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Sibenik 52 SUPER SERIES Sailing Week in Croatia - Day 3

by 52 Super Series 25 May 2018 12:27 PDT 23-27 May 2018

Les Bleus in the pink at race win, leaders Quantum's last run blues for Hutchinson

If the largely amateur French team on Paprec finished the third racing day of the Šibenik 52 SUPER SERIES Sailing Week in raptures after a well earned victory, the hard driving Terry Hutchinson, skipper and tactician of Quantum Racing may take some satisfaction that they now top the regatta standings but he mood was more one of frustration to have lost two boats down the final run of the second race.

The French proved that their second in the coastal race was no fluke. They lead off the pin end of the line, around the top mark and kept cool and composed to earn their first race win on the world's leading monohull grand prix circuit in more than a year. For a team on which only the two full time boat crew are paid directly to race their win was truly special, particularly since it is now three years since they brought on board a crop of new young sailors such as 2102 Youth World Championship runners up and 470 Junior World Champions Guillaume Pirouelle and Valentin Sapin from Le Havre. Sapin, who raced in the Youth America's Cup in Bermuda, is calling tactics on the 'new' Paprec which was previously Rán Racing. Their win in a 2015 Vrolijk design to some extent counters the belief that you need a latest generation boat to win races in this white hot 12 boat class. The team is drawn from all different generations and disciplines, including Figaro racer Jean Charles Monet as navigator, young match racers and Olympic class racers turned Tour Voile starts Pirouelle and Sapin who joined the crew in Porto Cervo in 2015.

"That was my first win with the boat." Sapin stressed, " We made a good start and the guys stayed very focused on the speed and the manoeuvres and we were able to hold on to defend our place. We had a plan and it was a good plan. As a team we have young sailors from all disciplines. We are all still amateurs in that we don't get paid to race here. I sail on the Diam 24 with Guillaume (Pirouelle) but we have young match racers, we have guys from the different projects and take the best of them."

After a disappointing eighth in the coastal race Thursday the Quantum Racing on the bounceback were at their most potent. Hutchinson, Dean Barker and navigator Ian Moore engineered another good start but it was their timing, when to cross from the left to the right side of the upwind track, which gave them the top mark lead which they were able to hold out to win Race 4 ahead of Andy Soriano's Alegre. Azzurra were also back on their game after two back to back 10th places, finishing third.

But it was letting both Azzurra and Sled slide through on the final run, dropping from second to fourth, which meant Hutchinson returned to the dock at Šibenik's D Marin Mandalina marina less than content.

"It was disappointing to lose the two boats down the last run of the second race but overall a solid day. It was a way better day than yesterday and we met the goal for the day. There is plenty of racing still to go. The mood this morning was pretty good. We took back two hard fought points yesterday and it would have been easy to be completely last. The mood was that a lesser team would have gone backwards."

In their quest to learn their new boat and how to set it up best Hutchinson admits that, like most teams, they are still climbing a steep learning curve:

"We are still learning a lot every day about the boat. We are not even half way there. It is about how the rig fits the sails, how we use the adjustments to get the rig through the range. That is the key. And a lot of that is trial and error still. We do have a really good debrief system. The numbers help. But right now we are way more aggressive in the afternoon debriefs with the speed team than we have been in the past. We spend a lot of time talking about the boat's performance, way more than we have done in the past. We will do a session tonight and then a session tomorrow morning."

Quantum Racing lead by two points from Platoon. Harm Müller Spreer's crew had a middling day with a 5,7 to Quantum's 5pts aggregate for the day. Onda's 10th in the second race to Sled's fourth sees the two locked on the same points.

Regatta Standings after Day 3: (five races) 1. Quantum Racing (USA) (Doug DeVos) (4,1,8,1,4) 18pts
2. Platoon (GER) (Harm Müller-Spreer) (1,4,3,5,7) 20pts
3. Sled (USA) (Takashi Okura) (12,3,1,8,3) 27pts
4. Onda (BRA) (Eduardo de Souza Ramos) (2,7,5,3,10) 27pts
5. Azzurra (ARG/ITA) (Alberto Roemmers) (3,10,10,4,2) 29pts
6. Paprec Recyclage (FRA) (Jean Luc Petithuguenin) (6,12,2,12,1) 33pts
7. Alegre (USA/GBR) (Andrés Soriano) (9,8,6,2,8) 33pts
8. Luna Rossa (ITA) (Patrizio Bertelli) (7,5,9,9,5) 35pts
9. Provezza (TUR) (Ergin Imre) (5,9,4,7,12) 37pts
10. Phoenix (RSA) (Hasso/Tina Plattner) (8,6,11,6,6) 37pts
11. Gladiator (GBR) (Tony Langley) (10(+2 PEN),2,7,11,9) 41pts
12. XIO Hurakan (ITA) (Marco Serafini) (11,11,12,10,11) 55pts

Quotes:

Santiago Lange (ARG) Azzurra (ITA/ARG):
We have not started so well but now luckily we managed to put a good day together. We still need to learn how to coordinate together but it's fun, it's a really good team and it's good for me to be in a team at this level.

On replacing Vasco:
"That's our challenge, I think the last two days we made a couple of mistakes on that. The team is used to a strong personality that leads very strongly, and obviously I respect a lot the knowledge the guys on board have on this type of boat that I don't have. So it takes some time for them to stand up and take some decisions and for me to be calm in the boat and take my decisions so obviously these different approaches to racing take some time and I'm happy that today we managed to sail better."

Ray Davies (NZL) tactician Sled:
"We are going really well, the boat's going well, our speed is good. As always it's hard to get off the line in this fleet, all the teams are starting incredibly well and that's so important when the wind isn't shifting too much. We had a disastrous start on the first race today but managed to claw back. That was probably our better race in the sense of gaining points after the gun and ending up third."

On integration with the team:
"I know all the guys really well so that's been really easy to work with, there's only a couple that I haven't sailed with before so that's been a pretty natural transition. And I find Mr. Okura really easy to work with, he's got a fantastic understanding of the sport, he's done 470 sailing when he was young so he's got a very good natural feel."

On the 52 SUPER SERIES:
"It's always a tough class but this season in particular is tougher than ever. There's no better standard of yachting at the moment in keelboat sailing, so it's nice to stay involved and keep yachting at the top level!"

For full results, visit bit.ly/2IGhEE1

To watch the race again, visit bit.ly/2e6o3tR

The Sibenik 52 SUPER SERIES Sailing Week will take place from 23-27 May. State-of-the-art live boat tracking technology will allow 52 SUPER SERIES fans to follow their favourite teams. Shows start 15-minutes before racing, and can be enjoyed via the 52 SUPER SERIES homepage – www.52SUPERSERIES.com – or via the app. Never miss a beat.

Azzurra works her way back up the scoreboard (from Azzurra)

It was a positive day for the boat flying the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda's burgee: Azzurra and her team are now in fifth place overall, just two points behind the third placed team. First place finishes today for Quantum and Paprec. Racing will continue until Sunday.

Azzurra showed that she knows how to bounce back from difficult times today, after the two bad days she has had at this event. Heading out to race today, the team was very concentrated, but the mood was serene: everyone knew they could do it.

The two windward/leeward races run today in winds from the southwest at about 10 knots saw Azzurra finish in fourth and second place, the kinds of finishes and rankings that this team, defending champions of the 52 Super Series, is more used to.

In the first race Azzurra got a good start to the right of the line, the side most of the fleet chose because it looked better. Azzurra rounded the mark third, behind Quantum and Alegre. Thanks to some smart tactics downwind, Azzurra narrowed her gap and rounded the gate contemporaneously with Alegre, one on the right, the other on the left. Along the next upwind leg Onda, with the five-time Olympic champion Robert Scheidt as tactician, recovered positions sailing on the left and held on to third place until the finish. Azzurra was fourth by half a length, followed by Platoon and Phoenix.

At the beginning of the second race, dark clouds over the landmass made it much harder to predict where the wind would be coming from in the rest of the race. This time tactician Santiago Lange chose to start on the left without pushing to get the pin. The French team aboard Paprec got the pin and held on to their lead for the entire race. Quantum had to fight hard to hold on to their second place position: at both the upwind marks and at the gate there were close duels and rapid manoeuvres that had everyone holding their breath- sailing at its best!

On the final leg Azzurra gybed at just the right time, early but not right away, as did Luna Rossa. The two Italian teams were at an advantage thanks to their new positions on the course and Azzurra not only crossed in front of Quantum, she also managed to creep up on Paprec. Quantum was passed shortly before the finish by Sled.

Guillermo Parada, skipper: "It was important that we stopped bleeding away points and got back to our standard. Yesterday we went over our mistakes and today we managed to sail sure of our strengths and our capabilities. We got two good starts, we were always fighting it out of the head of the fleet and we got results at the end of the day. There are still four races at this event, it won't be easy to keep up this recovery because the fleet is really tight and even the smallest error costs a lot, but we can do it. Today we took an important step ahead even in terms of communication aboard. The two new members of our team are better integrated and we moved better and got better results."

Santiago Lange, tactician: "I'm really happy after two disappointing days, but I guess that's obvious. The truth is that we can never sit back and relax, today the crew worked really well but the course is still hard and our competitors are top notch and tough to beat. We have to keep working and give our all every single day.

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