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The Hague Offshore Sailing World Championship - Practice Day

by Dobbs Davis 15 Jul 2018 19:47 NZST 12-20 July 2018
The action is already getting hot in Class C in today's practice race - The Hague Offshore Sailing World Championship 2018 © Sander van der Borch

Under bright sunny skies and a gentle 10 knots of wind, many entries of the 86-boat fleet from 15 nations made it out to the race areas today to test the waters of the North Sea in preparation for tomorrow's opening round of races in The Hague Offshore Sailing Worlds 2018. The conditions were perfect to test not only the racers and their inshore racing skills, but the race committee team members led by Peter Anink on their skills of handling a highly-competitive fleet.

Paolo Massarini was out on the course area today for Class C, which this week will have the largest group of boats on the starting lines: 49 entries. "The starts were very tight, and we had numerous General Recall signals before we started using other tools to keep them in control," he said. "This will be a very challenging week for the sailors and the committee in this class."

"About two knots of current at a 45-degree angle to the start line made it interesting," said Thomas Nilsson, who is sailing this week with the Jon Sverre Hoiden's Sinergia 40 Sons of Hurricane from Norway. They are competing this week among the 27 entries in Class B, which is sharing a course area with the nine entries racing in Class A. "Because we have two systems used in the scoring it's a little hard to know where you are relative to your competitors, but you just have to sail your best and I think as we race we will get used to it."

Yet for tomorrow's start of racing for the championship there will not be short windward-leeward course races like today, but a single start for one of two required long distance races in the event format. And with a light wind in the forecast once again, its unlikely the race course will bring the sailors more than 25 miles out from shore, according to Anink. The exact details on the course will be discussed tomorrow at 0830 AM in the Skipper's Briefing for a start planned at 11:00 AM.

Regardless of the light wind forecast, the strong turnout and excellent organization by the event staff prompted ORC and IRC officials in the Opening Ceremony to be very upbeat about the historic significance of this World Championship event.

Bruno Finzi, Chairman ORC, said "ORC was founded almost 50 years ago as a service to the sailors, and for the past 20 years we have helped organize World Championships. We have been working towards a unified system, and are pleased to have this championship represent a good start towards this goal."

"Along with our partners in IRC UNCL, we too are pleased with the efforts made to having this combined World Championship event," said Michael Boyd, past Commodore RORC "There were many that have worked hard for this, and we thank them all."

Tomorrow's offshore race can be followed live with the use of trackers placed on all boats in the fleet via this link: offshoresailingworlds2018.com/tracker. Standings in each class will be calculated based on the measured speed over the previous tracking interval of 15 minutes, and this used to estimate a finish time and thus an estimate of placing in both ORC and IRC scoring. This will not be exact of course, as the wind and current conditions will change throughout the race, but it does give a sense of how well the teams are doing during the race.

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