Please select your home edition
Edition
J Composites J/45

Price and team crowned Sharp Australian Youth Match Racing Champions

by Olivia Price on 24 Oct 2016
Price and his team, comfortably handle the Musto sponsored Elliott 7 downwind CYCA Hamish Hardy
CYCA’s Harry Price, Ben Robinson, John Cooley, Harry Morton and Hugo Stoner have won the 2016 Sharp Australian Youth Match Racing Championship, defeating long-time rival Will Dargaville from the Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club, three - one in the finals. This marked back-to-back national titles for Price who won the event in Mooloolaba last year.

Over the course of the regatta, nine teams from Western Australia, Queensland, Victoria and New South Wales battled a predictable Sydney sea breeze on the opening two days, followed by a strong and shifty southerly change for the last two days. The event was marked with some fast, yet sometimes out of control downwind runs, with the Elliott 7m asymmetrical spinnakers proving to be a hot ride for the youth Under 23 competitors.

Showing their professionalism and expertise, the CYCA Race Committee team, led by Denis Thompson, completed a staggering 123 races across the Championship, creating a new record for the club. The wind averaged 20 knots over the Championship, with gusts of 35 knots recorded on Sydney Harbour on Sunday, when the fleet were held ashore for the majority of the day.

At 1315hrs, a call from Race Management to ‘give it a crack and see what we might break’ was decided. In the end, the young sailors proved their skills by handling the Elliott 7s effortlessly in the breeze, which shifted through 40 degrees and ranged from 14-28 knots in the finals.

With the morning lost to high winds, the remaining races of the semi-finals were scrapped and the call to jump straight to the finals was made, seeing Harry Price and Will Dargaville advance after finishing top two in the qualifying stage. Tom Grimes and James Hodgson were paired against each other in the petit-final.

The battle for third place needed all three races to decide a winner, even though winning margins were some of the highest seen this regatta. The lone non-New South Wales team to qualify for the semi-finals, James Hodgson from Mooloolaba Yacht Club nailed the first race with a comfortable 90 seconds lead to the finish. Race two saw an even bigger delta between the boats, when Grimes handed Hodgson a double penalty in a ruthless pre-start and squared the petit-final with over a three minute lead. Not rattled by this loss, the Queenslander bounced back to defeat Grimes in race three and sailed away to the bronze medal position.



In the finals, Harry Price and his team could be described as ‘simply better’. Throughout the finals series, Price had the better starts and controlled his opponent for the majority of the race course, although after leading for three quarters of race one, they stumbled at the end and Dargaville took the race win.

Races two and three saw Price again get the better starts, and from there his team managed the shifty and puffy southerly incredibly well, bouncing the RPAYC team to the wrong side of the track to take out both races and take the lead in the series. Race four saw Price sink the biggest blow to his competitor, when he handed out a double penalty effectively allowing him to sail the race his way in order to take the title.

“The boys did a great job all week and kept me in check. We executed our starts well and it made a big difference in the final to have that controlling positon early on. We always have a good battle with Will, he’s a great competitor and we love being pushed hard by him. To come away with our second National title the way we did was just great,” commented Price back at the CYCA.

At the Presentation, Sharp’s Sydney and Canberra B2B Branch Manager, Ed Gaete, acknowledged that Sharps involvement with the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, and this event, came about for one major reason; the expertise and experience of the competitors, race management, branding and event planning, aligns with their company line, ‘Simply the best’.

All attention now turns to the CYCA’s 2016 Match Racing finale, the World Sailing Grade 2 Musto International Youth Match Racing Championship, held from 21-25 November 2016.

Cyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERJ Composites J/45SCIBS 2024 FOOTER

Related Articles

Australian Sailors set for major events in France
Olympic preparations continue for Nacra 17, 49er, 49er FX and 470 fleets Australian sailors are poised to make waves in France in the four two-person disciplines as the Nacra 17 World Championships, 49er, FX and Mixed 470 European Champions take place this week.
Posted today at 4:55 am
Sam Davies third in The Transat CIC
British sailor completes an international IMOCA podium in the race An exhausted but delighted Sam Davies sailed her Initiatives Coeur across the finish line of the Transat CIC at 20:11:37hrs local time NYC (00:11:37 hrs UTC) to take a well earned third place on the legendary solo race across the North Atlantic.
Posted today at 4:44 am
Around NZ Solo Record attempt underway
Accomplished solo sailor Lisa Blair has set off on new record attempt - solo around New Zealand Australian record-breaking solo sailor Lisa Blair has embarked on a new World Record sailing attempt crossing a start line off Auckland's North Head early Tuesday morning.
Posted today at 2:40 am
Boris Herrmann second in The Transat CIC
Career best for the German skipper of Malizia - Seaexplorer Germany's Boris Herrmann sailed to the best result of his 14 year IMOCA ocean racing career so far when he finished in second place on The Transat CIC on Sunday.
Posted on 6 May
2024 Star Worlds comes to San Diego this September
SDYC has previously hosted the regatta eight times San Diego Yacht Club (SDYC) is excited to invite members of the International Star Class to compete at the Star World Championship in San Diego, CA with racing from September 8-13, 2024.
Posted on 6 May
Pre-eminence
Not too hard to work out that I am unabashedly Australian Not too hard to work out that I am unabashedly Australian. Hope everyone is as proud of their country, as I am. Most folk I know seem to be.
Posted on 6 May
Yoann Richomme wins The Transat CIC
IMOCA Paprec Arkéa first to arrive into New York French skipper Yoann Richomme made it two back-to-back solo Transatlantic wins today when he brought his PAPREC ARKÉA across the finish line first on the historic Transat CIC race across the North Atlantic from Lorient in Brittany to New York.
Posted on 6 May
Newport, Rhode Island here we come!
Excitement and anticipation are already high among 52 Super Series owners and crews A precious cargo of ten 52 Super Series representing seven different nations left Palma today heading across the Atlantic bound for the USA's sailing epicentre, Newport, Rhode Island.
Posted on 6 May
Herrmann using his experience from The Ocean Race
Climbing to second place in The Transat CIC All that experience in last year's The Ocean Race is paying off for the German Malizia-Seaexplorer skipper, Boris Herrmann, who has climbed to second place in The Transat CIC with just over 100 nautical miles to sail.
Posted on 6 May
Open Category for RS Venture Connect Worlds
Designed for participation by all, including non-disabled teams "The sport of sailing should be available to anyone, anywhere and on an equal playing field for all participants."
Posted on 6 May