Christophe Favreau / www.christophefavreau.com

Aussies fight back

Another bullet for Truswell and Pascoe at the International 14 Worlds

Monday January 12th 2015, Author: Tracey Johnstone, Location: Australia

Australian skippers Brad Devine and Lindsay Irwin did their best to upset the dominance of the British today fighting them with vengeance in Race 4 of the International 14 World Championship being hosted by Royal Geelong Yacht Club.

They put the pressure on series leaders Glen Truswell and Sam Pascoe to ensure the British team’s win didn’t come easily. It’s been hard to fault that team’s performance. Even after choosing to re-start the race to avoid an OCS, they quickly grabbed the lead by the first mark and then never let go.

In second over the line was Devine and crew Ian Furlong, who was also a nervous starter thinking, like Truswell, they were over early. Once off the line they followed the fast German team of Goerg Borkenstein and Eike Dietrich around the course until one poor tactical decision by the German’s gave Devine the opening to power through into second.

Irwin was just so close to taking third place, but the disappointed skipper admitted it was tough racing. “These guys are really, really good. You don’t have to do very much wrong to get wrong-footed. We’re still pretty happy with our fifth,” Irwin said.

Third over the line was instead taken out by Ben McGrane and James Hughes (GBR).

Geelong turned on stunning race conditions on Corio Bay for the 67-boat fleet with a sweet 10 to 12 knot south-easterly and gentle chop making for fast legs.

After an hour’s delay as the breeze finally built and settled in, the committee boat end of the start line was jam packed with anxious pointscore leading boats.

Luckily Truswell was at the starboard end so he went back around, just in case. “I believed we were over the line. I was trying to positon the boat and doing a really bad job of it and Sam was absolutely convinced we were over and I had nothing to believe we weren’t,” Truswell said. 

Devine said McGrane, who was to leeward of him, was panicking a bit on the start and so was Devine. “We thought we might have been close. We checked with the finish boat at the end of race to make sure we were clear, which we were. That was a huge relief,” Devine said.

Truswell got around the committee boat really quickly and then headed right. “We got a clear lane. There were no boats in it and our boat did its magic. We found a huge amount of speed. It was a shifty beat, but we got the better of the shifts. We were nigh on amazed when we got to the windward mark first,” Truswell said.

Close on Truswell’s stern at the first mark was Borkenstein. They had a strong start and were very pleased to be in second place early in the race and keeping Truswell on his toes. “We had a good downwind triangle, but we started to lose a few boats due to weed on our rudder. Our boat is an older design while the other teams are smarter and quicker,” Borkenstein said.

It was a tactical decision on the second upwind leg that cost them their second place. There was a big shift, where Truswell went left. They tacked away and lost touch with Devine who was behind them in third place.

It wasn’t only poor tactical decisions that caused upsets today. There was a significant amount of weed on the course, far more than any other race day. Truswell stopped several times each leg to clear the weed from this rudder.

Defending World Champion Archie Massey must have been saying to himself, if only. He was buried on the start line, fought back from sixth around the first mark to fifth at the bottom mark first time, however was then forced to take a costly penalty. “Brad Devine caused the whole thing,” Irwin said.

“Brad decided at the leeward to clean his foils so he parked his boat fair and square on the rhumb line and started cleaning the weed off. So we came around behind him. We put our bow down around him. Archie came around behind us and put his bow inside us. As we came around Brad we came up on the wind and windward boat got touched. So we asked him nicely to do a 360 and he obliged us,” Irwin said.

Finally, by the finish Massey had clawed his way back up the fleet to finish in fourth place.

For Irwin, a stunning display of speed earlier in the afternoon turned sour late in the race. “We were third at the last leeward mark, but then we dropped two places on the last beat. It might have been because of a combination of weeds and tactics,” Irwin said after finally finishing in fifth place.

Truswell was complimentary of the Devine’s attempt to unseat him from first place. “Brad (Devine) was right up there with us. He kept making inroads on us and then we squeaked them back out again. He was travelling really well today,” Truswell said.

After four races the top three overall places remain in the hands of the British with Truswell/Pascoe in first place on five points, McGrane/Hughes in second place on nine points and Massey/Hillary in third place on 16 points. In fourth place overall is Devine/Furlong with 18 points and in fifth place is Andy and Tom Partington with 27 points.

On the Australian Championship pointscore, Devine retains first place with five points ahead of Irwin in second with nine points.

Three races remain in the seven-race regatta. One drop is allowed after the fifth race which is scheduled to start at 1400 tomorrow.

More photos from Christophe Favreau / www.christophefavreau.com

 

Results

Pos Nat Helm Crew R1 R2 R3 R4 Tot
1 GBR Glen Truswell Sam Pascoe 1 2 1 1 5
2 GBR Ben McGrane James Hughes 3 1 2 3 9
3 GBR Archie Massey Harvey Hillary 2 5 5 4 16
4 AUS Brad Devine Ian Furlong 6 3 7 2 18
5 GBR Andy Partington Tom Partington 4 6 4 13 27
6 AUS Lindsay Irwin Andrew Perry 14 4 6 5 29
7 GBR Richard Bone Chris Rodway 9 8 3 14 34
8 GBR Katie Nurton Nigel Ash 5 11 13 17 46
9 AUS Stuart Sloss Ben Lawrie 22 9 9 7 47
10 GBR Andy Fitzgerald Richard Dobson 10 7 23 8 48
11 AUS David Hayter Trent Neighbour 7 19 8 15 49
12 AUS Mark Krstic Cameron Mc Donald 8 13 18 11 50
13 GER Georg Borkenstein Eike Dietrich 13 23 12 6 54
14 AUS Ron Scherwinski James Lanati 17 12 14 12 55
15 AUS Scott Cunningham Dave Parker 23 10 10 18 61
16 AUS David Lugg Dave Bramley 20 20 19 10 69
17 AUS Graeme Everett Andrew Wilson 31 22 20 9 82
18 AUS Roger Blasse Andrew Gilligan 33 17 11 21 82
19 AUS Chris Vaughan Matt Balmer 26 18 16 23 83
20 USA Terence Gleeson Evan Sjostedt 11 24 28 25 88
21 CAN Dan Cunningham Ian Struthers 12 34 27 24 97
22 AUS Cameron Elliott Sam Batt 25 21 22 30 98
23 AUS Luke Devine Eike Ehrig 21 32 26 26 105
24 AUS Adam Syme Daniel Farthing 36 16 31 27 110
25 GBR Julian Pearson David Edge 15 15 68.0F 16 114
26 AUS Greg Coutts Jason Close 29 36 25 28 118
27 AUS Tony Carr Scott Cole 16 14 21 68.0O 119
28 AUS Ben Austin Peter Nicholson 30 45 15 35 125
29 AUS Ian Arber Drew Farrar 38 30 30 31 129
30 AUS Dave Alexander Dan Wilsdon 68.0U 26 17 20 131
31 GBR Andrew Penman Chris Watson 24 40 32 41 137
32 GBR Charles Duchesne Tom Bracewell 41 28 50 19 138
33 AUS Steve Vance Blake Vance 43 35 24 39 141
34 AUS Cameron Dale Adam Evans 27 44 34 36 141
35 AUS Anthony Anderson Mike Mcdonald 68.0U 25 29 22 144
36 USA Ron Boehm John Gilmour 28 37 37 42 144
37 AUS Ben Strong James Patterson 49 29 39 33 150
38 CAN Lauren Laventure Jason Lemieux 18 47 42 44 151
39 USA Chris Rutz Michael Radziejowski 19 54 41 38 152
40 GER Bjoern Frasch Oliver Peter 32 27 68.0F 29 156
41 AUS Nigel Smith Dane Stead 48 33 36 48 165
42 AUS Tim Vance Greg Vance 44 41 35 45 165
43 AUS Phil Vance Andrew Vance 35 31 68.0F 34 168
44 USA Kirk Twardowski Michael Lazzaro 39 38 45 51 173
45 GBR Robin Pascal Martin Pascal 56 48 38 32 174
46 AUS Scott Davis Daniel Vaughan 52 46 33 47 178
47 AUS Stephen Edmunds Tom Edmunds 40 53 44 43 180
48 AUS Sam Duncan John Warren 45 43 40 52 180
49 AUS Phillip Tomamichel Geoffrey Tomamichel 37 39 68.0F 37 181
50 AUS Brec Mitton Peter Knispel 42 42 68.0F 46 198
51 AUS Philip Strong Jeffre Klemm 62 50 47 40 199
52 AUS Ian Cunningham David Cunningham 34 51 68.0F 55 208
53 GER Julian Retzlaff Fabio Pfisterer 51 58 46 54 209
54 GBR Colin Smith Imogen Smith 57 52 43 59 211
55 AUS Christian Wangel Henrik Wangel 64 56 49 50 219
56 ITA Dominic Van Essen Simona Saccani 54 59 48 60 221
57 AUS Robert Vickery Arron Vickery 46 55 68.0F 53 222
58 AUS David McGeoch Bridget Mcgeoch 50 49 68.0F 58 225
59 JPN Yasutaka Uto Satoshi Ishida 60 57 51 57 225
60 AUS Jason Dixon Pat Agar 55 68.0F 68.0F 49 240
61 AUS Marcel Bucek Scott Curtis 58 60 68.0F 56 242
62 AUS Brian Long Frederic Papon 53 62 68.0F 62 245
63 AUS Wayne Frankcombe Marcus Korobacz 47 68.0F 68.0S 68.0F 251
64 AUS Richard Thomas Luke Thomas 61 63 68.0F 61 253
65 AUS Takashi Furugaki Kenichi Hagiwara 65 61 68.0F 63 257
66 AUS John Taylor Martyn Tribe 59 68.0F 68.0S 64 259
67 AUS David Lorimer Freya Vickery 63 68.0F 68.0F 68.0C 267

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