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Maurer commented: "It was very light and difficult to
keep the boating moving. It was hard. One of those days when
one fold and you lose!"
"It was very light," said Kerry Waraker in the
Radial Great Grand Master division. "It was very
difficult to keep the boat going. Peter (Seidenberg) went
right early. He crossed the fleet on port tack. He got a
marvelous break and stayed there - a mile in front," he
said.
Results, however, show Seidenberg (USA), the leader
coming into today, as a DNC and James Quinn (NZL) as the
winner of Race 4 today, with Greg Marshall (AUS) second and
Kerry Waraker (AUS) third. Overall, this means Waraker leads
the Championship on 10 points from Tom Speed (NZL) on 18 and
Quinn third on 20 points. This could change pending
confirmation of Seidenberg's DNC.
Reigning world champion Brett Beyer (AUS), yesterday's
overall leader in the Standard Apprentice division scored
OCS in today's Race 3, dropping him off the podium
altogether.
"I have a sneaking suspicion I might have been OCS'd
- but I don't know where I might have finished up anyway,
because the fleets got mixed in with each other," Beyer
said. His misfortune today cost him dearly. However, once
five races are sailed, a race drop will come into play which
should return both to the podium in what is becoming a mixed
series for many of the top players.
Winning the race, Jyrki Taiminen (FIN) is the new leader
of the Apprentice division on six points from Rohan Lord (NZL)
who remains second on seven points after finishing second
today. Christopher Gowers (GBR) moves up from sixth overall
to third after a third place finish.
A third place finish in the Standard Master division has
cemented Brad Taylor's (AUS) place at the top of that
scoreboard. On six points, Taylor is four points clear of
Jan Scholten (AUS) who scored seventh place and seven points
clear of a third Australian, Peter Conde, who finished the
day in fifth place.
'Clogs' Scholten told: "It was serious brain
meltdown stuff. Everyone had the same problem. The Race
Committee did well to pull it (racing) off."
Michael Schreiber (USA) won the Red group today from Tim
Landt, also from the USA and Mark Skelton (AUS). "It
was very testing. You had to stay very focussed and pay
attention the whole time. There were lots of shifts out
there. The current was the key downwind today. I love this
country. I'm from Florida, so I'm used to light winds,"
Landt said.
Malcolm Courts (GBR) pulled off a win in the Yellow group
from Charles Tripp (USA), in fact the USA and New Zealand
sailors appear to have won the day across the board.
In the Standard Grant Master division, current title
holder Mark Bethwaite (AUS) took a tumble from the top of
the scoreboard after finishing 49th. Wolfgang Gerz (GER) won
Race 3 to claim first spot on seven points from Jack
Schlachter (AUS) who moves up the board into second place
after finishing the race fifth.
Although Rob Lowndes (AUS) was upset with himself after
finishing the lone race today in unlucky 13th place, it was
enough to only drop him from equal first to third place
overall. "I went badly. I came good at one stage then
stuffed it up," he said.
Stephen Wawn (AUS) was the second placegetter in the
Grand Master today and Dirk Seret (AUS) was third.
Seventh place getter, Peter Stephinson (AUS) commented:
"I just enjoyed being out there with my mates bobbing
around and having fun. I was last off the beach. I enjoyed
looking around at all the other boats; it was a spectacular
sight,"
"I feel terrific, cos I beat Peter," laughed
Colin Cain, who did a great job in finishing fourth, a huge
improvement on his 36th and 35th places of Races 1 and
2.
Results are provisional pending protests and ratification
by officials and will be posted to the official website
below in due course.
Tomorrow, Wednesday, is a layday for all. Racing resumes
on Thursday.
For all information on the Gosford Sailing Club hosted
Laser Masters Worlds go to: http://aus08.laserinternational.org/
Di Pearson Laser Worlds media manager |