New Zealand and Interdominion OK Dinghy Championships

Napier Sailing Club

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Napier Sailing Club, 27th – 31st January 2005

The 2005 NZ Nationals and Inter-dominions were hosted by the Napier Sailing Club from the 27 – 31 January. A very competitive field of 34 turned up, including 3 former National Champions and 3 former Inter-dominion Champions. The field also included 6 Australians from Melbourne and Lake Macquarie. The current Inter-dominion champion, Roger Blasse, of Black Rock YC Australia was unable to attend.

Ten races of about 70 minutes length were sailed over four days; the race officer, Roger Gourley, managing to avoid the use of the reserve day. The weather was mainly fine and sunny with NE to E winds around 10 – 15 knots and oscillating, becoming a bit patchy towards the end of the day.

Race 1
Race 1 got underway in an 8 knots northeasterly. Alistair Deaves led at the top mark followed by Mark Perrow. Perrow found a good shift on the second beat out to the left and led at the top of the run. Some confusion about the finish line caught a few sailors out, although Perrow held on to win followed by Steve McDowell, who been slowly making his way up the fleet.

Race 2
Race 2, held in a slightly stronger breeze, was led from start to finish by Joe Porebski. Greg Wilcox also faired better in the increased wind coming second.

Race 3
Very similar conditions prevailed for the third race on Friday morning. This time it was Owen Anderson leading at the top mark, after picking up a large shift on the left hand side, followed by Deaves. Deaves got past on the second beat and led Anderson to the finish; these two opening up a huge gap on the fleet. Bad luck for Anderson though, he was OSC, as was third place Nick Gray from Australia, which left Paul Rhodes in second place.

Race 4
As had happened the day before the breeze increased a bit for the next race. This is the point at which Steve McDowell stamped his authority on the event as he won this and the next two races. With slightly more wind McDowell started to make his intentions clear and sailed an excellent race to win from Wilcox and Morrison.

Race 5
The wind eased off for the last race on Friday. Karl Purdie started to show some of his early season form and challenged for the lead, but it was McDowell again who came out on top. Deaves was third after a close race with Porebski and Perrow.

Race 6
Napier was beginning to get a reputation for light breezes and fine weather as for the third day we headed out into the same conditions. Ben Morrison led initially but was ground down by McDowell who went on to score his third win in a row. Morrison held on for second with Rhodes coming through for third.

Race 7
The breeze almost dropped out entirely for the start of race 7, leaving those with a bad start wallowing in disturbed air and a chop. Purdie was first round, coming in from the right, followed by Mike Wilde who had sailed a superb beat more to the middle and Deaves who came in from the left. The race finished in this order, shortened after the second beat, although McDowell and Wilcox made appearances in the top three only to drop back again.

Race 8
Race 8, the last race of the day was started in similar light conditions. Deaves rounded the top mark first, some distance ahead of Purdie and McDowell. On the second beat the wind started increasing and swung to the right reducing Deaves’ lead. Meanwhile, the race officer, clearly intending to shorten the course at this point, had removed the bottom mark. But on account of more wind, he decided to carry it on. This meant that Deaves and McDowell chased the mark boat down the run and saw the leeward mark dropped just 100 meters in front of them. McDowell’s’ superior off-wind speed saw him take the lead on the run and just held on to finish first followed by Deaves and Purdie. This win handed the championship to McDowell.

Race 9
The breeze held through the night, and in the morning and we were greeted with 15 + knots and waves. It was quite a good thing that most sailors, expecting another light day, had gone out the night before, and most of the morning, for a �few’ drinks. Some hard hiking up the first beat saw Morrison lead at the top mark, followed by McDowell. The places stayed pretty much the same with little to gain on the beats. On the run, however, Wilcox showed his amazing off-wind prowess by sailing further to the right that anyone else, picking up some nice waves, and sailing from sixth to first, a position he held to the finish.

Race 10
The last race of the championship was almost a repeat of race 9, with the top ten remaining the same (but in a different order) except for McDowell who had sailed home. Adrian Mannering, the local hero, led from start to finish, opening up a good lead by the end. He clearly enjoyed the stronger breeze better than the light stuff. Second place was taken by Andre Blasse from Australia, after picking up a huge left-hander on the last beat to come reaching across the line.

Overall the Wellington sailors seemed to dominate the racing, although this was the first time the National title has left Auckland for some years. Steve’s overall consistency, only one result out of the top 4, and his ability to recover, clearly proved him the rightful winner, and was in part surely due to his commitment and training with the other Wellington sailors and the development of his Linton sail.

The Nationals also formed the selection process for the 2005 Worlds in Denmark, and with all of the top 5 attending, New Zealand will be sending a strong team with high hopes.

 

Results
Plc Fleet Sail No Name R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 R8 R9 R10 Pts
1 open NZL 519 Steve McDowell 2 6 3 1 1 1 4 1 3 DNC 16
2 open NZL 502 Karl Purdie 11 10 5 5 2 4 1 3 7 3 30
3 vets NZL 522 Greg Wilcox 8 2 11 2 10 6 5 5 1 6 35
4 open NZL 521 Mark Perrow 1 4 6 7 5 7 6 4 8 9 40
5 vets AUS 719 Andre Blasse 4 3 4 14 6 5 17 12 4 2 40
6 open NZL 472 Alistair Deaves 7 12 1 9 3 12 3 2 9 10 44
7 open NZL 511 Ben Morrison 5 15 9 3 11 2 9 16 2 4 45
8 vets NZL 517 Paul Rhodes 6 11 2 4 16 3 21 10 11 5 52
9 vets NZL 509 Joe Porebski 14 1 12 13 4 10 7 9 6 7 56
10 open NZL 520 Russel Wood 13 7 8 11 9 22 23 7 5 8 68
11 vets NZL 481 David Hoogenboom 17 13 7 6 7 13 8 11 12 DNF 77
12 vets NZL 504 Adrian Mannering 16 5 20 10 19 15 24 26 10 1 96
13 open NZL 52 Owen Anderson 9 22 OCS 17 8 8 16 6 21 14 99
14 open NZL 490 Trent Pryce 10 9 10 15 15 18 13 13 20 15 100
15 vets NZL 475 Nigel Mannering 3 18 13 18 13 14 18 24 16 11 106
16 vets NZL 515 Mike Wilde 20 16 14 12 23 19 2 25 13 12 108
17 open NZL 498 Darren Hunt 18 8 18 25 17 17 11 23 14 13 116
18 vets AUS 711 Nick Gray 15 19 OCS 16 22 9 20 18 15 17 129
19 open NZL 51 Grant Pedersen 12 17 15 19 14 24 22 14 19 24 132
20 vets NZL 474 Tony Clifford DNC DNC OCS 8 12 21 12 8 18 19 133
21 vets NZL 500 Philip Rzepecky 23 14 23 21 33 16 28 17 17 18 149
22 open GER 5 Peter Scheuerl 21 21 17 20 24 27 14 20 23 16 152
23 open NZL 466 Matt Hibbard 27 25 16 26 29 11 25 15 27 25 170
24 open NZL 494 Rob Hengst 32 27 24 30 26 20 10 19 26 21 173
25 vets NZL 360 John Hoogerbrug 28 24 OCS 23 32 23 31 21 22 22 194
26 vets NZL 518 Selwyn Pedersen 19 29 21 31 31 25 19 28 28 26 195
27 vets AUS 694 Richard Furneaux 26 31 28 24 27 30 27 22 24 20 198
28 vets AUS 715 Tom Pearce 25 28 OCS 28 25 31 15 27 29 28 205
29 open AUS 713 Peter Lynch 30 26 27 22 30 28 30 29 25 23 210
30 open NZL 510 Graeme Bates 22 20 19 27 18 DNC DNC DNC DNC DNC 211
31 open AUS 684 Chris Hall 31 33 25 29 28 26 26 30 30 DNF 225
32 open NZL 467 Nigel Stilwell 33 32 29 33 20 29 29 31 32 27 229
33 vets NZL 485 Campbell Scott 29 23 22 32 21 DNC DNC DNC DNC DNC 232
34 vets NZL 516 Graham Lambert 24 30 26 DNS DNS DNC DNC DNC 31 DNF 251