_CCP1793.jpg
Announcements
  • Member's Opening Hours


    Friday 5.00pm to close Wardroom

    Saturday 9.00am to close Wardroom

    Sunday 9.00am to close  Wardroom

  • MRX's available for charter


    The MRXs are often available for charter for club races. At $250 per race this is a very affordable way to get out on the water. We can supply a skipper if you need one. Contact Matt Wood on 939 6702.
      
      
      
     

Coming Events
September
Major Events Committee Meeting
September 08 (18:00)

Winter Match Racing Series Two
September 11 (08:00)


128th Season Opening Day
September 18 (All Day)


October
New Zealand Business Games
October 11 (15:30)

February

VIEW CALENDAR
RPNYC finish second at Hardy Cup

Photo by Aline Van Haren

Young Australian sailors have regained the prestigious Hardy Cup ISAF under
25 grade 3 match-racing title from the New Zealanders, with Evan Walker
from the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia Youth Sailing Academy today
winning a hard-fought final against Josh Junior from Wellington’s Royal Port
Nicholson Yacht Club.

The final, sailed in a building 10-12-knot north-easterly seabreeze, went to
four flights as the two young sailors and their crews used all their helming,
sail-trimming and tactical match-racing skills in a bid to out-manoeuvre each
other in the Elliott 6 sports boats.
 
 


Walker is only the second skipper to have won the Hardy Cup more than
once, an event conceived by eminent Australian yachtsman Sir James Hardy
to promote match-racing skills, who has watching the regatta this week. The
success of his concept can be judged by the ongoing international success of
Adam Minoprio (NZL), three-time winner Michael Dunstan (AUS), Laurie Jury
(NZL) and Mark Campbell-Jones (GBR).

Many of the competitors in this year’s Hardy Cup can be expected to go
further in match-racing and other yachting pursuits – Evan Walker tomorrow
will be skippering an 18-footer in the JJ Giltanan international regatta on
Sydney Harbour; Josh Junior will soon return to campaigning a single-
handed Laser for the London 2012 Olympics.



Walker won the Hardy Cup for the first time in 2008 and finished a rather
luckless third last year. Despite some losses in the round-robins this week,
he remained at the top of the leader-board throughout the regatta, eliminating
Jordon Reece from the host club, the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron, 2-0 in
their semi-final and then winning the best-of-five final against Junior 4-1.

Junior won his best-of-three semi-final against fellow Kiwi and defending
Hardy Cup champion, Adrian Short from the Royal New Zealand Yacht
Squadron in Auckland, 2-0.

“We seemed to be coming from behind in each of the final flights today,
overtaking Josh on the downwind legs by picking the better wind shifts,”
Walker said after the final.

“Josh was sailing really well, upwind he was faster but we managed in all but
the second race to overtake him downwind. In the first race, we looked out of
the running but I think we ‘spooked’ into gybing away; then, when he came
back we did the same thing; we made up four or five boat lengths on final
third of the last run to the finish,” recalled Walker, who crossed the finish line
just two seconds ahead.



Walker lost flight two after incurring a pre-start penalty for tacking across
Junior’s bow and trying to take the exonerating turns nearing the finish. “It
didn’t work and we lost out,” Walker added, with Junior then winning by 1
minute 36 seconds.

Walker and his crew of Carl Langford (tactics/mainsail and bow) and Ted
Hackney (jib and spinnaker trim) again came from astern to win flight 3 by 18
seconds after the New Zealander broke his tiller extension. The fourth and
deciding flight again saw Junior faster upwind but losing downwind, with a
penalty adding to their woes, losing the flight by 14 seconds and the Hardy
Cup 3-1.

Sailing in his second Hardy Hardy (fifth in 2008) Josh Junior sailed a most
impressive series with his crew of Chris Jones and Tim Coltman, all from
Wellington. “We were in control at the starts and upwind, but kept losing on
the downwind spinnaker runs,” Junior said. “Downwind, Evan kept rolling
us…his tactics were better.”

Junior has one more youth match racing regatta, the National Bank under 21
regatta in Auckland, before returning to his campaign in the single-handed
Laser. Currently No 2 in New Zealand, he has sights set on the London
Olympics in 2012.

In today’s petite final to decide third and fourth placings overall, Adrian Short
(NZL) scored two straight wins over Jordan Reece (AUS), generally sailing
‘faster and smarter’, as one spectator commented.
Earlier in the day, Walker won two hard-fought flights against Reece, the first
by a mere 1 second, the second by 28 seconds after a spectacular tacking
duel on the second beat to windward, to win their semi-final.

In the Short versus Junior semi-final, the first encounter saw the two Kiwi
sailors twice split tacks, contrary to copybook match-racing tactics, with the
Junior’s winning margin just 9 seconds. In the second flights, Junior won the
start and sailed faster and higher, picking the wind shifts well for a convincing
18 second victory.
 



A flourishing yacht club that enhances the vibrancy of Wellington
by providing a key sporting, recreational, business and social focal point for Wellingtonians.