Clean Sweep for the ‘Royals’ at Festival of Sails Premier Racing Series

Three Royal Yacht Club of Victoria boats have made a clean sweep of the Melbourne Premier Racing Series, the Festival of Sails opener, on a magic summer’s day on Port Phillip.

Rob Hanna’s rocket ship, the TP52 Shogun V, blitzed the IRC Division A field, finishing the six race series with a near-perfect scorecard of four firsts and a second after their worst result, a third, was dropped.

“Today was a better day,” the winning skipper said. “The light air early on made it hard to put distance on the rest. When the breeze came in at 21 knots though, we were doing 19 knots of boat speed.

“This boat’s definitely faster than my previous Shogun, both upwind and downwind. Now it’s about learning to sail it properly.”
 
Shogun V’s crew has the advantage of having two days to blow away the cobwebs before the Festival of Sails gets into full swing with the Australia Day Passage Race from Williamstown to Geelong.

“It takes two or three races to get it right, and that can cost a regatta. This IRC series has been fabulous for training and settling in a few newcomers to the crew,” Hanna said.
 
The two strongest blips on Hanna’s radar for the next stage of the Festival of Sails are Michael Hiatt’s Farr 55, Living Doll, and Jim Farmer’s Botin & Carkeek 52, Georgia. “Living Doll will be hard to beat,” he warns.

Second in Division A in the Virgin Garden Organic Tea sponsored IRC series, which was hosted by the Royal Yacht Club of Victoria, was Jason Van Der Slot’s TP52, Calm, and third was Nicholas Bartels’ Cookson 50, Terra Firma.
 

The Division B winner was incontestably Grant Botica’s Adams 10 Executive Decision. Six wins from six races meant his worst dropped result was the envy of all – a first.

“Today’s results were much closer,” Botica said. “Everything went right for us, everyone did their job and there were no mishaps. Six races in a fair bit of breeze was a good workout and it’s given us confidence going into the Geelong series.”
 
Botica is cognisant the field will widen considerably come Thursday and all the way through to Sunday’s final day of racing. “There will be a lot of good sailors at Geelong; we hope we can keep them at bay.”

Andrew Saies’ former Rolex Sydney Hobart overall winner, Two True, was Division B runner-up and Bruce McCraken’s Beneteau 45 First, Ikon, placed third.
 
The Sydney 38 scoreboard was the closest among the podium placegetters, Bruce Taylor’s Chutzpah38 claiming the victory with a two point advantage over Ian Murray’s Cinquante.

“This series was a great warm up for us,” Taylor said tonight. “It’s easy to forget how different the Sydney 38 is to my IRC 40, and how different fleet racing is to class racing.
 
“The racing was so close today; the lead kept changing. Oh, and we managed to keep the swimmers on board,” he added drily.

The full schedule of six races was completed in ideal conditions, sunshine and south-east breeze, which trickled in at 6 knots before clocking left and building to a decent 18-20 knots.
 
“It was one of those magic days; and there were quite a few onshore enjoying the action,” principal race officer, Denis Thompson said this afternoon.

The remainder of the 300 plus Festival of Sails starting list will gather en masse on Australia Day, Thursday January 26, for the traditional 34 nautical mile Williamstown to Geelong Passage Race, one of the highlights of the extensive water and shore-side program.

By Lisa Ratcliff/Festival of Sails media

 

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