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Cyclops Marine 2023 November - LEADERBOARD

Musto Skiffs at Datchet Water

by Ian Martin on 13 Jun 2012
Musto Performance Skiff /Ovington Boats http://www.mustoskiff.com/
Datchet Water Sailing Club welcomed eighteen Musto Skiffs to its event on the ninth and 10th of June.

This was the final opportunity for the fleet to judge how well their early season training was going against the fleet in a variety of conditions prior to the World Championships in two weeks.

The wind on Saturday was a challenging 20 knots blowing onshore with some feisty gusts on top. A handful of boats decided to sit out the first race – launching required three people to help get boats off the beach!

With a heavily biased port end start line in the first race, the majority of the fleet opted to start on port ‘Riva del Garda’ style which also minimised the number of tacks required upwind in the survival conditions. Ben Schooling led round the first windward mark with a good lead to the pack but capsized as he hoisted the kite. The pack blasted downwind with the majority capsizing on their first gybe. Some boats were finding white sail downwind sailing was more effective rather than risking capsizing with the kite up!

Chris Webber kept his boat upright more than the rest to lead at the downwind gate and through the next couple of laps until an injury forced him to retire from the event. Cooper took over to lead only to capsize after the final gate and just metres from the finish line. Jamie Hilton, recovering well from his early swim, sailed though the fleet and took the bullet – Sergei ‘I don’t capsize’ Samus was second and Cooper finished third.
Race two started with more boats on the water after an on shore postponement waiting for the challenging wind speed to drop. Cooper sailed well to get the win. Martin followed in second and Hilton was third.

The final race of the day was held in perfect ‘champagne sailing’ conditions. The usual faces appeared at the front as Hilton led round the first windward mark. He was overtaken by Martin who gybed early into a bigger gust. Hilton used a left hand shift on the next upwind leg to regain the lead which he held onto until the finish. Cooper threatened second place momentarily towards the end of the final lap however was forced to settle for third at the finish behind Martin. Palfreman finished fourth and Samus closed out his very successful day with a second fifth place putting him in third place overnight after Hilton and Cooper.

Sunday dawned with totally different conditions – the water was a mirror. The fleet were held ashore for an hour for the breeze to fill in.

Racing started in light patchy, puffy breeze with the odd downdraft from aircraft landing at nearby Heathrow causing ‘mini-hurricanes’ on the water and resulting in surprise capsizes throughout the fleet.
Cooper took the fourth race followed by Schooling and Martin. Fifth race was also won by Cooper who was now starting to turn the screw on the rest of the fleet.

After a bit of course moving for race 6, David Annan sped in to lead from the left side of the beat. He led round most of the race and unfortunately sailed into a hole after gybing early down the final run. This allowed Dave Poston through to take first place and Hilton to take second. Cooper followed Annan over the line to finish fourth.

Going into the final race only two boats could win the open meeting – Cooper was ahead of Hilton by just one point. To take the overall win Hilton needed to either win the race outright or finish second with at least one boat between him and Cooper. This led to exciting watching as Hilton engaged Cooper in some pre-start match racing.

Whilst this was going on, Palfreman found his usual light wind boatspeed and sailed off into the distance to take the win by a considerable margin. It was helped in part by a mini-hurricane which capsized second placed Poston near the windward mark preventing other boats from rounding more quickly. Schooling and Martin sailed though Poston to complete the top three places.

Whilst Hilton managed to sail Cooper down the fleet, he was not able to sail back up to second – even after a bell ringing final beat – and finished the race in fifth place. This handed the overall event win to Cooper who sailed very well demonstrating consistency throughout the variety of conditions.

Many thanks to Datchet Water Sailing Club for running the full race programme. Next event is the Musto Skiff World Championships at Weymouth at the end of June – with record 104 skiffs entered to date it promises to be a legendary event.

2012 Musto Performance Skiff Open Meeting at Datchet Water Sailing Club 

Overall

Rank SailNo HelmName Club R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 Total Nett
1st 461 Alex Cooper Stokes Bay 3 1 3 1 1 4 (7) 20 13
2nd 444 Jamie Hilton Datchet Water Sailing Club 1 3 1 4 3 2 (5) 19 14
3rd 351 Ian Martin Datchet Water Sailing Club (19 DNS) 2 2 3 4 5 3 38 19
4th 295 Michael Palfreman Stokes Bay 4 (8) 4 6 2 8 1 33 25
5th 456 Sergei Samus Datchet Water Sailing Club 2 5 5 8 (11) 10 9 50 39
6th 373 Paul Molesworth Datchet Water Sailing Club 5 7 8 (13) 7 6 8 54 41
7th 097 Gavin Brewer Stokes Bay 6 6 (9) 9 8 9 6 53 44
8th 291 Ben Schooling Datchet Water Sailing Club (19 DNF) 19 DNF 7 2 10 7 2 66 47
9th 169 David Annan Grafham Water (19 DNS) 9 10 14 9 3 4 68 49
10th 113 Ed Wilkinson Stokes Bay (19 DNS) 4 6 7 14 11 19 DNC 80 61
11th 216 Jon Modral-Gibbons   7 (19 DNC) 19 DNC 5 5 19 DNC 19 DNC 93 74
12th 310 Paul Whitesmith Chew Valley Sc (19 DNS) 10 11 11 15 14 13 93 74
13th 324 David Poston Datchet Water Sailing Club (19 DNC) 19 DNC 19 DNC 19 DNF 6 1 11 94 75
14th 086 Alec McKinlay Datchet Water Sailing Club (19 DNC) 19 DNC 19 DNC 10 12 13 10 102 83
15th 152 Nicholas Lake Datchet Water Sailing Club (19 DNS) 19 DNC 19 DNC 12 13 12 12 106 87
16th 260 Mark Cooper Burghfield SC 8 (19 DNC) 19 DNC 15 16 15 19 DNC 111 92
17th 362 Chris Webber Bewl Valley SC (19 DNF) 19 DNC 19 DNC 19 DNC 19 DNC 19 DNC 19 DNC 133 114
17th 350 Mason Woodworth Datchet Water Sailing Club (19 DNS) 19 DNF 19 DNC 19 DNC 19 DNC 19 DNC 19 DNC 133 114


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