Please select your home edition
Edition
Switch One Design

Olympic Champion Matt Wearn leads after Day 1 at Hyères

by Cora Zillich/Australian Sailing 25 Apr 2022 22:41 PDT 25-30 April 2022
Matt Wearn - French Olympic Week 2022 © Sailing Energy

The famous Hyères mistral cracked in for the opening day of racing at the French Olympic Week 2022, throwing up challenges to competitors and race organisers alike. In glorious conditions much like at home, the Australian Sailing Team (AST) and Australian Sailing Squad (ASS) athletes scored a couple of race wins and several top three finishes on a successful first race day, with Olympic champion Matt Wearn (WA) the stand-out performer and leader of the ILCA 7 fleet.

Strong winds of up to 25 knots enabled the 470s, 49er, ILCA 6 and ILCA 7, Kites and iQFOiL classes to get a good day of racing in, but conditions were simply too choppy on the offshore course with the Nacra 17 only completing one race, while the 49er FX fleets finished two races.

Before the start of racing Australian Sailing's Technical Director Michael Blackburn had predicted a "very physical day" and conditions that suited a lot of the Australian sailors. The team were eager to get racing, with this just their second international regatta of the season after the opening Sailing World Cup series at Palma, Spain earlier this month.

"We are looking for a much-renewed vigour among the team after we had some Covid issues, breakages and other challenges at Palma, which held a lot of our team back. But all those issues are hopefully gone now, and we are looking forward to some really good racing here this week," Blackburn said.

Olympic champion Matt Wearn did not disappoint, leading the Australian charge with a second and first place on the first day of racing to take the lead in the ILCA 7 fleet.

"It was a good day for me with a two and a one and we'll take that going into day two," Wearn explained.

"It was a pretty typical Hyères day really with a nice offshore breeze of around 15 to 20 knots. There were a few shifts as we were sailing quite close to shore so you couldn't really relax when you are out in front because you didn't know what would happen on the downwind,"

With only one month to go to the ILCA 7 world championships in Mexico, the whole Australian ILCA 7 (former Laser) squad showed their class with fellow Fremantle sailor Zac Littlewood (WA) adding another win in the first race of his group. After a 13th place in the second round Littlewood finished the first day ranked 17th. Ahead of him in 15th sits Finn Alexander (NSW) after a third and tenth place, while Luke Elliot (WA) is ranked 23rd after another two top ten finishes (9, 7). Ethan McAullay (WA) also scored a top ten finish with a fourth place in the first race.

"It was great to see all the boys out there, the stronger conditions help us a little bit and we enjoy this a bit more than maybe some others do," Wearn added.

"It just shows the class of the squad even with got a couple of younger guys emerging. They are pushing to the top of the fleet and hopefully we can keep that consistency throughout the week and finish with all four of us in the medal race."

470 sailors Chris Charlwood (WA) and Amelia Catt (TAS) were also among the top-performers of the day after scoring a second and sixth place to finish the day in fifth overall.

They mastered the conditions the best of the two Australian crews racing at Hyères, with Tokyo Olympian Nia Jerwood (WA) and Conor Nicholas (WA) in 20th after a tenth and an eleventh place.

"It was definitely a good day for us. It was good coming out of the blocks firing like that. We feel like we slightly underperformed in Palma so it's been good to come here and work on a few things and show that we have what it takes and that we are actually quite close to being one of the strong competitors in the fleet," Charlwood said.

"We perform pretty strongly in these conditions, so if we get around 15 knots tomorrow we hopefully can get a couple more solid top ten results."

In the ILCA 6 (former Laser Radial), Zoe Thomson (WA) is the best placed of the Australians in 15th after two races. Tokyo Olympian Mara Stransky (QLD) follows in 23rd, with Casey Imeneo (VIC) in 32nd and Elyse Ainsworth (WA) in 34th.

"This is a much bigger fleet than Palma with close to 70 boats," Thomson said.

"The starts were pretty intense and there was a lot to be gained by having a good start and getting away clean and fast. I ended up having two keepers, it was a bit of an average day but nothing too drastic. Everyone was struggling off the line a bit more with the bigger fleet and I'm looking forward to some lighter breeze to see where we all sit speed wise,"

Olympic medallist Olivia Price (NSW) and new partner Evie Haseldine (NSW) had a strong finish to the first regatta with a second in the last race and a 12th place overall. For squad mates Laura Harding (NSW) and Annie Wilmot (NSW) a consistent 4, 6 series paid off with the pair moving into eighth place overall.

The 49er fleet managed to get three races in with Queenslanders Tom Needham and Joel Turner the top ranked Australians in 17th (8, 17, 8), while Olympic gold medallist in the Laser Tom Burton (NSW) finished his first international race day in the 49er together with Simon Hoffmann (NSW) ranked 28th (16, 18, 22).

"It was a really good day for us. We were going to have three top ten, but unfortunately in the middle race we had a bit of a swim just before the finish line," Needham said. "We are using these ones to check in with the fleet and some racing practice after such a long period of time stuck at home in Australia,"

Rio Olympic medallists Jason Waterhouse (NSW) and Lisa Darmanin (NSW) only had one race in the Nacra 17 but made the most of their first racing opportunity since the Tokyo Games and after missing out on most of the racing at Palma due to a bout of Covid.

"We had a couple of races in Palma but we had Covid so we had to recover from that," said Darmanin.

"We did really well today and it was the first time we have properly raced since the Games which is super exciting. We were leading around that last top mark but unfortunately, we had a gear failure which we overcame and sailed with it to fourth."

In the new class additions to the Paris 2024 programme, Queenslander Breiana Whitehead put in a solid first day and is ranked seventh in the Kite after four races.

The iQFOiL class will also be making its Olympic debut at Paris 2024 and Australian Sailing Squad's Grae Morris (WA) and Caelin Winchcombe (WA) are making their international debut in the class this year. After five races they sit in 16th and 44th respectively, but it was Australian Sailing Futures sailor Will McMillan (NSW) who outranked them both with an overall ninth place after a strong race series including a fifth and third finish.

The opening series continues tomorrow at the French Olympic Week Hyères, you can see the full race schedule here: sof.ffvoile.fr/official-notice-board

See results at sof.ffvoile.fr/results

Australian Sailing Team (AST), Australian Sailing Squad (ASS) and Australian Sailing Futures (ASF) Results after Day 1:

470 Mixed (51 entries)
5th - Chris Charlwood and Amelia Catt (ASS) 2, 6 = 8 points
20th - Nia Jerwood and Conor Nicholas (ASS) 10, 11 = 21
46th - Sophie Jackson and Angus Higgins (ASF) 24, 21 = 45

49er (61 entries)
17th - Tom Needham and Joel Turner (ASS) 7, 14, 8 = 29 points
21st - Jim Colley and Shaun O'Connor (ASS) 8, 17, 8 = 35
25th - Jack Ferguson and Max Paul (ASS) 10, 19, 13 = 42
29th - Tom Burton and Simon Hoffmann (ASS) 16, 9, 22 = 47
53nd - Ryan Littlechild (ASF) and Jack Hildebrand (ASF) DNF, 26, 25 = 83
56th - Otto Henry and Miles Davey (ASF) RET, DNS, DNF

49erFX (38 entries)
8th - Laura Harding and Annie Wilmot (ASS) 4, 6 = 10 points
12th - Olivia Price and Evie Haseldine (ASS) 13, 2 = 15

Formula Kite (Female, 42 entries)
7th - Breiana Whitehead (ASS) (20), 7, 12, 5 = 24 points

Formula Kite (Male, 68 entries)
45th - Zac Pullen (ASF) 12, (DNF), 15, 16 = 43 points
50th - Alex Landwehr (ASF) 15, 16, 16, (17) = 47

ILCA 7 (129 entries)
1st - Matt Wearn (AST) 1, 2 = 3 points
15th - Finn Alexander (ASS) 3, 10 = 13
17th - Zac Littlewood (AST) 1, 13 = 14
23rd - Luke Elliott (AST) 9, 7 = 16
36th - Ethan McAullay (ASS) 4, 24 = 28
47th - Samuel King (ASF) 25, 11 = 36
83rd - Michael Compton (ASF) 27, 30 = 57
97th - Stefan Elliott-Shircore (ASF) 32, 30 = 62

ILCA 6 (65 entries)
15th - Zoe Thomson (ASS) 13, 16 = 29 points
23rd - Mara Stransky (AST) 20, 28 = 48
32nd - Casey Imeneo (ASS) 39, 26 = 65
34th - Elyse Ainsworth (ASS) 31, 39 = 70
55th - Paige Caldecoat (ASF) 52, 54 = 106

iQFOiL (Male, 57 entries)
9th - Will McMillan (ASF) 5, 9, (14), 3, 11 = 28 points
16th - Grae Morris (ASS) (24), 11, 15, 15, 12 = 53
39th - Harry Joyner (ASF) (40), 31, 34, 29, 40 = 134
44th - Caelin Winchcombe (ASS) 38, 43, 43, (47), 36 = 160

iQFOiL (Female, 32 entries)
19th - Natasha Bryant (ASF) 17, 19, 14, (29), 21 = 71 points
22nd - Samantha Costin (ASF) 21, 21, 17, (29), 21 = 79

Nacra 17
4th - Jason Waterhouse and Lisa Darmanin (AST) 4 = 4 points
11th - Jack Liddell and Lucy Copeland (ASS) 11 = 11

Related Articles

AST and B&G extend high-performing partnership
Continuing a collaboration that has been critical to the success of the team AST has announced the renewal of its long-term partnership with B&G, the world's leading sailing navigation and instrument specialists, continuing a collaboration that has been critical to the success of the team over the past eight years. Posted on 2 Jul
Australian Sailing welcomes new CEO
Malcolm Page OAM brings a wealth of experience to the role Australian Sailing is pleased to announce the appointment of respected sports administrator and dual Olympic gold medallist Malcolm Page OAM OLY as its new Chief Executive Officer. Posted on 1 Jul
Bronze breakthrough for Liddell and Brown
Nacra 17 duo claim their first international podium at Kieler Woche Brin Liddell and Rhiannan Brown have claimed their first international podium in the Nacra 17 class, securing bronze at Kieler Woche, the third Sailing Grand Slam event of the season. Posted on 30 Jun
Aussies Break into Top 10 at Kieler Woche
Put to the test from light air to heavy breeze The first half of Kieler Woche has wrapped up in Germany, with Australian sailors putting themselves to the test in five Olympic classes. Kiel delivered a complete spectrum of conditions for athletes to sharpen their racing skills. Posted on 26 Jun
Vale Hugh Treharne OAM
The Australian sailing community is mourning the passing of one of its greatest contributors The Australian sailing community is mourning the passing of one of its greatest contributors, Hugh Treharne OAM, who died peacefully surrounded by his loving family in Sydney last night. Posted on 25 Jun
Australian Sailors ready to tackle Kiel Week
The third event within the five event Sailing Grand Slam Australia's Olympic class sailors are set to tackle Kiel Week, the third event within the five event Sailing Grand Slam, held in the north of Germany. Posted on 21 Jun
Zhik and Australian Sailing renew partnership
For a fourth Olympic cycle Zhik and Australian Sailing are proud to celebrate over a decade of partnership, one built on innovation, elite performance and podium success. Since 2013, the collaboration has helped deliver four Olympic gold medals and four silver medals. Posted on 20 Jun
Top 10 finishes for Aussie crews in Europeans
Australia's 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 sailors have wrapped up a demanding week in Greece Australia's 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 sailors have wrapped up a demanding European Championships in Thessaloniki, Greece, with light winds, lengthy delays, and multiple general recalls pushing teams to their limits throughout the week. Posted on 9 Jun
Young Aussie squad ready to shine at Europeans
Australia's fast boat sailors are set for the 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 Europeans in Greece Australia's fast boat sailors are set to take on the 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 European Championships this week in Thessaloniki, Greece. With up to 18 races scheduled over the next six days, it's set to be a high-intensity regatta. Posted on 2 Jun
Event updates dominate this week's industry news
A summary of news relevant to businesses across Oceania The 36th annual Sanctuary Cove International Boat Show (SCIBS) has once again cemented its status as the Southern Hemisphere's premier marine event, drawing an impressive 45,865 visitors over four spectacular days from 22-25 May. Posted on 29 May
Rooster 2025Selden 2020 - FOOTERPredictWind - Offshore App 728x90 BOTTOM