Sunrise at Needles - Paul Wyeth

Brewin Dolphin Commodores’ Cup: Some fantastic sailing taking place

Suzanne and Alan share this roundup from the Brewin Dolphin Commodores’ Cup. Ed


Following Saturday’s Skippers Briefing at the RORC Clubhouse in Cowes all the teams in this year’s Brewin Dolphin Commodores’ Cup were able to get to know each other at a reception hosted by Michael Boyd Commodore of the RORC. There was the chance to meet Rupert Tyler, National Director of Brewin Dolphin, who said that his company were, once again, pleased to be title sponsors of the event and wished all the competitors ‘good sailing’.

At the briefing, competitors were introduced to Nick Elliott RORC Racing Manager and Stuart Childerley. Skippers were reminded that sails could not be changed, except under exceptional circumstances and that there would be penalties for the non-use of trackers.

Local competitors
Several local sailors are taking part in the regatta. Hugh Dudley is crewing on board Herzliya Daniel renamed for this event from Salvo which is owned by Cowes resident Peter Morton.

This boat, as are the other two vessels in the team from Israel has been renamed due to sponsorship. Cowes resident, Hugh, has been sailing since he was a boy when he was under the wing of his father John, one time Commodore of the Island Sailing Club and recently appointed chairman of the Cowes Yacht Haven Board.

‘Round the cans’
Day one (Sunday) saw Principal Race Officer Stuart Childerley lay on two windward-leeward races followed by a ’round the cans’ race.

With a southwesterly breeze relatively light at the 10.30am start but by the end of the final race mid-afternoon the wind had picked up to 20+ knots, with some lumpy wind-against-tide conditions.

Stand-out team on day one was favourite, France Blue, but second-placed France White was in contact with their fellow countrymen, as were their neighbours in the Flanders North Sea team.

There was an outstanding start for RORC Admiral Andrew McIrvine and his First 40 La Réponse in GBR Red Team claiming the opening race of the day, but they were subsequently 12th in race two.

The 153 mile offshore race
Monday saw the start of the long offshore race for the 24 competing yachts in the Brewin Dolphin Commodores’ Cup. Designed to last 24 hours or more, the offshore race is the longest in the Royal Ocean Racing Club’s biennial flagship event and it comes with a 2.5x points co-efficient.

This year the race committee set a course of 153 miles. Starting from the Royal Yacht Squadron line Cowes, the course was east down the Solent and along the Sussex coast towards the turning mark of Royal Sovereign south of Bexhill.

The boats then returned west sailing south of the Isle of Wight through the night, then past the Needles Fairway Buoy and on to the finish at the North Head buoy off Milford on Sea. En route there were some tactical decisions to be made with boats obliged to avoid the large exclusion zone around Rampion Wind Farm, south of Shoreham-by-Sea and right in the middle of the race course both outbound to Royal Sovereign and on the way back.

By afternoon just three boats had taken the longer route south of the Rampion Wind Farm with the race’s highest rated boat, James Neville’s HH42 Ino XXX (GBR Blue) leading from Eric de Turkheim’s A13 Teasing Machine (France Blue) and Didier Gaudoux’s JND39, Lann Ael 2 (France White).

While the big boats seemed to have the upper hand, with James Neville’s HH42 Ino leading the way, the tide turned foul en route to St Catherine’s Point allowing the smaller slower boats to catch up through the night.

Needles Fairway Buoy was reached around dawn on Tuesday by some before the finish line at Milford on Sea.

And the winners are …
Breakfast time in Cowes saw some furious adding up to resolve the winning team. Initially France Blue, overall leaders after day one, looked strong with their two big boats, Eric de Turkheim’s A13, Teasing Machine, and the Prietz family’s JND 39, GOA, in front.

However, as boats started finishing the Flanders North Sea team edged ahead but it wasn’t until almost all the boats had finished that with the handicaps kicking in France White jumped into the lead by two slender points ahead of their European neighbours.

In fact, in this race France White cleaned up. Emmanuel le Men’s First 40.7, Pen Koent, took honours in the big boat class while Noel Racine’s JPK 1010, Foggy Dew claimed the small boat class.

Regatta points after the long off-shore race were: France White 86, Flanders North Sea 88, France Blue 97.5, GBR Red 117.5, France Red 119.5, Israel 131.5, Celtic 148 and GBR Blue 159.

Look out for the Round the Isle of Wight Race on Friday (29th July).

Image: © Paul Wyeth