Please select your home edition
Edition
Allen Brothers

No napping for Siesta at J24 Nationals

by Di Pearson on 10 Jan 2006
Sakamoto and his crew sailing Siesta (JPN) did not win a race on the opening day of the Australian J24 National Championship, the pre-event for the upcoming J24 Worlds, but their pair of second places was enough to give them the lead at the Sail Melbourne event being hosted by Sandringham Yacht Club.

Sailed on Port Phillip in conditions that went from light and fluky to blowing dogs of chains, the Siesta crew did not have time for napping during the two races completed today. They lead the Mike Ingham skippered Brain Cramp (USA) by seven points, although Ingham won the first race, but could not consolidate, finishing 11th in race two.

New NSW champion, Sean Kirkjian, steering Death Star (AUS) is currently third, but tied on 11 points with the American’s. Kirkjian, from NSW, finished his day with a fifth and a sixth.

'Our big picture is the J24 Worlds. We are using this as a warm up,' the Sydney sailor said.

Although the Death Star crew are third overall, they lead for the trophy, being the top-placed Australian crew, with another Ausssie crew, and West Australian champions, the Sean Wallis steered Fly Emirates, in fourth place overall and Doug McGain’s Code Violation (AUS) fifth overall, but third Aussie boat.

A Brazillian entry, Bruschetta, skippered by Mauricio SantaCruz, is in sixth place. The Brazilians brought their own boat to Australia, unable to find a charter boat, but had some trouble locating and then retrieving their boat from Customs.

Serious as the situation was, Bruschetta’s Italian owner, Paolo Bodido, made it sound comical. 'It took us three days to get our boat from Customs. When I flew in and arrived at the Club (Sandringham), I expected to find my boat already there, but that was not true – it was being held by the authorities here. Apparently they were concerned about bugs and spiders that might be hiding in my boat – it took me two days to get it back.

'I really did not want to get involved, but when three days went by, I felt I had to. I went with someone from the Club to the terminal and at first we could not even find the boat, but finally we find – it was in a special area on a platform. I thought we would need a forklift to get it down, but the officials said no, you can’t do this, we will do this – and finally they put in on the forklift and charged me $900.00! Unbelievable!'

More amusement as the Brazillian crew do not speak Italian and Bodido does not speak Portuguese. So I asked the owner, well how do you talk to each other? 'We speak the international sailor’s language – English of course!'

A number of international entries are sailing in the Championship, warming up for the worlds that begin the day after the Nationals finish. It is the first time many have sailed on Port Phillip, including the Canadian entry, Single Malt, which is holding 15th place.

Crew member Chris Pytlik said of his experience, 'it was a little bit crazy,' and crew mate Kerry Colbourne agreed. 'There sure was a variety of conditions out there. We had calm and had to wait two hours for wind, when all of a sudden, we had up to 42 knots, so there was a little bit of carnage – there were spinnakers splitting and jibs going too.'

Pytlik’s skipper, Tadeusz Bartlewski commented, 'it’s pretty much a warm-up for us. It’s not our equipment (the boat is chartered), so we are testing it and we didn’t have too many problems.'

For Aussie skipper, Grant Willmott, who sailed Crackerjack in 26th overall from 31 entries, damage was very much on his mind. 'The conditions clocked right around the compass out there. We bailed out of the second race when the squally hit. We really wanted to make sure we are in good shape for the worlds and didn’t want to risk any damage.'

Racing continues on Port Phillip today.
Rolly Tasker Sails 2023 FOOTERHenri-Lloyd - For the ObsessedRooster 2023 - FOOTER

Related Articles

The oldest footage of 505 racing
A look back into our video archive We delve into the past, and round-up all videos which show sailing at in the 5o5 class of dinghy.
Posted today at 11:00 am
International 18s in the 1950s
A period of New Zealand-led design & innovation Following the first major change in the 18 footers from the big boats of the early 1900s to the 7ft beam boats of the mid-1930s, there had been no major change or innovations until the late 1940s
Posted today at 6:02 am
Apex Group Bermuda Sail Grand Prix Day 1
Aussie's come out firing on opening day After crashing out in the previous event, Tom Slingsby's Australia SailGP Team completely dominated the opening day of the Apex Group Bermuda Sail Grand Prix.
Posted on 4 May
Spirit & competition shine at Antigua Sailing Week
The 55th edition attracted 88 boats from 20 different countries The 55th edition of Antigua Sailing Week attracted 88 boats from 20 different countries and 750 crew from all over the world. Antigua Sailing Week is one of the most celebrated regattas in the sailing world; the 2024 edition added another great chapter.
Posted on 4 May
From setback to triumph
Australians lead leaderboard in Bermuda Tom Slingsby and his Australian squad unleashed a masterful comeback performance at the opening day of the Apex Bermuda Sail Grand Prix, securing their seat at the top of the leaderboard.
Posted on 4 May
SailGP: Fired up Slingsby wins two in Bermuda
Australia dominates fleet racing on the opening day of Bermuda Australia has bounced back from its devastating Christchurch penalty by dominating fleet racing on the opening day of Bermuda.
Posted on 4 May
Clipper Race 11 - See ya Seattle, next stop Panama
The start of Race 11: #StayConnected with SENA Seattle bids farewell to the Clipper Race fleet as it departs for the start of Race 11: #StayConnected with SENA.
Posted on 4 May
20th PalmaVela Day 3
Advantage Galateia as Maxi class goes into final light winds Sunday Five times America's Cup winning Kiwi sailing legend Murray Jones, the tactician on the Wally Cento Galateia wears only half a smile when he rails against the suggestion that, for them, PalmaVela is a mere warm up before the Maxi season.
Posted on 4 May
The Transat CIC Day 7
Yoann Richomme on Paprec Arkéa over 70 miles ahead of Charlie Dalin The top trio on the Transat CIC solo race to New York from Lorient, France are charging towards the finish line averaging over 22kts.
Posted on 4 May
Armstrong Midlength FG Board redefines foiling
Armstrong Midlength FG Board gives you the freedom to define how you ride. The choice is yours Armstrong Foils have announced the new Midlength boards, they are epic for wing and prone surf among many other things. The Armstrong Midlength FG Board Range truly redefines when and how you can go foiling.
Posted on 4 May