16-19C
Generally fine

Find a...

Date Job Car Home











 




Weather can’t spoil spectacular finale

With few changes in Thursday’s overnight standings, Cork Week closed at Crosshaven last night after a spectacular 100-boat race off Roche’s Point and briefly around the inner harbour.

Winds did their utmost to disrupt the racing schedule for a second consecutive day, this time by threatening to die off completely.

It was a day for careful tactics and local knowledge, although that didn’t help Conor Phelan’s Jump Juice from the Royal Cork Yacht Club, who placed eighth in class one and discarded the result but still left Richard Fildes’ Welsh entry Impetuous with local talent Maurice ‘Prof’ O’Connell to secure the overall win for the class.

Ex-pat Jamie McWilliam on Peninsula Signal 8 from Hong Kong was best of the Irish bunch in third overall for class zero — won by Dutchman Piet Vroon on Tonnerre de Breskens with an eighth straight win yesterday.

A no-nonsense final race win for Ian Nagle and Paul O’Malley’s Jelly Baby ensured overall victory for both class two on IRC plus the five-boat J109 national championship.

Visitor John Hall from Dun Laoghaire on Something Else placed third to finish just behind the Cork boat, having been left needing to win by five places to overturn the leaders’ dominant position from Thursday’s racing.

As expected, RCYC Admiral Peter Deasy on Bad Company won class four on IRC after a second place yesterday left plenty of water between him and Tim Cunliffe.

Meanwhile, in the non-spinnakers classes racing under ECHO handicap, a first place for Anne O’Sullivan’s Diamonds are Forever was enough to take class one by a point over Mike Bailey’s Something. In class two, Tom NcNeice’s Sigma 33-footer Minx III also had a close conclusion to the week with a third place yesterday just enough to beat Conor O’Donovan’s Xtension.

Meanwhile, Dun Laoghaire is hosting the ISAF Youth Sailing World Championships on Dublin Bay this afternoon.

A fleet of 265 boats from 61 nations are competing in the seven-day championship that is recognised globally as the pathway event to the Olympic Games.

Eight classes are in action varying from double-handed boats to skiffs and windsurfers as well as single-handers.

Ireland is represented in five classes varying from established boats to newer types in development for Irish sailors.

Patrick Crosbie and Grattan Roberts from the Royal Cork Yacht Club are competing in the 420 boys’ event; Alex Rumball and Rory McStay from Dun Laoghaire are relative newcomers to the SL16 catamaran, a fast and exciting class; Sophie Murphy from Quoile is a strong candidate in the Laser Radial Girls’ class, while Finn Lynch from Blessington is also string in the boys’ division of this single-handed class.

Sean and Tadgh Donnelly, also from Dun Laoghaire, will compete in the 29er skiff.

© Irish Examiner Ltd. All rights reserved

Home

More from the Irish Examiner