52
7 Artemis Racing Youth (SWE 4) 7 4 7 4 8 9 7 10 4 60
8 Katusha (RUS 21) 6 8 11 9 6 6 8 7 3 64
9 RUS - 7 Anywayanyday (RUS 7) 8 9 8 7 4 7 11 9 9 72
10 MAG Racing (POL 44) 9 7 9 8 10 10 9 8 6 76







[Sorry, this content could not be displayed]


Henri-Lloyd - For the ObsessedZhik 2024 March - FOOTERRS Sailing 2021 - FOOTER

Related Articles

20th PalmaVela Day 1
Galateia returns to defend PalmaVela title with a perfect start At the 20th PalmaVela a breezy opening pair of windward-leeward races on the Bay of Palma saw the Wally Cento Galateia make a strong start to defending their IRC-IMA Maxi division title that they won last year with a perfect scoreline.
Posted on 2 May
52 Super Series PalmaVela Sailing Week overall
Provezza are the pride of Palma after thrilling title decider Ergin Imre's Provezza crew laid to rest some of their past bad memories of racing on the Bay of Palma when they clinched the first title of the season at 52 SUPER SERIES PalmaVela Sailing thanks to a spectacular victory in the final race.
Posted on 2 May
La Grande Motte International Regatta 2024 preview
Final dress rehearsal for the Cats and Skiffs Of those 148 crews registered, 39 will represent their country in less than three months in Marseille, location of the 2024 Olympic sailing events.
Posted on 2 May
Transat CIC day 5
Richomme takes the lead in the IMOCAs The skippers have been facing tough conditions since the start and fatigue, the chilling temperatures on board, the lack of sleep, as well as the inevitable technical problems and breakages, are putting sailors and boats to the test.
Posted on 2 May
GSC achieves sustainability & environmental goals
The verification of the compliance with the standard was conducted in two phases TÜV Thüringen congratulates the organization and participants for their achievements in the Global Solo Challenge.
Posted on 2 May
Why are 3Di sails aero-optimized?
A streamlined sail shape delivers less drag, more drive, and greater effectiveness North Sails explain the advantages of aero-optimisation: a streamlined sail shape delivers less drag, more drive, greater effectiveness and enhanced durability.
Posted on 2 May
Cruise with confidence with Doyle Sails
Doyle Sails is the sailmaker of choice for many cruising catamarans and performance multihulls Doyle Sails is the sailmaker of choice for many cruising catamarans and numerous performance multihulls worldwide, continuing to lead the fleet when it comes to reliable, durable, and easy-to-handle cruising sails.
Posted on 2 May
Zhik kits out Australia's Olympic sailors
With industry-first high-performance neoprene-free wetsuit When Australia's 12 Olympic sailors take to the waters of Marseille in July this year, they'll wear the industry's first high-performance, neoprene-free wetsuits created by Sydney sailing apparel company Zhik.
Posted on 1 May
Holcim-PRB sustains bowsprit damage
Nicolas Lunven continues racing towards New York While in fifth position in The Transat CIC fleet, Team Holcim-PRB skipper Nicolas Lunven alerted his shore team on Wednesday morning that the boat's bowsprit had broken. The incident occurred overnight amid strong wind conditions.
Posted on 1 May
Momentous day for INEOS Britannia
As AC75 sets sail for first time INEOS Britannia's new race boat for the 37th America's Cup has set sail for the very first time. The British Challenger's AC75 took to the water in Barcelona with Olympic Gold medallists Sir Ben Ainslie and Giles Scott at the Helm on Wednesday 1st May.
Posted on 1 May