Viewing entries by
David Liebenberg

Gdynia Poland Europeans 2018

Gdynia Poland Europeans 2018

This  year's European Championship was in Gdynia Poland on the south end of the Baltic Sea.  Conditions were often light with small chop. We have never been to Poland before, and can decisively say that the people were nice, the weather was beautiful and the food was delicious and inexpensive!

As a new team putting in a lot of racing hours, we aren’t as focused on results goals as we are on process goals that will give us the tools we need to excel at the right times in coming two years. We used this event as an opportunity to troubleshoot some equipment and technique questions we had. We are pleased with the progress we made in challenging conditions and really stoked to bring it to the table in Aarhus this week for the Hempel Sailing World Championships.

A huge asset in attacking these process goals in Gdynia was our involvement with the US Sailing Team. This was our second regatta sailing with them. The support we received on and off the water from our team mates and coach helped us improve in all aspects of our game… and we are REALLY excited for what is yet to come from Team USA!

When to foil, when not to foil? Euros posed some opportunities to work on this question, and understand the strategy of it! Sea state has more affect on the Nacra than the wind strength when it comes to performance.  When foiling, waves are speed bumps! The wrong sea state and 12 knots can be much more difficult to sail in than 18 knots and flat water. At Euros we were lucky enough to see a variety of sea states.. great for the learning process! For the first few days a light breeze came from a direction sheltered by land, and we sailed in flat water. This made upwind boat speed a huge priority, and downwind foiling a secondary one. The last few days of the event the breeze was the same but the sea state was a bit more complex: a sloppy short chop mixed with waves. Upwind speed was still the biggest priority.

Why? Because in light air foiling is actually not necessarily the main feature of a race. The first upwind leg is! It is too light to foil upwind, and the spread of the fleet at the top mark is unlikely to go through many drastic changes when the top speed of the boats is so low. That means if you sail well upwind and round in the top, you're likely to stay close to that position throughout the race!

Our downwind foiling range starts at about 5+ knots... although it takes some work to pop up on the foils, if you can keep the apparent wind forward (by keeping the speed up) the boat stays on the foils. A few wrong steps or a luffing sail and the boat will drop off the foils.  It is an investment of speed and distance to get the boat up and flying, so teams have to be clear and concise about whether the foiling mode is the best mode at the low end of the breeze range. The average breeze range we saw at Europeans was 4-12... perfect conditions to make choosing the mode hard sometimes. We had great speed downwind in Poland, and feel really confident about our ability to keep the boat foiling in light conditions. Unfortunately, these assets were not as important as upwind boatspeed is in light to moderate wind conditions. 

After the first day of racing, it was clear that we had an upwind speed problem and it made it extremely hard to compete in light choppy conditions. The regatta quickly changed from a chance to perform to a great opportunity to line up against the fastest boats and improve our boat speed. And that is what we did, every day we got a little faster and could hold our lane a little better. On top of that, our downwind speed had us passing boats every downwind! 

We finished the regatta happy with our progress in boat speed. We had the chance to work closely with the US Team coach throughout the event, and are very confident in the changes we've made and the learning opportunities afforded to us by such a tricky boat speed handicap. 

Now, two weeks of solid training with the US squad in Aarhus, Denmark followed by the 2018 World Championship is what we are focused on! 

 

Kiel Week 2018

Kiel Week 2018

Kiel Week is always an amazing production.  It is the largest sailing event in the world with 4000 sailors from 50 nations. Onshore there are 3 million visitors to Kiel to watch the racing and enjoy the festivals on shore. Kiel is known for its cold windy and often rainy conditions. The race committee will use every moment of sunlight sending boats out for their first race at 8 PM and not get back to the beach until 1030 as the sun is setting. It is truly a grueling week physically and mentally. 

For us, Kiel Week was a great stepping stone from the Medemblik Regatta to the Europeans.  It was the first extremely competitive gold fleet that we were in giving us a taste of what the world championships will be like later this summer.  Most days we were on the closest race course to shore creating flat and puffy conditions. With short beats and 3 laps, it made for high paced racing that rewarded quick tactical decisions and attention to good mode changes, both of which required quick precise communications. 

After our first two days of qualifying racing, we were top fifteen overall... a great start in our first real competitive fleet event. We sent it into Gold fleet eager to learn from tight racing with some top ranked teams.

Several days of 18kt+ gold fleet racing on the course closest to shore had us learning about boat speed an handling very quickly. Storms threatened almost every day, and many of our races were weather affected, with squalls rolling through and shaking the fleet down. One big squall hit us on a last downwind lap to the finish... and we watched the boat below us lose its mast as the winds reached well into the 20s.

Most days in the final series we were leaving the boat park just as the sun was going down, exhausted, more notes than we have room to write down in our notebooks, and ready to attack the next day.

With much learned, we ended our first major regatta in 18th overall in Gold fleet. Onward and upward! 

We are now packed up and heading on to Poland for the European Championships in a few weeks.

2018 Miami Sailing World Cup

2018 Miami Sailing World Cup

Our first regatta is in the books! After only 11 days in the boat, we are thrilled with our performance place at Sailing World Cup Miami. On the third day of racing we were sitting in 11th place and ready to make the jump into the medal race on the final day. The weather gods had other plans though. The final day or racing was canceled due to high winds and waves. We ended up 11th, missing the medal race by only a couple points. This was a great opportunity for us to sail against the top boats in the world. From here we can set our priorities and structure our training over the next couple months before our first event in Europe this spring!