Please select your home edition
Edition
J Composites J/99

Royal Navy halts Dragon Edinburgh Cup

by Fiona Brown on 12 Jul 2008
International Dragon Edinburgh Cup 2008 Fiona Brown http://www.fionabrown.com

The second day of racing at the Dragon Edinburgh Cup in Plymouth proved to be somewhat controversial. Although races three through five of the six race series were sailed, race five had to be abandoned on the instructions of the Royal Navy.

The boats had just started the final leg of the race and were due to sail a last beat taking them across the channel at the western entrance to Plymouth Harbour. Unfortunately the Navy had decided to move one of its submarines through the channel at the exact same time and instructed that the boats could not continue to the finish line.

An attempt to 'shorten' course was made, setting a line in the middle of the leg and a set of results for the race were published showing France's Louis Irvois as winner with Ireland's Don O'Donoghue second, Eric Williams from Cowes third and Len Jones from Kent fourth. However, back ashore it was established that the attempt to shorten course did not comply with the rules and the Race Committee had to abandon the race.

The two races that could be correctly completed saw some massive wind shifts and serious snakes and ladders on both the race course and the overall scoreboard. The forecast said the wind would go right as the day wore on and it didn't disappoint going from south west to north west. Fortunately the Royal Western Yacht Club's Race Committee was on the pace and aside from one run which turned into a reach they were able to keep up with the shifts and gave the teams another great day of sailing.

With two final races still to sail tomorrow and the discard yet to come into play the championship remains wide open. Overall Ireland's Don O'Donoghue crewed by Brian Matthews and Mark Pettitt continues to lead the regatta. Yesterday he scored two first places and today he added two fourth places to his card giving him ten points overall. Louis Urvois of France, sailing with Gwen Chapalain and Eric Drouglazet, remains in second place and currently counts 15 points overall having come sixth and fifth in today's races.

Most consistent performer of the day was without doubt Gavia Wilkinson-Cox, crewed by Jon Mortimer and Mark Hart, who was both fast and smart and scored two third places, leaping up the scoreboard from eighth overall to third. For Gavia the abandonment of the fifth race was a blessing as she had found herself on the wrong side of a shift and finished 12th.

75 year old Edward Sawyer from the USA, crewed by Martin 'Stavros' Payne and Pedro, found much better form in the lighter airs and less boisterous seas to finish seventh in race three and win race four handsomely moving up to fourth place overall as a result.

On equal points with Sawyer, but lying in fifth on count-back is Eric Williams from Cowes, crewed by Duncan Grindley and Rory Paton. The day's other race winner was Medway's Len Jones, crewed by Jamie Lea and Henry Bagnall, who led race three from start to finish and won by a handsome margin. With a sixth in race four Jones is now lying sixth overall.

In the Classics Division for wooden Dragons built prior to 1972 three boats are battling it out for the honours and competition is as fierce here as in the overall regatta. Tonight Matthew Ratsey, Kevin Poole and Tim Petitt sailing Blue Skies lead the competition by just five points from David Jephcott, James Tyers and Keith Davis sailing Moonbeam, with David Dale, Cathy and Peter Williams sailing Inge in third place.

This is the 60th running of the Edinburgh Cup and to mark the occasion a special gala dinner is being held Friday evening in the wardroom of HMS Drake. The regatta concludes tomorrow and the Race Committee aim to complete the two final races of the series plus the traditional Edinburgh Cup Crews Race.

Dragon - Provisional Overall positions

1 204 M SEABIRD Don O'Donoghue 1 1 (4) 4 2 12 8
2 365 M AR YOULEG II Louis Urvois 2 2 (6) 5 1 16 10
3 682 M ECSTATIC J E Williams 6 5 (11) 2 3 27 16
4 708 M RUMOURS Len Jones (9) 9 1 6 4 29 20
5 716 M JERBOA Gavia Wilkinson-Cox 4 (13) 3 3 12 35 22
6 310 M CLAIRVOYANT Edward Sawyer 10 6 7 1 (24) 48 24
7 684 M HAND OF FORTUNE Mike Holmes 7 8 2 (11) 7 35 24
8 734 M BIFF Thomas Wilton 3 3 15 (16) 8 45 29
9 688 M QUICKSILVER III Rob Campbell 5 7 (16) 7 10 45 29
10 633 M FEI-LIN'S FLIRTATION Ron James 14 4 (18) 10 5 51 33
11 714 M NORBERT Chris Brittain 11 (12) 10 8 6 47 35
12 653 M NJORD Owen Pay 15 (17) 5 9 13 59 42
13 693 M VIRAGO Timothy Blackwell 16 (18) 8 12 11 65 47
14 717 M NEREID Michael Hayles (17) 11 13 14 9 64 47
15 686 M DUCRU Christopher Hunt 12 15 14 15 (24) 80 56
16 695 M MAGIC Jonathan Hughes 8 (21) 12 21 17 79 58
17 710 M ALCYONE Simon Winn 13 (22) 9 20 19 83 61
18 322 C BLUE SKIES Matthew Ratsey (20) 14 19 19 14 86 66
19 718 M CAVALIER Tony Singer (24) 16 17 18 16 91 67
20 636 SEAFIRE David Crabb 18 19 (20) 13 18 88 68
21 434 C MOONBEAM David Jephcott 19 20 (21) 17 15 92 71
22 515 M BASILISK Alan Krailing (24) 10 23 24 24 105 81
23 184 C INGE David Dale (24) 24 22 22 24 116 92
X-Yachts X4.3Cyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERSydney International Boat Show 2024

Related Articles

20th PalmaVela Day 1
Galateia returns to defend PalmaVela title with a perfect start At the 20th PalmaVela a breezy opening pair of windward-leeward races on the Bay of Palma saw the Wally Cento Galateia make a strong start to defending their IRC-IMA Maxi division title that they won last year with a perfect scoreline.
Posted on 2 May
52 Super Series PalmaVela Sailing Week overall
Provezza are the pride of Palma after thrilling title decider Ergin Imre's Provezza crew laid to rest some of their past bad memories of racing on the Bay of Palma when they clinched the first title of the season at 52 SUPER SERIES PalmaVela Sailing thanks to a spectacular victory in the final race.
Posted on 2 May
La Grande Motte International Regatta 2024 preview
Final dress rehearsal for the Cats and Skiffs Of those 148 crews registered, 39 will represent their country in less than three months in Marseille, location of the 2024 Olympic sailing events.
Posted on 2 May
Transat CIC day 5
Richomme takes the lead in the IMOCAs The skippers have been facing tough conditions since the start and fatigue, the chilling temperatures on board, the lack of sleep, as well as the inevitable technical problems and breakages, are putting sailors and boats to the test.
Posted on 2 May
GSC achieves sustainability & environmental goals
The verification of the compliance with the standard was conducted in two phases TÜV Thüringen congratulates the organization and participants for their achievements in the Global Solo Challenge.
Posted on 2 May
Why are 3Di sails aero-optimized?
A streamlined sail shape delivers less drag, more drive, and greater effectiveness North Sails explain the advantages of aero-optimisation: a streamlined sail shape delivers less drag, more drive, greater effectiveness and enhanced durability.
Posted on 2 May
Cruise with confidence with Doyle Sails
Doyle Sails is the sailmaker of choice for many cruising catamarans and performance multihulls Doyle Sails is the sailmaker of choice for many cruising catamarans and numerous performance multihulls worldwide, continuing to lead the fleet when it comes to reliable, durable, and easy-to-handle cruising sails.
Posted on 2 May
Zhik kits out Australia's Olympic sailors
With industry-first high-performance neoprene-free wetsuit When Australia's 12 Olympic sailors take to the waters of Marseille in July this year, they'll wear the industry's first high-performance, neoprene-free wetsuits created by Sydney sailing apparel company Zhik.
Posted on 1 May
Holcim-PRB sustains bowsprit damage
Nicolas Lunven continues racing towards New York While in fifth position in The Transat CIC fleet, Team Holcim-PRB skipper Nicolas Lunven alerted his shore team on Wednesday morning that the boat's bowsprit had broken. The incident occurred overnight amid strong wind conditions.
Posted on 1 May
Momentous day for INEOS Britannia
As AC75 sets sail for first time INEOS Britannia's new race boat for the 37th America's Cup has set sail for the very first time. The British Challenger's AC75 took to the water in Barcelona with Olympic Gold medallists Sir Ben Ainslie and Giles Scott at the Helm on Wednesday 1st May.
Posted on 1 May