Please select your home edition
Edition
PredictWind - GPS 728x90 TOP

PredictWind A-Class Cat World Championships 2025 at Milford Cruising Club - Day 3

by Gordon Upton 14 Nov 10:30 NZDT 8-16 November 2025

The second day of racing at the PredictWind A-Cat Worlds was keenly anticipated. After all, the original second day had been scrubbed due to a rather brutal forecast, featuring high winds and stormy rains. Hence, Thursday was the day for the Classics and Open fleet to get into action on the 2 fleet courses out on Castor Bay.

To be fair, our title sponsor, PredictWind, did have the wind going up and down all day, and rain showers. The fleets set off from the beach at the now traditional 10:30 for the 11:00 starts. The sailors for the Open course were on area course B, to the south of the Milford Cruising Club sandy beach, and off they sailed to their lovely big cat start boat. There then assembled and under starters orders were got away with little fuss as pushing the line and being OCS means game over for that race.

The fleet quickly split into three elements. A pin end breakaway trio of Kuba Surowiec POL 41, Lamberto Cesari ITA13 and Dave Shaw NZL 270 headed in search of wind they figured was at the sides of the course and sailed lower but faster. A central core who sailed straight on from the line and included Ravi Parent USA76, Emmanuel Dode FRA2 and Adam Beatie AUS 14, all on the Exploder AD3 platform. And a couple who were forced to go right, tacking off after being left in dirty air, these included Darren Bundock AUS 88, who headed for the other side, also hoping to find winds, which in this area did seem to be found at the corners.

Halfway up the beat, yet another bunch of boats, led by Emmanuel break back to the right. All this is clearly seen to the Course B TracTrac feed you can see on www.aclassworlds.com/tracking. The top mark is reached first by Adam, chased by Stevie Brewin AUS 4, and Ravi, with Carolijn Brouwer NED 888 having a good upwind first leg, in fourth. They all carry on, over to the left and their chosen gybe points.

This tactical state of affairs, in future events could set to change though. And AUS proposal to make the top course mark into a gate, as used in the SailGP for example, was passed unanimously at the AGM and be implemented at major events for a 2 event trial period, before adoption into the Championship Rules. This will open up the whole right side of the course tactically, and make it a much less formulaic race course.

Bottom gate, Adam arrives in the area first, but Ravi was sailing deeper and Adam is forced to gybe to make the gate. The result is Adam gybes, wanting to go right, so gybes again around the mark. Ravi just gybes the once and chooses the left side and splits. A tactical good move on his part as their boatspeeds are much the same and the uphill starts again. Watching the tracking is really fascinating viewing. You see every twitch, gain, mistake, and clicking on the boat as it moves will show their VMG and speed too, nothing escapes it, nothing can be hidden.

The wind is dropping, and these speedsters have dropped into Lowrider mode uphill. If a well sailed Classic were added in, they'd be eaten alive by them. The course had been shortened and the top gate brought closer downwind. They could still foil downwind though and by the second rounding at the gate, Ravi had stretched his lead, with Bundy doing his usual shadowing, quietly creeping up technique, and following another unfortunate Adam double gybe affair, rounds in second place now. Uphill, the 2022 Open Champ just extends his lead. He is 2 kts faster that most of the rest and sailing smoothly and well. The lad has been putting the hours in after his recent less successful F18 Worlds, and it shows. At the finish, Ravi leads Bundy by a good 30s, and Kuba arrives a similar distance later, with Adam in 4th ahead of Lamberto. Although, Adam wins the fastest boat moment from the TracTrac data, with 23.05 from the recorded data.

Meanwhile over on Course A things went differently for the sailors a couple of miles to the North.

The course was readied, but the PRO was expecting a steady pressure drop as he got the fleet away in 9 kts of breeze. This one was going to live in the dreams of the sailors, but not in a good way. The breeze was already switching off by the time the top mark was reached by the leading pack, and the South German Lake sailors would have wiped the floor with the fleet in this stuff had any been here. At the bottom Micky Todd ESP7 rounded ahead of Jacek Noetzel POL and Jamie Jochhiem AUS 956, next with Andrew Landenberger AUS 308, and Andy Landenberger AUS 300 in pursuit, the rest followed around the bottom gate like cows going for milking. It continued dropping but was still just keeping above that magic 5kt base, so the PRO let it continue. Bottom mark it was still Micky and Jacek, Jamie in touch in third.

Back up again, and down they went, brains close to exploding with tactical what if I did thoughts, where just sitting still like a fly is usually the fastest. But at the finish, it was neck and neck, with Jacek just pipping into first some 30m from the line from Micky, with Jamie next. Then, as if on a switch, the wind just finished. The leaders had crossed, so the race had to continue to its grisly conclusion. Landy, in forth was marooned at the bottom gate mark, taking at least 5 mins to sail the last bit to the line, the rest drifted across in ones and twos as the traumatised sailors did their finishes.

There then occurred a proper weather event. With no wind, we could see the weather forming and moving around the whole bay. And the showers moving ever closer. Auckland was variously covered and uncovered in the horizon as dark clouds moved about. Great for photos, less great for the sailors floating around and getting colder. Then the rain mist surrounded the fleet. A very eery feeling was the result. Those at the 2016 Medamblik Worlds experienced a similar feeling. If you saw the movie Interstellar, and the scene on that water planet, where Mathew McConaughty is surrounded by water with his spaceship. It's that, but with more A-Cats.

It then rained, the wind backed 90 degrees, blew a bit, stopped a bit, but finally, about 2 hrs later settled, and the Interstellar effects stopped. By now, the Open sailors had been seen going home on the horizon ages ago, but this PRO hung in there. And rightly so, as the winds returned, marks were set and races 4 and 5 of the Classic series got under way, much to the relief of the thoroughly moistened, somewhat chilled competitors. And great racing was the result.

Starting into a nice 9-10kt NNW breeze, both races were got off cleanly. Although in the first one Robin Maeder SUI 007, on his older Scheuer G6 platform, fitted with the latest Classic boards, had to stop suddenly as his mast foot had jumped out from the socket. How it didn't just collapse is a wonder, but he quickly loosened the forestays, relocated the base, tightened the strings again, and set off in pursuit for the fleet to finish 11th. Landy, Jamie, Baby Landy, Jacek together with Kiwi AC legend Mike Drummond NZL 287 and the rest, all raced off into the chessboard of the course. Jacek got two bullets again by picking the right of the course and Jamie both 2nds, much to his delight, as this is the first big event he's raced in on his Exploder AD3. Mike was 3rd in the 4th race, with Landy 3rd in the last one of the day.

After great tactical racing, Jacek was emerging as the regatta leader. He is just really fast on his ExploderAD3. His foiling Exploder hull with Classic foil configuration seems to work really well. His new Exploder C boards seem to make him very slippery, and combined with his years of racing skill, he is emerging as the top dog with straight bullets so far.

So much fun with four seasons in one day, but then a quiz night and meal specials in the club, these folk are living their best lives.

Results after Day 3:

Open Fleet

PosBow NoBoat NameSail NoHelmR1R2R3R4R5Pts
1st35EXPLODER / BRYT SAILS1Jacek Noetzel‑111114
2nd36 956Jamie Jochheim‑4332210
3rd26SCHEURER G8308Andrew Landenberger22‑44311
4th11MATUKU287Mike Drummond34‑53414
5th7HAMMER SAILS / A CAT KIT7Micky Todd9‑2125622
6th51SCHEURER G77Robin Maeder57711‑1230
7th3THE TOOL 311Wayne Mercer11‑13117534
8th18SCHEURER G8300Andy Landeberger6512‑201538
9th34NO272Patrick Ashby1010612‑2438
10th47MR BLING954Paul Neeskens14889‑1839
11th16RIGGA246Steve Ashley126158‑1941
12th55 258Thomas Block716‑1861342
13th43ITB RACING9John Dowling‑251113151150
14th39 27William Michie1512(TLE)18752
15th12C‑LORD65Richard Nicholson‑17179161456
16th15MLC978Ewan Campbell13‑191719958
17th29XPLODER120Valdek Kwasniewski8‑22TLE22859
18th4THE TOOL250Bruce Mathers1914(TLE)131763
19th5LADY JANE960Neil Caldwell‑241814171665
20th24N/A263Ken Urquhart219(DNS)261066
21st23SAILBROKERS.NZ281Dave Aarons16‑25TLE142374
22nd45MORIS99Mark Capel20152021‑2276
23rd27PUZZLEBOX395Michael Love‑2626TLE102178
24th49CAT CHEW L8R257David Carswell22‑2419232084
25th33AXLR8277John Kennett(RET)DNC1024DNC94
26th28 148Chris Bolton2320TLE(DNS)DNC94
27th6UFO255Brent Harsant27(DNF)1625DNF98
28th42DEEP BLUE SOMETHING24Nicholas Flint1823(DNC)DNCDNC101
29th8ARTEMIS982Brian Wright(DNC)DNCDNSDNCDNC120

Classic Fleet

PosBow NoBoat NameSail NoHelmR1R2R3R4R5Pts
1st35EXPLODER / BRYT SAILS1Jacek Noetzel‑111114
2nd36 956Jamie Jochheim‑4332210
3rd26SCHEURER G8308Andrew Landenberger22‑44311
4th11MATUKU287Mike Drummond34‑53414
5th7HAMMER SAILS / A CAT KIT7Micky Todd9‑2125622
6th51SCHEURER G77Robin Maeder57711‑1230
7th3THE TOOL 311Wayne Mercer11‑13117534
8th18SCHEURER G8300Andy Landeberger6512‑201538
9th34NO272Patrick Ashby1010612‑2438
10th47MR BLING954Paul Neeskens14889‑1839
11th16RIGGA246Steve Ashley126158‑1941
12th55 258Thomas Block716‑1861342
13th43ITB RACING9John Dowling‑251113151150
14th39 27William Michie1512(TLE)18752
15th12C‑LORD65Richard Nicholson‑17179161456
16th15MLC978Ewan Campbell13‑191719958
17th29XPLODER120Valdek Kwasniewski8‑22TLE22859
18th4THE TOOL250Bruce Mathers1914(TLE)131763
19th5LADY JANE960Neil Caldwell‑241814171665
20th24N/A263Ken Urquhart219(DNS)261066
21st23SAILBROKERS.NZ281Dave Aarons16‑25TLE142374
22nd45MORIS99Mark Capel20152021‑2276
23rd27PUZZLEBOX395Michael Love‑2626TLE102178
24th49CAT CHEW L8R257David Carswell22‑2419232084
25th33AXLR8277John Kennett(RET)DNC1024DNC94
26th28 148Chris Bolton2320TLE(DNS)DNC94
27th6UFO255Brent Harsant27(DNF)1625DNF98
28th42DEEP BLUE SOMETHING24Nicholas Flint1823(DNC)DNCDNC101
29th8ARTEMIS982Brian Wright(DNC)DNCDNSDNCDNC120

Friday promises a little more fruitier winds, so the big lads will get to go well we hope, at least.

Find out more at www.aclassworlds.com

Related Articles

Predictwind A-Cat Worlds - Day 6 - Three-Peat
Poland's Jakub Surowiec has won his third successive Open division World Champion title Poland's Jakub Surowiec has won his third successive Open division World Champion title at the 2025 Predictwind A-Class Catamaran Championship sailed off Milford Beach, Auckland on Sunday. Posted today at 4:51 am
Predictwind A-Cat Worlds - Day 6 - Preview
The forecast is for a light NE seabreeze to build - with the offer of champagne sailing conditions The Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championships will conclude today, Sunday, off Milford Beach. The forecast is for a light NE seabreeze to build Posted on 15 Nov
PredictWind A-Class Cat Worlds 2025 Day 5
Saturday dawned with the PredictWind forecast promising something exciting happening weatherwise Saturday dawned with the PredictWind forecast promising something exciting happening weatherwise, on Day 5 of the Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championships, being sailed at Milford Beach, NZ. Posted on 15 Nov
Predictwind A-Cat Worlds - Day 5 - Poland wins
Poland won its first medal of the world championship, and leads the Open fleet by a 4pt margin. Poland's Jacek Noetzel claimed the first title, on the penultimate day of the 2025 Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championships being sailed at Milford on Auckland's North Shore. Posted on 15 Nov
PredictWind A-Class Cat Worlds 2025 Day 4
Epic Friday at Milford Cruising Club In every Worlds, there is usually one day that can stand head and shoulders above the rest for one reason or other. Friday was probably that day for these Championships. Posted on 15 Nov
Predictwind A-Cat Worlds - Day 5 - Preview
After yesterday's tumultuous racing the 55 sailors are back on water in lighter winds and rain After yesterday's tumultuous racing the 55 sailors are back on water in lighter winds and rain. Today's conditions are a minefield, and success today will be as much about damage control, as sailing brilliance. Posted on 15 Nov
Predictwind A-Cat Worlds - Day 4 Masterclass
Defending world champion Jakub Surowiec (POL) scored a hat-trick as winds blasted at over 25kts Defending world champion Jakub Surowiec (POL) scored a hat-trick, winning three straight races, as offshore winds blasted at over 25kts to test A-Class catamaran fleet in the Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championship. Posted on 14 Nov
Predictwind A-Cat Worlds: Stiff breeze - Day 4
Racing is continuing with a moderate offshore breeze, sun shine and flat seas. The Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championships resumed today, Friday off Milford Beach. Racing is continuing with a similar offshore breeze to Thursday, but with less rain and weather shutdowns. Posted on 13 Nov
Predictwind A-Cat Worlds: Day 2 abandoned
Racing has been abandoned for Day 2, with the strong wind forecast for today and this evening. The Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championships are underway off Milford Beach. Racing has been abandoned for Day 2, with the strong wind forecast for today and this evening, already hitting the race area. Posted on 11 Nov
PredictWind A-Class Cat Worlds 2025 Day 1
The culmination of many months work by the Milford Cruising Club Today was the culmination of many months, possibly years of hard work by the Milford Cruising Club, and the NZACCA's David Haylock, in particular, as the 2025 PredictWind A-Cat Worlds finally got under way. Posted on 11 Nov
PredictWind - GPS 728x90 BOTTOMPredictWind - Routing 728x90 BOTTOMPredictWind - GO! exec 728x90 BOTTOM