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Salcombe Yacht Club Sailing Club Series 2026 - Race 2

by J Burn & A Griffin 5 May 05:50 PDT 3 May 2026

Short-Race Handicap Race

Typical, the Bank Holiday weather set the scene for the second instalment of the sailing club's short race handicap series: torrential rain, a light easterly breeze, and the tide at the bottom of a spring tide.

Despite the conditions, seven intrepid sailors made it to the start. Among them was a guest appearance from rising star Frankie Burn, who found himself available as his regular Merlin Rocket helm was competing in the Yawl Open Meeting. Seizing the opportunity, Frankie borrowed a club Laser and joined the fleet.

Race Officer Roger Guess set a compact course of 3-1-3-2, sparing competitors the two-mile downwind slog out to sea assigned to the other fleets.

Andrew Groves made a strong start, taking an early lead from Frankie, with Venetia Andrews and Emily Hoar close behind. As the race unfolded, Frankie—clearly benefiting from time spent crewing for some of the club's top sailors—began to reel Andrew in.

However, drama struck at the final mark when Frankie's rudder came off during the rounding. The mishap dashed his chances of victory, allowing Andrew to sail on unchallenged to the finish. Venetia capitalised to take second place, while Frankie recovered to secure third.

Solo Race - Captain's Innings

On Bank Holiday Saturday OOD Roger Guess was faced with the prospect of managing not only the local Club fleets comprising slow & fast handicap plus Solos, but also several open meeting fleets comprising three sets Yawls as well as visiting National 12s and RS400s. Roger's unenviable task was to find a way of setting eight starts for over eighty boats in a light N.Easterly and with absolutely no water in the harbour at the bottom of an enormous spring tide.

With able assistance from Safety boat leader Simon Ballantine, Roger solved the conundrum by sending all but the slow handicap fleet out to sea, where there was a strong breeze, using the course 3,A,B,A,B,3,2.

To the unfocussed eyes of the elderly Solo helms, the letters on the course board were reminiscent of a Swedish super-group, it also prompted the inevitable chatter amongst the Solos, as they cruised behind the start line, of 'where on earth are race marks A & B?'. Only Chris (Chubby) Cleaves had an up to date course, map so he generously offered to let the rest follow him.

Indeed, it was Cleaves who made best use of the shifts on the first beat to take a short lead from Tim Law, fleet captain Adrian Griffin and Billy Jago at the windward mark. This order was maintained for most of the two-mile long run out to sea, with Jago edging into third place around A. The chasing pack of Mike Hodges, Roger Lumby and Chris Turns remained close behind, ready to capitalise on the slightest mistake.

Malcolm Mackley however, renowned for picking maverick routes in his turquoise Solo, was alone in hugging the eastern side of the harbour past Sunny Cove, Biddle Head and Smalls Cove, emerging so far behind the rest that early retirement seemed the most attractive prospect.

Meanwhile at the front, Cleaves relishing the conditions out at sea, extended his lead to several hundred yards whilst humming through his repertoire of ABBA hits and, as he rounded B for the second time, changed the gramophone record to "Winner takes it all", but curiously setting off in the direction of A! With Law & Jago maintaining their game of follow the leader, Griffin & Lumby spotted the leader's error and sensing a rare opportunity for a podium finish, set off on the long beat back up the harbour to finish in that order.

While Hodges too was taken in by Chubby's error, Chris Turns headed back to the finish line to take 3rd place. Later that same afternoon and now finally facing his own Waterloo, Cleaves led the angry tail end procession of Law Jago and Hodges back into the harbour and over the finish line.

Full results can be found here.

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