Mahón – The was no doubt whatsoever on Friday, May 23, that the Mediterranean’s most exciting and close racing took place in Menorca as the nine Wallys and three J Class boats sailed two windward/leeward races. Conditions were perfect, with a southwesterly breeze between 10 and 14 knots, flatter seas and bright skies. The spectacular fleet of maxis offered the city of Mahón a unique sight as for the first time ever they sailed out to the race course through the narrow and striking bay.
Wally Class
While the right-hand side of the course was the favored one on Thursday, today’s winning tactical call was to stick to the left, as much as possible, especially on the beats. One boat that carried out the plan to perfection was Antonio Cacace’s Magic Blue, where Wally founder and CEO, Luca Bassani, is calling tactics.
In the first race, Magic Carpet 3 and Open Season hit the starting line at the pin end and headed to the left-hand side of the course. Magic Carpet 3 took the early lead and never relinquished it. With the breeze in the mid-teens, conditions favored Sir Lindsay Owen-Jones’ WallyCento and stretched her lead. In an early indication of the tactics that would play out during the day, Magic Blue held on to the left as much as possible, keeping the number of tacks to a minimum. Although she finished third on the water, she held more than a one-minute lead in corrected time over second-placed Open Season.
As the breeze weakened in the second race, Magic Carpet 3 saw her advantage diminish, while Magic Blue again carried out her left-hand side strategy. The fleet stretched out on the first beat with Magic Blue sailing on the left-hand layline. Magic Carpet 3 again took line honours but her lead wasn’t enough to prevent her from handing first place to Magic Blue.
An elated Luca Bassani commented once ashore: “Today was a fantastic day! We are very happy because we sailed very well. We made a few mistakes, crew work was excellent, the boat was fast and conditions were perfect. We had two very beautiful races and I am more than happy to be in Menorca.”
“The left was clearly favoured because the pressure was coming from the left. The breeze was coming and going throughout the day, so the more to the left you were positioned, the earlier you could catch it. Everything played out very well today.”
“Tomorrow we have a coastal race and it will be completely different. The forecast calls for a northeasterly breeze and we aren’t familiar with the tactics. In addition, Magic Blue is very fast upwind but Magic Carpet3 and Open Season have an edge downwind. In a long coastal race, the two WallyCentos will certainly have an advantage in the long runs.”
One boat that stood out today was Alberto Palatchi’s Galma, whose consistency has kept her on the podium. She was always in the mix in both races, staying close to the top three and fighting a close battle with both Magic Blue and Sensei. A clear demonstration of the day’s close racing, Galma lost third place by five seconds in corrected time in the first race and just one in the second one.
Antonio Piris, tactician onboard Galma, commented on today’s results: “Initially we thought we wouldn’t have had such a result because we were caught in some traffic. In the second race we had a nice fight with Sensei and we lost the third place for just one second! Overall, we are happy and today was a day of fun and close racing.”
J Class
It was J Class racing at its very best today with perfect sailing conditions off Menorca of 7-14 knots and two challenging windward-leeward races on Friday May 23.
The day began with all three J Class yachts sailing out of Mahon harbour, as spectators from the host city treated to the memorable sight of Hanuman and Ranger reaching out of the narrow channel side-by-side, with Lionheart close behind.
In the first race Lionheart opted for the left-hand side of the course, which lifted them up to the top mark in first place, a position they held to the finish. There was a reminder of the power of the Js at the second windward mark, when a member of Ranger’s bow team was flicked overboard by a spinnaker sheet, before being quickly recovered by a following RIB.
Lionheart skipper Bouwe Bekking said after racing: “I think we had the best start of everybody, even if we were maybe a little bit to leeward, but we went the right way and from then on it was quite easy because the boat speed is pretty good as well, the owner is doing such a good job on the helm.”
The second race saw the three J Class yachts racing head-to-head from start to finish of the two-lap course.
Ranger led off the start, taking the pin end, with Lionheart crossing the line on port. When Lionheart tacked back onto starboard, it was Ranger who was ahead, with Hanuman gaining metre by metre. The three boats rounded the top mark with just over one boat length separating Ranger in first place from Lionheart in second, and Hanuman only two lengths behind in third.
At the first leeward gate Ranger and Lionheart split, and crossed tacks upwind as Lionheart repeatedly ducked Ranger’s transom, but as the fleet approached the layline it was Lionheart who took the advantage to round in first place.
Lionheart held on to win, whilst Hanuman and Ranger came down the final run on port gybe, with Ranger slightly ahead and to leeward. Hanuman’s only option to get ahead of Ranger was to gybe onto starboard and take Ranger away from the three boat-length circle of the pin. A penalty was awarded against Ranger under Arbitration for failing to keep clear.
Lionheart skipper Bouwe Bekking said the race had been tactically challenging: “We had a port start – we were a little bit wrong with our timing and I think you just have to commit, and actually it worked out well because we were going really fast, so with all the tacks it was still looking nice. Then I made a little mistake when I tacked onto Hanuman, but I should have kept going because the left became so strong. In those situations you can either keep going and hope for the best, but I just decided to limit the losses and tack back. We peeled Hanuman off really nicely. On the run, I thought Ranger was going to the right-hand leeward mark, but they kept going so all of a sudden we could split. They still crossed us on the first cross, but it was really, really close because we had to do a dip, and then it was hard for them to tack over. I think Capey [Andrew Cape] our navigator made a really good call at the top because Hanuman was just underneath the lay so we could have tacked onto them and kept them behind, but he said sail to the layline.”
Hanuman’s tactician Kevin Burnham was also enjoying the challenge. “The competition with the other boats is just great. We happened to find a little bit more upwind speed on the second beat of that second race which helped us get back in the mix, and with all three of us together it probably looked very spectacular! Everybody knows each other in this class and we’re all out to win, and it’s that competitive spirit which makes the J-Class so inviting. The weather here in Menorca is just gorgeous. I think this is a beautiful place to have regattas, this is my first time here and I think this a fantastic place to race. And we’re looking forward to seeing more of it in the coastal race tomorrow – we’re ready to go!”
Menorca Maxi 2014 – Results after 3 races
Wally Class
1. Magic Blue, 3,2,1, 6 points
2. Magic Carpet 3, 6,1,2, 9 points
3. Galma, 2,4,4, 10 points
4. Sensei, 5,7,3, 15 points
5. Tango G, 1,8,8, 17 points
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J Class
1. Lionheart, 1,1,1, 3 points
2. Ranger, 2,2,3, 7 points
3. Hanuman, 3,3,3, 9 points
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