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2021 UKLA ILCA 6 Inland Championship at Rutland Sailing Club

by Alastair Brown 8 Nov 2021 05:00 PST 30-31 October 2021

Saturday morning racing began on time and the 46 strong ILCA 6 fleet was greeted by 15 knots of wind from the Southwest. Racing was held at the opposite end of the lake to the clubhouse with the Committee boat right by the dam and the windward mark underneath the peninsula.

The inland nature of the venue and the course location had the fleet expecting shifts to be a major factor in the racing during their sail out and sure enough a day of shift management followed.

The ILCA 6s were last in the starting order with the 7s and 4s setting off first on an outer loop. This allowed for the 6 sailors to watch the previous fleet's starts and build up an idea of the different angles boats were sailing across the upwind leg. From prestart routines and information gathered from watching the earlier fleets it was clear that shifts were a major factor with the right-hand side getting a nice lift and pressure.

The first sequence came around and posed a key question. Take some pin bias and potentially struggle to get back right or give up some line bias to work the shifts on the right? Anstey sailed the first beat better than anyone else coming from the left and leading his way back to the right. He led at the windward mark with Emmett, also taking line bias, and Brown and Mitchell who came from the right close behind. Downwind pressure was key, and this was a theme that prevailed throughout the weekend. Brown kept in the pressure nicely and was leading by the bottom gate. There was a split at the bottom gate with Brown and Emmett taking the left turn and Mitchell and Anstey taking the right turn. The top five were battling and going back and forth with the shifts the entire way up the second beat. By the second windward mark Brown had a lead big enough to hold to the finish with Mitchell, Wilcox, Emmett, and Anstey rounding in a pursuing bunch that battled the entire reach and downwind leg to the finish, resulting in a top 3 of Brown, Mitchell, and Wilcox.

The second race followed shortly after the first and the question the fleet was asking themselves was much the same as the first race. This time however, there was a different outcome. The right was good but far right was better, displayed beautifully by Curtis who took the 15-degree shift and was comfortably the first round the windward mark. He was followed shortly by Brown and Emmett. The downwind saw few place changes and at the leeward gate Curtis, Brown and Emmett all made their way off to the right with the shift from the first beat still present. The fleet were sailing an I3 course with the second downwind initiating an awesome battle for the lead between Emmett and Brown that continued until the last Leeward mark. Emmett and Brown overtook Curtis on the second beat and opted to split the course at the second leeward gate. Emmett took the right turn and Brown took the Left. Emmett sailed the better second beat and led handsomely at the last windward mark. A planing reach got the leaders to the reach mark, and they began the turn downwind. Emmett led but Brown, noticing they had a reasonable gap behind, decided to split the course and put lots of leverage between the two boats. He was fortunate his decision paid off and the top three at the finish was as such Brown, Emmett, and Curtis.

The final race of the day once again posed the same question but this time the consistent 15-degree right shift was not present. Anstey demonstrated his shift sailing ability for a second time taking some line bias and sailing the best first beat, leading comfortably by the windward mark. An unfortunate death-roll lost him his lead and empathy was felt throughout the fleet. Brown, Mitchell, and Emmett battled for many of the following legs until the last upwind when the trio found themselves right of middle, the same side as a drop in pressure. Scurrah made the most of the pressure on the left and caught everybody off guard, nearly leading by the final windward mark. Another to benefit from the left was Anstey who had recovered well and placed himself in 5th by the end of the race. Brown ended the day with a win and 3 bullets under his belt with Emmett and Scurrah behind after a good battle on the final downwind.

Race day two on Sunday was promising big things in reference to both the forecast and the on-course battles. Brown led at the start of the day, but it was no means over with Emmett close behind. The first race was vital as it would set the momentum for the day and very nearly overturn any point advantages. The breeze started from the SE but the forecast predicted a front to come over and a swing right to follow. Sure enough, the front came over just as the first boats began to launch and 40 knot gusts descended onto Rutland Water. The Fleet was left waiting on the shore as AP was raised. The postponement was the right decision as some boats were unfortunate enough to be blown off their trailers.

The breeze died down and went right and the first and only completed race of the day got under way in 20+ knots of breeze. The race area was similar but on Sunday working the left paid off due to the lifts coming off the shore. Emmett displayed his intent to dominate the day and led at the first windward mark with no-one getting a look in during the entire leg. Brown and Anstey followed behind. Emmett led for much of the race with the main battle being behind between Anstey and Brown. Anstey was sailing well and constantly attacking, almost overtaking Brown, but a tight windward mark rounding enabled Brown to break away and focus on Emmett. The last downwind rolled around and Brown used this to mount his attack on Emmett. A smaller split downwind this time and Brown used the inside overlap to overtake Emmett and crossed the finish line half a boat length ahead rounding off his event with 4 bullets. Emmett was 2nd with three 2nd places and Anstey finished 3rd in both the last race and overall.

This however was not the end of the story. A fifth race was started with a massive squall lurking on the horizon. Emmett showed his skill leading the entire race all the way through the huge squall. He crossed the finish line in first only to find the race had been abandoned.

Thank you to Rutland Water Sailing Club for hosting a brilliant event and thank you to all the competitors for racing on the second day especially those that were unsure of the conditions. Everyone from RSC and UKLA deserve thanking but a special shout out to the RO, Mike Haynes and the on-the-water team who did a brilliant job at managing two challenging days.

Hats off to our sponsors:

  • Sailingfast - Duncan brings his battle buss down from Scotland for most the big events, which is so ridiculously well equipped, you could replace everything on your boat. Although based in Scotland they will get anything to you super fast. He also supplied many of the prizes for the draw on Saturday evening. sailingfast.co.uk

  • Ovington Boats - Chris Turner lives dinghies and has been a significance presence in the boat building world for decades. OB are now the official UK builders of ILCAs. A very smart new Ovington ILCA Dinghy was on display at the Masters event. www.ovingtonboats.com

  • Vaikobi - a brand born on the waters of Sydney Harbour, out of a passion for all ocean sports. Across the team, we paddle, Surfski, SUP, Wing Foil and Sail. Sailing has been a passion within the business right from the start. The senior management team at Vaikobi comprise more than fifty years of marine industry and sailing experience between them. www.vaikobi.com

Overall Results:

PosHelmSail NoClubAge GroupR1R2R3R4Pts
1stAlastair Brown216646Stokes Bay SC Great Moor SCU21‑11113
2ndJon Emmett216115Weir Wood SCAM‑42226
3rdLuke Anstey213544Frensham Pond SCU195‑125313
4thJoe Scurrah213563Carsington Lake SCA‑753614
5thTom Mitchell219812Royal Tay Yacht ClubU192‑134915
6thOliver Allen‑Wilcox216724Chew Valley SC / RLymSC / Castle Cove SCU193‑109416
7thRichie Thurlby210976Hill Head SCU1987‑12520
8thEwan Mcanally214637Rutland SCU1996‑15722
9thTim Evans215835Grafham Water SCU17(UFD)461424
10thEdward Baker216655Chew Valley Lake SC/Bowmoor SCU19‑12117826
11thTerry Hacker214560Rutland SCU196‑1481327
12thFreddie Howarth203084Parkstone YCU17‑198101129
13thJames Curtis211013Bosham Sailing ClubU17(UFD)3211034
14thJack Graham‑Troll214007Royal Lymington Yacht ClubU17101613‑2039
15thWilliam Sunderland194659Draycote WaterU19171814‑2349
16thGeorge Colquitt216122West Kirby SCU1711(BFD)221952
17thSamantha Edwards212008Papercourt SCU19‑2517191854
18thOliver Woodley173611RLYCU19(UFD)20112455
19thDaniel Fletcher183153Island Barn Reservoir SCU1921‑35181655
20thCarys Attwell209425Rutland SCU171619‑342156
21stJamie Tylecote213524Rutland SCU171332‑351257
22ndIris Singleton206856Draycote Water SCU1932920‑3861
23rdKeiran Bray215118Draycote Water & Banbury Sailing ClubU192025‑291762
24thJames Deaton215271Royal Harwich YCU1918‑30272267
25thMatthew Stubbins216378Llandudno SCU172221‑302568
26thFelix McMullan210900Draycote Water SCU173423‑361572
27thJoseph Warwicker215162Bough Beech SCU171429‑373073
28thJosh Lyttle211165Datchet Water SCU17‑3715263475
29thWilliam Thorogood188220Orwell YCU192327‑312676
30thDru Townsend208325Portishead Y & SCU1724‑33242876
31stJohn Russell183408 M29‑31173177
32ndSavva Tretyakov183264Penarth Yacht ClubA‑3528252780
33rdRhys Powell212573 U19262628(RET)80
34thIssy Leetch195246Rutland SCU1727‑37233585
35thThomas Bates215383Ripon SCU173124‑323287
36thJo Field217018 AM363616(DNC)88
37thJames Russell206301 U1915(DNC)DNC2991
38thFinn Sinclair216704Neyland YC/ Pembrokeshire Performance SaU172838‑393399
39thAnya Morris204539 U1730(BFD)333699
40thBenjamin Tylecote217551Rutland SCU193322(RET)DNC102
41stLucy Davis214960RSrnYC & RTYCU19‑41343837109
42ndJoe Mole190673PapercourtU173839‑4040117
43rdJulian Lloyd167587Notts County SCGM3940‑4139118
44thEmelia Tinch217500Cardiff Bay Yacht ClubU17404343(DNC)126
45thTom Onions217047 U19(NSC)4242DNS131
46thMike Heap189200Ogston SCGGM(UFD)41RETDNC135

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