Please select your home edition
Edition
Mackay Boats 728x90 TOP

13th China Club Challenge Match, Part 1. So how was it for you?

by Al Skinner on 12 Oct 2017
CCCM 2017, Round 1: fleet racing Al Skinner
The CCCM is by any reckoning the longest-running and entirely amateur sailing regatta in China. Club crews against club crews, representing their clubs. A long weekend’s fleet racing to seed the field, followed by a weekend’s match racing to sort the salty tars from the dilettantes – and judging by the smiles of the sailors as they came off the water at the end of it all, it was PDG (Pretty Damn Good)!

37 competing teams stepped up to the plate for the 13th China Club Challenge Match. Maybe not as many as the organisers had made allowances for, but for an event which is only in its 13th year in a nation where sailing is not much older, this is an impressive figure.

This year’s event started with three days of mainly champagne sailing on the waters off Xiamen – an overused expression perhaps, but in this case it was truly sparkling. 11 races scheduled and sailed over three three days, with sailors from the top to the bottom of the fleet giving it their all – and with the huge majority with the right attitude. In fact, the crew that was last in almost every race could always be seen with big smiles on their faces and a wave for every support boat that passed close by whether media, umpire or mark boat – and that’s what sailing should be all about.

The event was overseen by an excellent PRO who set fair windward-leeward courses up and down the sometimes fierce equinoctial tidal current. When the tide started to go slack on a couple of days, the huge number of OCS prompted general recalls with the black flag in evidence. That caught out a couple, but on the final day the BFG threat was enough to pull all the competitors into line for a clean start on the first attempt. Some previous over-enthusiasm would have made it easier for the RO to count the legal starters than the OCS boats!

The racing was kept ‘honest’ by Addendum Q on the water judging, provided by a team of sharp-eyed umpires: John and Wayne up from New Zealand, Cathy Delaney from Hong Kong (another Kiwi) and Al Skinner from China making up the foursome. Although briefed and warned about early bowsprit deployment, the early races saw multiple penalties for over eager use of the prods, but by the final day the lesson had, it seemed finally sunk in with only two or three red flags for that particular ‘over eagerness’.


The racing was effectively policed, but with two umpire boats for a fleet of 37, many of whom seemed to have an almost magnetic attraction for each other, the on-the-water hearings were still busy, with protests up into double figures at the end of the second day. Strangely – perhaps with the realisation that a protestor wasn’t guaranteed a result, or worse still with a reverse decision - many were withdrawn. The spirit however was an example to sailors everywhere with the losers smiling, happily shaking hands, and the two skippers heading off together to the free beer.

Nowhere was this spirit of sportsmanship better displayed than at the prizegiving dinner at the end of the event. All teams who sailed with at least one female crewmember received a point “discount” on their score. One of the prizewinners realised that this meant that they had received a prize - and that prize was to come back for the match race finals and a nice silver trophy (plus some Ronstan and Sunrise Marine goodies). However, although they had entered with a female crew member, they actually sailed with an all male crew - so they immediately informed the Race Committee and handed over their slot to the crew below them. That was almost as cool as the actual team that won the event. In response to this, the owner of Sunrise Marine deemed they should keep his contribution to the prizes and awarded an additional set to the replacement winners.


The main trophy remained on its plinth as in reality the event has just reached its midway stage, with 8 teams invited back in around 5 weeks time for the head-to-head match racing element to determine the 2017 champion. This is an event which is not ‘padded out’ by multiple teams of foreigners engaging in a bit of regatta tourism; every team was from within China. This is a country where, 15 years ago, sailing outside vocational provincial teams of Olympic hopefuls was unheard of.
This was an event of sailors trying hard to win for the honour. There are no big cash prizes, so why is the event proving to be successful, growing in numbers, stature, and reputation year on year?

Speaking to many competitors the answers received are not quite unique but follow a similar vein all the way through: this is a fun event with the balance between the quality of the racing, the competition, the race management, the ‘apres-sail’ activities, the adherence to the rules, and the camaraderie. Also interesting were the comments that the competitors felt it was great to leave the race course knowing where they came was where they came, with the majority of disputes settled on the water instead of having to wait for a sometimes long drawn out process in the ‘room’. Perhaps other events in more established areas might learn from this.

It is interesting to note that a well run event, designed entirely for the benefit of the competitors – call them the customers if you like – is growing in this manner whilst in other, sometimes much more established sailing nations the concern is about falling rather than rising numbers. Could it be that in some cases the organisers believe it is THEIR event rather than the sailors’?

The China Club Challenge Match most certainly belongs to the customer.


Lloyd Stevenson - Catalyst GT 1456x180px BOTTOMArmstrong 728x90 - HA Foil Range - BOTTOMDoyle_SailWorld_728X90px_cruise BOTTOM

Related Articles

17th Transat Café L'or Start
Full speed into an uncertain night After tens of thousands of well-wishers and spectators gathered around Le Havre's Vauban docks to send off the skippers in perfect sunshine, the three divisions which started the TRANSAT CAFÉ L'OR Normandie Le Havre this afternoon were then released.
Posted today at 5:18 pm
Class40 set to stop in La Coruña, Spain
Deteriorating forecast in the Transat Café L'or Le Havre Normandie 2025 Because of an incoming frontal system the deterioration in weather conditions forecast at the entrance to the Bay of Biscay in the coming days, race management has decided to alter the Class40 course.
Posted today at 2:20 pm
18ft Skiff SIXT Spring Championship Race 3
A great 3-buoys race developed after an unpromising start to the day Following the drama created by the strong winds on each of the first two race days this season, Race 3 of the SIXT Spring Championship was an opportunity for teams to get their boats on the water in more favourable conditions.
Posted today at 9:34 am
Transat Café L'or: 3 Ocean Fifty trimarans capsize
Skippers of all three yachts are safe and well The skippers of all three yachts are safe and well. More information to be released soon.
Posted today at 6:03 am
2025 Bermuda Gold Cup Day 5
Championship Titles on the Line There were shocks, titanic tussles and some last-match deciders as the Bermuda Gold Cup and Aspen's Women's Match Racing Regatta finalists were decided.
Posted today at 6:02 am
2025 Lipton Cup at San Diego day 2
All to comes down to the final day as NHYC and SDYC trade blows on Saturday The 110th Lipton Cup returned to San Diego's South Bay for 4 more races in the 12 race series, featuring more sparkling San Diego weather.
Posted today at 1:41 am
iQFOiL Youth & Junior Europeans 2025 overall
Double Italian triumph as Mattia Saoncella and Medea Falcioni win The final day of the iQFOiL Youth & Junior Europeans at Club Nautico Arzachena concluded with a dramatic twist and double Italian glory, as Mattia Saoncella and Medea Falcioni surged from behind to claim the U19 European titles in the Medal Series.
Posted on 25 Oct
American Team win The British American Cup 2025
A sparkling finish to the event at Queen Mary reservoir On day one, the teams arrived at Queen Mary to a very unfavourable forecast. Some models have the breeze expected to peak at 50 miles an hour.
Posted on 25 Oct
2025 Wingfoil Racing Youth & Masters Worlds day 4
A day for the bold: WingFoil drama on final day of qualifying! The penultimate day of the WingFoil Racing Youth and Masters World Championships in the Azores delivered high drama, powerful winds, and no shortage of excitement as the race for tomorrow's finals reached its climax.
Posted on 25 Oct
Transat Café L'or: ready to race... or racing!
The Ocean 50 fleet are off! For all 64 duos who will start the 17th edition of the TRANSAT CAFÉ L'OR on Sunday afternoon off Le Havre, the watchword for the first night of the double handed race to Martinique is caution.
Posted on 25 Oct