Please select your home edition
Edition
Allen Brothers

WMRT Match Cup - Favourites flex their muscles in St Petersburg

by Aston Harald on 2 Aug 2017
1st August 2017. WMRT Match Cup Russia, St Petersburg, Russia. Ian Roman
A full first day of racing in glorious sunshine and solid westerlies at the WMRT Match Cup Russia in St Petersburg saw the big beasts making some early shows of strength as they sought the best seeding for the knockout battles to come. Phil Robertson (CHINAone Ningbo), Ian Williams (GAC Pindar) and Yann Guichard (Spindrift Racing) all topped their groups, but they did not have it all their own way.

If the draw produced a group of death, it was Group 1, where current Match Racing World Champion and this year’s clear leader, Robertson, discovered from the first race that it was not going to be all plain sailing. One of Perth’s many emerging talents, Matt Jerwood (Redline Racing), made an early impression by winning the first race after a three-horse race with Robertson and Pieter-Jan Postma (Sailing Team NL). “Our tactician kept putting us in the right place and we just snuck around Phil at the final mark,” Jerwood said. “As frustrating as it is drawing the number one seed in your group, it always toughens you up for the coming regatta. It’s always fun racing Phil because he and his boys are so good, you’re racing the best in the world when you race Phil.”

He is not wrong, Robertson remains the man to beat. The New Zealand skipper won stage one of the WMRT, Match Cup Australia, and was generally unbeatable in July. He followed a crushing victory in the GKSS Match Cup Sweden at the beginning of the month, by winning the inaugural M32 World Championship in Marstrand, Sweden, and then won the Extreme Sailing Series event in Barcelona in the third week.

Jerwood, currently fifth overall on the WMRT leaderboard thanks to finishing second at WMRT Match Cup Australia in March, where he lost 3-0 to Robertson, finished the day second in the pool after fluffing the start in race two and watching Robertson, score two bullets. But Jerwood roared off the start in the last race to make sure no one will fancy facing him when the knockout rounds start. He also did enough to perhaps elicit a small shot across the bows from Robertson.

“Matt had a pretty good day, I think he had a little wobble there, race two,” Robertson said, “but they’re a fast team and always going pretty nicely, and if they can get a clean start they’re definitely a bit of a threat.”

The fleet was more bunched in Group One, which probably reflected the depth of quality of the teams as much as the slightly shiftier breeze. In the early part of the day it averaged 12 knots, but dropped to 8 sometimes in the middle races and gusted to 14 at points. It was more stable, if slightly weaker later. The group stages are taking place at St Petersburg Yacht Club, in the slightly more offshore conditions of Neva Bay, before the knockout stages move into the city on the Neva River.

But for everyone it was a day when, as so often in fleet racing, the start was decisive. “It was very much a starting day, if you get ahead you get to stay ahead,” Robertson said. That was never clearer than in Group 3’s first race when Spindrift Racing were one of three boats that were OCS at the start and Steve Thomas (RPM Racing) won in his team’s first outing since Match Cup Australia in Perth. Guichard and Spindrift, with Sam Goodchild back on board after injury, did not give the others a sniff after that, reeling off three bullets in a row. “After that we made three really good starts in a row and when you’re not in the pack, it’s not tricky to control the other ones,” Guichard said.

In these early stages a good guide to form is how boats cope with bad starts, and on that score all the leaders showed their speed and consistency. Spindrift came from the back to finish second in the first race and GAC Pindar also gained ground to finish second twice, to go with their two bullets, won from the front.

In the first race in Group 2, GAC Pindar had a penalty re-start, went around the bottom mark in fourth but still managed to ease past in to second. “It’s a very short course, the races were not much more than 10 minutes, so there’s not much time to pull back if you have a bad start,” Ian Williams, the six-times Match Racing World Champion, said.



Qualifying Results

Group 1

1. Phil Robertson (NZL), CHINAone Ningbo - 7 pts
2. Matt Jerwood (AUS), Redline Racing - 9 pts
3. Pieter-Jan Postma (NED), Sailing Team NL - 11 pts
4. Viktor Serezhkin (RUS), Gazprom Team Russia - 17 pts
5. Nico Delle Karth (AUT) - Chilli Racing - 18 pts
6. Evgeny Elfimov (RUS) - M1 Cloud - 22 pts

Group 2

1. Ian Williams (GBR), GAC Pindar - 6 pts
2. Nicklas Dackhammar (SWE), ESSIQ Racing Team - 10 pts
3. Jonas Warrer, (DEN) Aarhus Innovator - 12 pts
4. Markus Edegran (USA), E11EVEN Racing - 14 pts
5. Sally Barkow (USA), Magenta 32 - 18 pts
6. Evgeny Neugodnikov (RUS), Team Tavatuy - 24 pts

Group 3

1. Yann Guichard (FRA), Spindrift Racing - 5 pts
2. Steve Thomas (AUS), RPM Racing - 11 pts
3. Sam Gilmour (AUS), Neptune Racing - 12 pts
4. Måns Holmberg (SWE), Gothenburg Racing - 13 pts
5. Kim Kling (SWE), Caprice Match Racing Team - 20 pts
6. Lukasz Wosinski (POL), Delphia Sailing Team - 23 pts
X-Yachts X4.338 South / Jeanneau AUS SF30 OD - FOOTERVaikobi 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
La Grande Motte International Regatta 2024 preview
Could the young Italians steal Olympic thunder this week? The Nacra 17 World Championship along with the 49er and 49erFX European Championships is about to start in La Grande Motte in the South of France, with sailors looking to make the most of the final major test before this summer's Olympic Games.
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