Please select your home edition
Edition
Leaderboard FD July August September 2023

Svea wins J Class at Superyacht Cup Palma in her new Native Swedish Colours

by J Class 2 Jul 2022 20:39 BST 29 June - 2 July 2022

With a second place in today's final short coastal race, the Swedish flagged Svea are overall winners of the J Class at Superyacht Cup Palma after four days of racing.

Following Ranger's debut victory for her new owner at the Saint Barth's Bucket in March, Svea's maiden triumph under her new Swedish co-owners maintains a remarkable winning record for new owners' teams winning their first J Class regattas.

"This is something really special," smiled Svea's winning tactician Bouwe Bekking. "The heritage of this boat in Sweden is huge and of course the Swedish owners have this Swedish designed boat and win here. It is massive. Everyone has done a great job. We came here with no expectations at all. Nothing. But here we are on par with the other boats, sometimes maybe even a little better."

Ranger took victory in the last race of the regatta today, thereby ensuring that all four J Class teams competing won at least one race. Three of the four also counted one fourth in their scoreline, the exception being today's race winner whose hard-earned victory ended a run of all third places and elevated Ranger to third overall behind Topaz.

The key battle of the showdown race was actually between a modest thermal sea breeze and the gradient wind which was blowing from just north of east. For the second successive day the first windward leg was towards the shoreline at Arenal. Off the start line, Ranger, with John Kostecki and Jordi Calafat on tactics and strategy, tacked off early and came in to round first with a handy lead from Svea.

Down the long run across the bay, it was evident the thermal breeze was trying its best to roll in. Ranger, inshore, held the old breeze longest but when the sea breeze came in, spinnakers were doused, and it became an upwind battle on port tack to the most leeward turn. Ranger held her ground on the next drag race in 8-9kts back to the same top mark where the course was shortened when it became obvious the conflict between the winds was going to result in a lottery. Svea pipped them on the line, but Ranger held their time on handicap.

Svea's winning 1,4,1,2,2 scoreline left them two points up on Topaz which led the standings early on in the regatta. The maiden win for Svea is all the more remarkable considering it is just six weeks since it was delivered back to Palma from the USA. The Svea crew is a potent mix of youngsters and experienced grand prix racers such as Magnus Woxen, Ben Bardwell, Jens Dolmer and North Sails' Paul 'Flipper' Westlake. The key catalyst is Bekking, who previously built the Lionheart team into J Class World Champions and the dominant team five years ago, also winning here in 2014.

Bekking concluded, "All the boats here have won a race here and I think all the boats are very similar in terms of speed. The class is very close. And I am the guy who always wants to keep it simple, stay out of trouble and don't put yourself in a place where you don't want to be. And at least sail your first lap where you want to go. And that has worked out again. And the crew have done a really fantastic job going from nothing to where they are now. That is a huge achievement, really it is."

"It has been incredible, absolutely incredible," grinned Paul Kelly, who has been Svea's captain since the boat was launched in 2017. "If you had asked me 14 days ago what my expectations were they were fairly low - new team, new owners - and I have been proved wrong. It has been an incredible effort from everyone, starting with the permanent crew getting the boat across the Atlantic. We arrived on the 15th May and it has been full noise since then. But we had a very structured training regime. Bouwe came in with the J Class experience. He drives it all very hard, but we would have it no other way, it is fun. I can't thank him enough and the boat is going faster than it has ever gone."

Finishing third today, Peter Holmberg, helmsman of Topaz was objective and happy with second, congratulating the Svea team."We are super pleased with our week. I think we overachieved on the first couple of days. Velsheda and Svea have legs and we have to do something extra special to beat them. Day 1 and 2 we had good starts and got ahead. The next races we got spanked a bit. I think we have to work very hard to get the results, so we are pleased with second. I am super pleased for Svea though, congratulations to them. To have a new owner win in Saint Barth's and now new owners win here is just great for them and for the class. They deserve it they sailed really well."

Superyacht Cup Palma, J Class Race 5:

1 Ranger, corrected time 1hr 49min 17secs
2 Svea 1hr 51min 03 secs
3 Topaz 1hr 53min 18secs
4 Velsheda 1hr 55min 31secs

Final Standings:

1 Svea 1,4,1,2,2, 10pts
2 Topaz 2,1,2,4,3 12pts
3 Ranger 3,3,3,3,1 13pts
4 Velsheda 4,2,4,1,4 15pts

More information at jclassyachts.com.

Related Articles

J Class Barcelona Regatta overall
Swedish Svea reign supreme in Barcelona Svea finished with something of a flourish, triumphing in both of today's light wind races and the Swedish flagged team are winners of the J Class Barcelona Regatta by a margin of five points. Posted on 12 Oct
J Class Barcelona Regatta day 4
Rainbow score their first race win but Svea lead into final day When the too gentle and shifting breeze died away during the second race of the day, Rainbow were denied a probable double victory, but the newest team to J Class racing were nonetheless pleased to have put their first race win on the leaderboard. Posted on 10 Oct
Image Gallery: The Magnificent J-Class
Images of the incredible J Class which sailed in the America's Cup from 1930 to 1937 The J Class sailed in the America's Cup from 1930 to 1937. The class is now revived, and for the first time there is a J sailing under New Zealand registration and is the latest in a long line of racing yachts owned by Neville Crichton. Posted on 10 Oct
J Class Barcelona Regatta 2024 day 3
Velsheda and Svea still all square after another full-on day After four excellent, hard fought races in brisk winds at the J Class Barcelona Regatta, it may be Velsheda which is credited with the overall lead, but that is only on tie break. Posted on 9 Oct
J Class Barcelona Regatta 2024 day 2
Honours are shared evenly after the first day of racing After a spectacular first day of racing, which saw the beautiful, majestic big yachts of the America's Cup past in close and exciting action, honours are shared equally between the three-boat fleet's newest and oldest yachts, Svea and Velsheda. Posted on 8 Oct
J Class Barcelona Regatta 2024 day 1
Insufficient wind to allow the competition to get under way Although the fleet went afloat on time and waited, ready to race at any time during the afternoon, there proved to be insufficient wind to allow the J Class Barcelona Regatta competition to get under way. Posted on 7 Oct
Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez 2024 | TP & Cape31
Gold Medallists Will Ryan and Tom Burton on the delights of St Tropez on a TP52 Gold Medallists Will Ryan and Tom Burton on the delights of St Tropez on a TP52, and Michael Wilson on the storming Cape 31 Class Posted on 6 Oct
Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez 2024 | Sailing a 12
The challenges and joys of sailing and maintaining the 12m, Crusader Bow Caddy Media spoke to Jamie Bolingbroke, skipper of Richard Matthews' 12mR Crusader about the challenges and joys of sailing and maintaining this British 1987 America's Cup boat. Posted on 6 Oct
Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez 2024 | D3 Videos
One of the great attractions is that there is some racing available for everyone One of the great attractions of Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez is that amongst the glamour of the Classics and the Maxis, the Moderns class caters for everyone else from the smallest day sailor to a TP52. And boats of all modern eras too. Posted on 4 Oct
Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez 2024 | D3 Update
Crosbie Lorimer brings you an update from Day Three of the 2024 Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez Bow Caddy Media's Crosbie Lorimer brings you an update from Day Three of the 2024 Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez. Posted on 3 Oct