Rozinante II wins slow dance to Grassy in 50th King Island Race

Rozinante II has won a protracted King Island Race from Melbourne to Grassy at the southern end of the Island, while John Newbold’s Primitive Cool took line honours in the time of 1 day, 3hrs 13mins 11secs, well outside the record he set in 2014 of 9 hours 50mins 21secs.

Competitors will long remember the Ocean Racing Club of Victoria’s 50th race. On the positive side were the crayfish and steak sandwiches at the end of a very slow race that took nearly double the time it normally would.

Rozinante II’s skipper, Andrew Middleton, joined the race last year as part of the rally, which the ORCV introduced to encourage more owners to step up to Category 2 racing.  Since then, he has gone on to regularly do Cat 3 races, but the King Island Race was his maiden Cat 2 race – and he won.  

For the 50th, Middleton joined forces with Leo Cantwell, who usually skippers Magic Bullet and who also took part in the rally in 2021.  

“I’d just like to thank the ORCV for presenting this opportunity. I think the rally was a great thing for us to do,” Cantwell said, clutching the King Island cheese package that formed part of his prize.

Fleet sailing upwind.
Fleet gets away at Queenscliff. Pic – Steb Fisher/King Island Race

After spending much longer at sea than they all expected, Cantwell caused much laughter when he commented, “Some people have said this was a short race, but for me it was bloody long. It was a hard night, but it was a great team effort and I’m very pleased to be standing up here today.”

And a word from the elder statesman of the fleet, Laurie Ford, skipper of Spirit of Downunder), who also produced laughter: “The start was horrendous. I thought, ‘oh god, the boat’s going to get damaged and I’m trying to sell it’. But the latter part of the race was very enjoyable.”

Ford, whose sons Tim and Stuart, along with Paul Beresford, joined him in the Four + Autohelm division, continued: “I think I did my first King Island in 1992 and it hasn’t changed much!” 

The 114 nautical mile race started in a 12-14 south/south-westerly under sunny blue skies at 3pm on Friday – glorious conditions. Primitive Cool got through the Heads first. Around midnight the wind dropped out. It remained light to the end and so favoured the smaller and lighter boats.

Some sailed the rhumbline course, while others took an easterly or western route. The east paid dividends. 

Normally the fleet would have been finished by around midnight Friday night, and that would have been the case had the forecast from a week earlier held. However, the reality was starkly different and it was a little more than a day later when the first boats trickled in.  

From midnight Friday the yachts were floating around in a negligible breeze and by Saturday morning nothing had changed. The scenario was there for all to see on the Blue Water Tracks race tracker. Boats not moving, some going backwards, others going around in circles.

At 8am on Saturday morning, Damien King’s Frers 61, Margaret Rintoul V, was just leading Brian Pattinson’s Don Jones 42, Gusto (being raced double handed by Pattinson and Bruno Carreto), both sailing well east of the rhumbline. Rintoul eventually retired, along with three others. 

Extasea (Paul Buchholz), race record holder Primitive Cool (John Newbold) and Carrera S (Gerry Cantwell), were next in the ‘chase’ if you could call it that, for line honours. Newbold was sailing close the rhumbline, while the other two were sailing west of the rhumbline.  

On Saturday morning, Rod Smallman said from mid-fleet, “We are in no wind. It’s been like this most of the night. We’ve got 1.2 knots of wind speed. Margaret Rintoul has done well; she’s sailed a good line. I’ve just done a weather route and it has us getting in around 2am.  The crays and steak sandwiches are looking good…

“It’s fun to be out at sea though. It was a beautiful sunrise this morning.”

A line of crayfish on plates with sauce next to them.
What could be better than King Island crayfish and cheese. Pic – ORCV

Meanwhile, the prizes were due to be handed out at 10am. The crayfish were cooked and the King Island Boat Club had the steak sandwiches ready to hit the barby – a paddock of water and no wind standing between the parties.  

The 50th King Island Race brought out many a past entrant, including Ian Lyall, who has competed in more than 20. 

Top three results:

AMS Division 1

1. Arcadia (Peter Davison)

2. Soiree Bleu (Douglas Lithgow)

3. Patriot (Jason Close)

AMS Division 2

1. Rozinante II (Andrew Middleton) 

2. Weekend Option (Michael Culhane) 

3. Vertigo (Tim Olding)

ORC Division 1

1. Patriot 

2. Bandit (Ashley Trebilcock)

3. White Noise (Daniel Edwards)

ORC Division 2

1. Rozinante II  

2. Merlion (Eddie Mackevicius)

3. Alien (Justin Brenan)

PHS Division 1

1. Soiree Bleu 

2. Arcadia 

3. Hot Chipps (John Chipp)

1. Weekend Option (Michael Culhane)

2. Rozinante II  

3. Foggy Dew (Robert D’Arcy)

Double-Handed

Maverick (Tony Hammond/Rod Smallman)

Gusto (Brian Pattinson/Bruno Carreto

Solera (Stuart Richardson/Jason Boyle)

Full results: https://www.orcv.org.au/results/2021-22/  

All information on the ORCV at: https://www.orcv.org.au/ 

Di Pearson/ORCV media

Sailworld_Banner_600x500
M.O.S.S Australia
MultiHull Central Corsair 880
Arcus-x-Cyclops-banner
Sailworld_Banner_600x500
TMG-LAGOON-600×500-optimized
raceyachts.com.au
JPK 11.80 July 2024