It was a
battle to the finish between the current world champions in Fiat and the young
rookie team in Gotta Love It 7 in Race 3 of the Winning Appliances
Australian 18ft Skiff Championship in Sydney Harbour. The experienced Fiat team of Michael Coxon, Aaron Links and Nathan Ellis
finally won the day by just 6secs from the Gotta Love It 7 team of Seve
Jarvin, Sam Newton and Robert Bell.
Third place went to John Winning Jr. in appliancesonline.com.au, which
finished a further 1min 30secs back.
Behind the placegetters were Macquarie Real Estate (Micah Lane) fourth,
Active Air-2UE (John Sweeny) fifth and SX Projects (Tom Clout) in sixth
place.
Despite the narrow loss, Gotta Love It 7 leads the championship at the
halfway point with a total of 9 points, followed by NSW champion John
Winning in Ssangyong Yandoo. The winner of this latest round, Fiat, is third on 14 points, ahead of Rag & Famish Hotel
(John Harris) on 21, Club Marine (Warwick Rooklyn – replacement) 23 and
ActiveAir-2UE on 24 points.
Active Air-2UE went to the right hand side of the course shortly after the
start and led by 20secs from Gotta Love It 7 at the windward mark the first
time.
Fiat was well back in the pack at this stage and had almost half the fleet
ahead of them as the fleet headed downwind.
ActiveAir-2UE maintained her lead over Gotta Love It 7 on the downwind legs
and held a break of 25secs as the pair headed back upwind.
Macquarie Real Estate was in third place but Fiat was already starting to
show winning potential as she raced into fourth place 45secs from the
leader.
Gotta Love It 7 grabbed the lead midway up the beat and led by 15secs from
Active Air-2UE at the second windward mark.
Again, Fiat was unstoppable under spinnaker and led as the fleet set off for
the final lap of the course.
The north-east wind, which started at 12-15 knots, freshened to 20+knots for
the final windward leg and provided a great setting for the battle between
the two leaders.
Fiat headed for home with a narrow lead of 7secs and it was
obvious that it would be a great finish.
Gotta Love It 7 reduced the margin by 1secs on the long run home as the
experienced Fiat team held on grimly.
Third place provided an even closer finish as appliancesonline.com.au
crossed the line just 2secs ahead of Macquarie Real Estate.
Leading Pointscores are now:
Gotta Love It 7 (9 points);
Ssangyong Yandoo (11);
Fiat (14);
Rag & Famish Hotel (21);
Club Marine (23);
Active Air-2UE (24)
The birth of
18ft Skiff Racing as we know it today occurred on Sydney Harbour on 26
January 1892. The father was Mark Foy.
Foy was a local businessman who loved sailing and believed Sydney Harbour to
be the world’s best aquatic playground, and was disappointed that, unlike
many other sports, sailing attracted practically no public interest.
He was quick to realise that the sailors themselves were responsible for
this lack of interest as they made no attempt to cater for the public.
They raced over a 12-mile course and were out of sight for up to two hours.
A complicated handicap system caused a further delay while the winner was
being determined later in the clubhouse.
There was no attempt to entertain spectators while the boats were out of
sight.
Determined to change this situation, he discussed the matter with a few
close friends and came up with a series of initiatives which he believed
would popularise sailing as an exciting spectator sport.
His plan was split into three simple steps: 1. Racing must be exciting and
faster; 2. Boats had to be more colourful and more easily
identified than by a number on the Sails; and 3. The race
winner should be decided on a first-past-the-post basis.
The major problem with Foy’s plan was producing a faster racer, but he
solved this with the first of the 18-footers, which was an open, centreboard
boat with a very light hull, an 8-foot (2.4m) beam and only 30 inches (76cm)
amidships. It carried a crew of 14 (compared to the previous boats with 25
crew) and had a huge spread of sail which gave it a sensational aquaplaning
speed downwind.
Foy’s original idea of having striped sails to identify each boat had to be
abandoned due to the excessive cost of manufacturing varying designs for
registration.
His alternative was for each boat to have a colourful emblem on its mainsail
- a tradition which continues to this day, although the colourful emblem is
now almost exclusively the logo of a corporate sponsor.
When Foy tried to enter his boats with the Anniversary Regatta Committee of
1892, they were rejected as the committee believed that "such badges were
not in keeping with the dignity of the oldest regatta in the southern
hemisphere." Foy was furious and announced "we’ll run our own regatta on
Anniversary Day. I’ll pay for it and we’ll give the public
what it wants."
High-pressure publicity given to Foy’s plans paid big dividends. On regatta
day, Clark Island (Sydney Harbour) was packed to capacity, while moored
ferries and jetties provided additional accommodation - as did every vantage
point along the foreshores of Sydney Harbour.
The crowd was without precedent in Australian yacht racing although most of
these spectators knew little about the sport. The vast majority were there
to thrill to the excitement that Foy had promised.
A triangular three miles course was plotted and a "staggered" start
introduced (where the best boats started after the slower boats) to bunch
the fleet for a spectacular, downwind run to the finish at Clark Island.
At the start there had been less than three minutes between all boats in the
fleet. At the finish there were a dozen boats racing for the line in a
bow-to-bow finish.
The public got its moneys worth and the coloured badges of the 18-footers
were an instant success.
Foy had demonstrated that 18-footer racing was the most exciting sport ever
seen on Sydney Harbour - a status that has never been seriously challenged.
The first era in the
history of the 18-footers was known as the "Big Boat Era"
and is generally accepted to include a transition from 22
and 24-footers at the turn of the century.
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It was a
battle to the finish between the current world champions in Fiat and the young
rookie team in Gotta Love It 7 in Race 3 of the Winning Appliances
Australian 18ft Skiff Championship in Sydney Harbour. |
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It was a
battle to the finish between the current world champions in Fiat and the young
rookie team in Gotta Love It 7 in Race 3 of the Winning Appliances
Australian 18ft Skiff Championship in Sydney Harbour. |
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These ‘big boats’ carried crews of 18-25 crewmen and had enormously heavy
spars and gear.
The 18-footer, with a 8ft beam, was manned by a reduced crew of 10-15 men
but carried not much less sail area than the bigger boats.
These 18-footers were dinghy type boats and carried mainsail, ballooner,
ringtail, topsail, topsail head spinnaker and (at times) watersails. For
spectators, they didn’t differ much from the bigger boats but were much less
costly to build and maintain.
The class was put onto a much firmer basis when the first official
Australian Championship was conducted in Sydney during the 1912-13 Season.
During this period there were tremendous sail carriers. Argument amongst
18-footer supporters as to the largest sail area ever carried will never
end, however one of the biggest must certainly be ZANITA, which was sailed
by Bill "Plugger" Martin.
In 1910 she carried approximately 3500 square feet of sail. Her mainsail was
32 feet on the boom, her sails included mainsail, ringtail, topsail,
ballooner, water sail and spinnaker.
In the early 1930s, the fleet began to dwindle when rising costs and the
difficulty of maintaining big crews made owners reluctant to replace old
boats with new ones.
Radical experiments had begun as designers began to apply the principles of
aerodynamics to boat building.
Arguments developed over the merits and otherwise of a new 7-foot beam
conventional 18-footer named SCOT.
It was generally dismissed as a passing fad.
A Queensland owner named Frederick Hart was one of its few supporters and
argued so strongly that his opponents challenged him to build this "miracle
boat".
In Brisbane, Hart worked out rough plans and specifications which he passed
on to boat builder H.P. Whereats to finalise. Skippered by Vic Vaughan,
ABERDARE won four consecutive Australian Championships and when she retired
was able to boast 23 title victories from 31 starts.
The success of this new concept was the beginning of the end for the ‘big
boats’ but the Sydney Flying Squadron club refused to register these new
narrow beam boats for their local sailors.
A group of sailors wanting these smaller boats held several meetings to
consider the possibility of forming their own club to cater for such boats.
In January 1935 this led to the formation of the N.S.W. 18-footers Sailing
League (now known as the Australian 18-footers League).
The new club’s first race was the first heat of the 1935 Australian
Championship.
Six new 7ft beam skiffs joined the club’s fleet for the 1935-36 Season. To
show the popularity of these new boats, a further seven new craft were added
to the register during the 1936-37 Season. By the 1938-39 Season there were
21 boats racing with the ‘League’.
During these ‘heady’ times there were seven ferries following the race every
Sunday. Each carried a commentator, manager, and other officials - one of
whom was stationed in the wheel house of each steamer to help the captain
decide where to go to get the best possible view for the people on board.
This period is best summed up by the following comments written by the
‘League’ president at the beginning of the 1938-39 Season:
"There can be no doubt that the modern type 18-footer appeals to the
sporting instincts of every Australian as is evidenced by the fact that our
patrons increase in numbers as each season progresses. Two seasons ago we
felt proud of being able to record 150,000 patrons for the season. Last
season we were just under the 200,000 mark".
(The initial success of the club continues today. It is the world leader in
the promotion and development of this racing class into a truly international
sport).
In 1937 Mr. James J. Giltinan (Secretary of the N.S.W. 18-footers Sailing
League) planned a World’s Championship for 18-foot open boats on Sydney
Harbour to coincide with Sydney’s 150th Anniversary in January 1938.
Advertisements were placed in major newspapers throughout the world and
replies received from England, USA, Hong Kong and New Zealand.
Unfortunately, due to the unsettled atmosphere in Europe at the time only
the New Zealanders were able to compete.
The carnival was a great success. The degree of success can be measured by
the article which appeared in the ‘Sydney Morning Herald’ newspaper on the
day following the first heat:
"The crowd at Circular Quay (ferry wharf) was so large that extra steamer
accommodation had to be provided at the last moment, while
craft of almost every conceivable description were in
attendance. The foreshores were thronged with spectators."
The total crowd watching was estimated at more than 10,000 people.
When World War II broke out, the authorities in Sydney stopped the League
racing on the main harbour so they continued their races on the ‘river’
courses (west of the Sydney Harbour Bridge) until early 1946.
Following the war years, there was a move in Queensland to build smaller
beam boats with smaller sails and reduced crew numbers. This was
understandable as their fleet of ‘7ft Beam’ boats was diminishing and new
boats were not being built. Increased costs was another factor.
In 1946, Queensland delegates approached the League to accept the new 6-foot
beam concept 18-footers so that the Australian Championship competition
could continue.
League boat owners and members had to decline as they had considerable money
invested in their 7-foot beam boats and to change so drastically would be
far too costly.
Queensland turned to the Sydney Flying Squadron to continue the Australian
Championship with the 6-foot beam boats while the League continued to race
the 7-foot beamers for another 5 years.
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