GAC Pindar edges ahead in M2 warm-up series

The nimble M32s came into their own on the first day of the San Remo warm-up event for the 2019 M32 European Series, when the featherweight one-design catamarans provided fair, even and exciting racing in just 4-7 knots of wind.

Forecasts for today varied from 2 to 22 knots all from the east or north-east. In the event, following an hour’s delay, the wind began to fill in from the south-west, racing getting underway in a marginal 4 knots. In fact, with crews perched on the leeward bows to minimise drag, this was more than enough to provide good racing.

Defending M32 European Series champion Ian Williams’ GAC Pindar nosed ahead off the line and led around the reaching mark as the five M32s set off on the windward-leeward course with reaching starts and finishes.

With breeze coming good on different parts of the course, GAC Pindar’s lead was threatened. Initially it was by the Daniel Bjørnholt-helmed Youth Vikings Denmark, but they were subsequently relegated to third by Håkan Svensson’s Cape Crow Vikings, on which young Swedish match racer, Nicklas Dackhammar, is standing in as helm while Aston Harald recovers from a hand injury.

For race two, the wind picked up by a couple of knots and evened out across the course. This transformed the racing with boats suddenly flying hulls, even downwind. In this, GAC Pindar once again got the best start, followed down the run and into the leeward gate by Youth Vikings Denmark.

For Williams, the British six-time Match Racing World Champion, and his crew, their victory was never particularly threatened. Last in the first race Shark Team, skippered here by Italian Andrea Vacchino, made a better start to hold second place to the finish.

With Cape Crow Vikings helmed by the present World Match Racing Tour leader, Nicklas Dackhammar, it was only a matter of time before the rising Swedish sailing star would show his true colours. This occurred in race three, the windiest of the day with 9-10 knots, in which the crews were furling gennakers upwind. A start on the button to leeward allowed Dackhammar and his Cape Crow Vikings to lead down the reach and on to the run.

Despite GAC Pindar keeping it close, they managed to hang on from there. Thus the boat that was last in race two won race three.

“It was really tight,” Dackhammar said afterwards. “We had a good start gaining some metres on the other boats and then a good first downwind and the first upwind was pretty close. We ducked Shark Team and Ian got really close to leeward at the last upwind mark, but then we got ahead again and held the lead from there to the finish.

“Today there were position changes in every race. There are only five boats, but it was really tight and up and down for everyone apart from Ian (Williams).”

Trying their hand at catamaran racing for the first time at this event is Richard Göransson’s Inga Racing Team, best known for competing in the Melges 32 and 40 classes. His team had already experienced highs and lows during the day, including their young Olympic Nacra 17 catamaran crewman Emil Järudd, falling off the bow while hardening up after a leeward gate rounding in race three.

This put Inga Racing last in that race, but like the Cape Crow Vikings in race three, they turned it around to score their first race win in the fourth and last race, on their first ever day of multihull racing.

“You couldn’t have asked for better conditions for our first time than this,” a delighted Göransson commented.

“It was light, but you could still sail around on one hull. It is pretty similar to sailing a monohull or at least the kind of quick boats I usually sail – you sail on the heel angle a lot. But it is so much fun! The M32 is well made and simple, with just a main and a gennaker, but it is really responsive.”

At the end of day one, a 1-1-2-2 for GAC Pindar sees the defending M32 European Series champion leading from Inga from Sweden.

“We were super pleased to get some racing in, because it looked dicey for a while,” commented Williams.

“It was a great start to the season for GAC Pindar – it was nice to be consistent, near the front. We are really happy about that.

“We’re lucky with these boats, because they are so light and powerful that we can have a great day with good racing in 4-7 knots when we were flying a hull upwind, with the gennaker and marginal popping downwind.

“It was tricky to decide whether to go high and get the hull up downwind, or go low with two hulls in, but that decision is something we are traditionally pretty strong at.”

Racing on day two of the M32 European Series warm-up event here in Sanremo, Italy will start at 1300, an hour earlier than today.

Results after day one:
1 GAC Pindar Ian Williams 1 1 2 2 6
2 Inga from Sweden Richard Goransson 3 4 3 1 11
3 Vikings Hakan Svensson 2 5 1 4 12
4 Team Shark Andrea Vacchino 5 2 4 3 14
5 Youth Vikings Daniel Bjornholt 4 3 5 5 17

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