Please select your home edition
Edition
Hyde Sails 2024 - One Design

2016 Sharpie 73rd Australian Championship – Day 1 overall

by Peter Campbell on 3 Jan 2016
Tasmanian boat One Hump or Two leading Zulu from the ACT Angus Calvert
2016 Sharpie 73rd Australian Championship – Former International Cadet Australian champion Alec Bailey yesterday led a strong Tasmanian challenge to regain the State status in the iconic Sharpie class.

Bailey, a newcomer to the class, sailed Gentlemen’s Relish to victory in the opening race in the 73rd Sharpie nationals on the River Derwent, representing the host club, Sandy Bay Sailing Club.

The young Tasmanian picked a 60 degree windshift late in the 15 nautical race to come from 10th in the 35 boat fleet to score a 46 second win from two veterans of the high performance, mainly adult three-crew centreboard class.

Second place went class veteran Derek Milligan from the ACT, sailing Zulu and an entrant in the Over 50 class of the regatta. A close third was wellknown South Australian Sharpie sailor Tony Turton (nominated in the Over 40 class) sailing Don’t Poke the Bear.

Bailey is sailing Gentlemen’s Relish with Doug Shephard and Chris Jones as crew.

The last Tasmanian to win the Australian championship in Sharpies, Dew Latham and his crew of Nick Johnston and Nick Carter finished a close fourth with One Hump or Two.

Junior sailor Maddy Salter, also from Sandy Bay Sailing Club, sailed an excellent race in Gun Smoke with her crew of Julian Salter, a champion foiler Moth sailor and her father Steve Salter, finished seventh and first female skipper.

This is the 73rd National Championship for the Sharpies but it may be the last due to the cost of shipping across Bass Strait as there is no State Government subsidy for vehicles towing ‘sporting equipment’ such as boats on trailers.

Of the 35 entries, 24 have come from interstate but the number would have been greater but for the cost.



While the local fleet has diminished over the years, the high-performance Sharpie has attracted some of Hobart’s talented young sailors as helmsmen and part of the three-person crew.

Other prominent former International Cadet sailors at the helm of a Sharpie in this regatta include Alec Bailey (Gentlemen’s Relish), Oliver Burnell (Bonfires), Jonny Cooper (Sleezy Wine Bars), Oliver Nicholas (Buzzwagon), Madeline Salter (Gun Smoke) and Sam Tiedemann (Get Smart).

Heading the Tasmanian contingent is veteran skipper Drew Lathan at the helm of One Hump or Two, the last Tasmanian to win an Australian championship in the Sharpie class.

Of the other young skippers Ollie Burnell finished 14th in the long 15 nautical mile race, Sam Tiedemann 23rd, Ollie Nicholas 25th.

Mainland sailors in the top ten were Zulu (Derek Milligan, ACT) second overall, Don’t Poke the Bear (Tony Turton, SA) third, Truck (Todd Curry, NSW) fifth, Blur (Tim Souter, NSW), Nude (Ryan Kelly, SA) ninth and Bullit (Ashley Gabrielson, SA).

Two races are scheduled to be sailed tomorrow, 4 January.

PredictWind - Routing 728x90 BOTTOMNorth Sails Loft 57 PodcastRS Sailing 2021 - FOOTER

Related Articles

O'pen Skiff World Championship in Japan
Team USA delivers a solid performance Five US sailors traveled to Nishinomiya, Japan for six days of challenging conditions, hot temperatures, and world class sailing. USA sailor Lucas Doran was in third place in the U17 fleet before the final day of racing.
Posted on 24 Jul
Admirals Cup: Day 4 - All hanging on the Fastnet.
The end of the beginning of the 2025 Admirals' Cup. Rán runs aground - claims redress. Today marked the End of the Beginning of the 2025 Admirals' Cup with the conclusion of Inshore racing on what is known as the "Central Solent". The Baltic teams' TP52 Rán hit a sandbank and has claimed redress.
Posted on 24 Jul
Less than 48 hours to Rolex Fastnet Race
Battle lines are being drawn up Battle lines are being drawn up for the RORC's centenary Rolex Fastnet Race. As the final day of Admiral's Cup inshore racing took place in the Solent, so several yachts due to take part in Saturday's main event were out training.
Posted on 24 Jul
Transpac 2025: Seconds apart after 2,280 miles
For decades, the Transpacific Yacht Club has sought to make racing as fair as possible for all boats The Offshore Racing Rule's (ORR) Forecast Time Correction Factor (F-TCF) rating system, used in this year's Transpac race from Los Angeles to Honolulu, resulted in exceptionally close results.
Posted on 24 Jul
A Day at the WASZP Games
Video interviews with some of the sailors and supporters of the class The WASZP Games 2025, being held at the Weymouth & Portland National Sailing Academy in the UK, has attracted 248 of the foiling dinghies to take part in a week of varied and high intensity racing.
Posted on 24 Jul
Admiral's Cup David Maynard Thursday Gallery
First race of the day, captured for our viewing pleasure David Maynard was out on the water to catch the action from the first on Thursday of the Admiral's Cup Inshore Racing.
Posted on 24 Jul
Snipe Women's World Championship day 1
Racing in a quintessential Enoshima southwester with big waves After a practice race yesterday, racing got under way today in a quintessential Enoshima southwester with big waves and breeze starting about 14 knots and building to 16 or 17 with a few higher puffs.
Posted on 24 Jul
World Sailing's inaugural Impact Report
Charting a new course for a sustainable future in sport World Sailing, the global governing body for the sport of sailing, today released its first Impact Report, a comprehensive overview of the federation's significant progress in environmental sustainability and social contribution.
Posted on 24 Jul
Yoann Richomme returns to Fastnet
Says Elodie Bonafous' is the boat to beat This weekend's biennial Rolex Fastnet Race - one of the oldest classics in sailing - sees the IMOCA Class return to the racetrack, with eight boats on the startline on Saturday for what is the second round of this year's IMOCA Globe Series Championship.
Posted on 24 Jul
2025 iQFOiL Youth & Junior Worlds kicks off
Over 20 races scheduled across eight days, with the world's top young windsurfers chasing the title The world's fastest young windsurfers are arriving in Brittany as the 2025 iQFOiL Youth & Junior World Championships get under way in Brest.
Posted on 24 Jul