Napier Sailing Club, 4 – 7 February

Report by Andy Phillips

A surreal feeling to be at an OK dinghy nationals in stunning Napier for a full compliment of 9 races in the midst of a pandemic. Rob Hengst and the team at the Napier Sailing Club put together a well-managed event with great racing in varied conditions.

The 41 competitors were treated to a full range of conditions from shifty offshore to the classic Napier NE’er. Big swells from the tropical cyclones in the pacific added another dimension again to a race course that never seemed to lack opportunities to pass, or indeed to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

The first start of the regatta saw a typically keen fleet pushing the starting line. Local Race Officer Andrew wasted no time in hoisting the U flag after an initial general recall, meaning anyone spotted over from then on would receive a 20% scoring penalty. That didn’t deter Jono ‘Rabbit’ Clough or regatta organizer and local Viking Rob Hengst from backing some solid transits to get away fast. Both showed a clean pair of heels up the first beat to round in the top bunch. Ben Morrison rounded the final gate with a small lead over Rabby, only to get caught on the wrong side of a right hand shift up the final beat, which Rabby picked to sail away for a well-deserved win, with Luke O’Connell and Steve ‘Lead Dwarf’ McDowell in 2nd and 3rd, to kick off the regatta well.

Race 2 had a click more pressure. A left shift at the top of the first beat had Ben Morrison reaching in on the port lay line to round first, gapping chasers Rod ‘Coach’ Davis and Andy ‘Lightning’ Phillips. It stayed that way on the two reaches and with the pack sailing fast there was no room for error for the front runners who found it all too easy to be swallowed up by a fleet that has made some speed gains over the last year. Morrison was able to extend away for a big win, while Andy “Lightning” Phillips sneaked past Coach on the upwind who held onto 4th, and Paul ‘Gouch’ Rhodes snuck in for a well sailed 3rd.

The final race of the day was Luke’s first bullet from Mark Perrow in 2nd and Andy Phillips in 3rd. Claiming the Mighty Tiki and the top of the leaderboard after day 1 was Luke, with Morrison and Davis in 2nd and 3rd tied on points. A beer and story session followed racing.

As the second day dawned it was clear that the small rainsqualls and offshore shifty conditions were going to play a big part. The race committee did a great job of getting the course as square as possible and another 3 great races in. Conditions were generally light, and again shifty offshore, with patches of pressure dropping in to play some pretty extreme snakes and ladders with the fleet. Rohan Lord came out swinging in the first race of the day and found an extra gear in his borrowed Ovington. Thomas Olds sailed a cracker of a race to finish second fending off Luke O’Connell who played some Tiki juju to take 3rd from a deep start.

The breeze strengthened for the next race and Steve Mcdowell pushed out to an early lead that he extended to finish on the top spot followed by Andy Phillips and Luke again posting a solid 3rd. But he wasn’t quite finished there….

Described by onlookers as someone ‘nailing it like a Roman Exectuioner’, Luke O’Connell’s dominant string of race wins in the final four races on Day 3 were an impressive display in a fleet and race course that took no prisoners. 3 days and 3 Tiki’s for the Wellington Hurricane Rigger. A job well done.

The battle for second and 3rd was a nail biter going into the final day as Andy Phillips managed to notch two races ahead of rival Steve McDowell. It was Steve who fired the final shot in the last race however, managing to put two boats between himself and Phillips to draw even again on points and take second overall with a race win to separate the tie. Well played Stevo.

Sailing an OK dinghy is arguably a solo endeavor. Managing to hold a national event with 41 competitors, race officials, numerous volunteers, supporters, friends and families attending during a pandemic was nothing short of an unprecedented national team effort. It was most definitely not taken for granted.

The prize giving was an unorthodox affair with the most rum going to those who finished in the “tens”: 10th place was John Cutler who is fast becoming a force to be reckoned with, 20th Mike Wilde and 30th, Ray Hall. Well-deserved recognition for some of the events unsung heroes drew the even to a close with a most excellent barbecue in the sun.

2021 New Zealand National Championship – Results
# Helm Name SailNo Club R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 R8 R9 Total Nett
1 LukeO’Connell 578 WBBC 2 5 1 3 3 1 1 1 1 18 13
2 Steve McDowell 579 WBBC 3 10 5 8 1 2 5 3 3 40 30
3 Andrew Phillips 559 WBC 19 2 3 4 2 8 3 2 6 49 30
4 Rohan Lord 562 PupukeBC 5 12 11 1 11 4 2 4 2 52 40
5 Rod Davis 592 WBC 4 4 6 17 16 5 7 5 15 79 62
6 Eric Rone 583 WBC 12 17 7 5 23 9 4 9 7 93 70
7 Paul Rhodes 577 WBBC 7 3 8 12 15 11 12 17 4 89 72
8 Gordon Sims 587 WBC 8 9 9 6 14 6 6 19 17 94 75
9 Jono Clough 549 WBBC 1 6 15 13 7 10 24 14 11 101 77
10 John Cutler 570 WBC 10 11 12 11 8 12 10 16 5 95 79
11 Thomas Olds 546 WBC 6 20 20 2 20 3 9 15 13 108 88
12 Simon Probert 565 WBC 13 15 14 10 10 14 11 7 18 112 94
13 Mark Perrow 581 WBC 17 18 2 33 4 26 17 10 16 143 110
14 Chris Fenwick 567 NSC 33 8 10 25 19 13 13 13 9 143 110
15 David Hoogenboom 563 Waiuku 16 7 27 15 24 23 14 12 14 152 125
16 Alistair Deaves 542 WBC 14 30 31 30 5 21 8 11 10 160 129
17 Josh Newman 509 SYC 21 14 23 24 17 20 18 6 12 155 131
18 Sean Cleary 601 WBC 38 26 26 9 9 17 28 18 8 179 141
19 Nigel Mannering 512 NSC 20 UFD 19 21 13 25 19 8 19 185 144
20 Mike Wilde 575 WBC 15 22 24 7 29 18 20 23 21 179 150
21 Ben Morrison 580 WBC 9 1 4 32 6 19 DNC DNC DNC 197 155
22 Mark Grise 589 WBC 25 27 17 19 18 7 21 21 27 182 155
23 Adrian Coulthard 588 NSC 29 24 18 16 26 22 16 20 23 194 165
24 Rob Hengst 571 NSC 11 19 16 23 22 31 22 34 22 200 166
25 Dean Coleman 568 WBC 31 29 33 18 21 29 15 26 20 222 189
26 Tom Brien 59 NSC 24 33 22 28 27 16 31 25 25 231 198
27 Philip Rzepecky 574 WBC 27 13 DNC 26 28 33 29 24 24 246 204
28 Joe Porebski 523 WBBC 26 28 21 37 31 24 26 22 30 245 208
29 Sefton Powrie 564 WBC 18 36 30 27 36 27 27 28 26 255 219
30 Ray Hall 526 WBC 22 25 25 34 25 15 DNC DNC DNC 272 230
31 Michael Morrison 555 WBC 23 23 13 38 35 37 33 33 35 270 232
32 John Shirley 539 NSC 32 35 29 20 33 38 32 27 31 277 239
33 Oscar Paulich 478 WBC 28 31 32 41 30 32 23 41UFD 29 287 246
34 Mike Shannon 536 WBC 30 21 28 29 32 28 DNC DNC DNC 294 252
35 Tim McDowell 560 WBC 36 16 34 35 39 35 34 30 33 292 253
36 Phil Coveny 569 WBC 37 37 36 22 40 34 36 29 32 303 263
37 Chris Pike 57 NSC 34 38 39 31 37 DNF 25 31 28 304 263
38 Adrian Mannering 504 NSC DNC DNC DNC 14 12 30 DNC DNC DNC 308 266
39 Ed Goodey 531 NSC 39 34 37 39 34 39 30 32 34 318 279
40 Tony Bierre 550 WBC 35 32 35 36 38 36 DNC DNC DNC 338 296
41 Phillip Otto 548 NSC 40 39 38 40 DNF 40 35 35 36 344 303

DNF, DSQ etc : 41pts
DNC: 42pts