Please select your home edition
Edition

PredictWind Moth World Championship at Manly Sailing Club Day 2

by Suellen Hurling for Live Sail Die & PredictWind 5 Jan 08:01 GMT 4-9 January 2025
Day 2 - 2024 PredictWind Moth Worlds. Manly Sailing Club. January 5, 2025 © Suellen Hurling / Live Sail Die

An earlier start didn't bother the young Kiwis who were the first out of the boat park for Day 2 of the PredictWind Moth World Championships in Auckland, New Zealand.

The home advantage is making waves on the scoreboard with Mattias Coutts (NZL) now leading the 74 strong fleet after an impressive line up of results. Coutts has had a 1, 2, 1, 1, 3 putting him on eight points overall, with training partner Jacob Pye (NZL) in second with a 1, 1, 10, 1, 1 and 14 points overall. The two 19 year olds definitely have the home advantage with Manly Sailing Club, the host for the PredictWind Moth World Championships, their backyard.

Harry Melges (USA) rounds out the top three after fives races with a 2, 5, 5, 5, 6 putting him on 23 points. Jack Bennett (NZL) is fourth overall after four races, with a 4, 3, 1, 8, 9 putting him on 25 points.

The youth are leading the charge with the top six all 21 years or younger. The top Open Division sailor is former two-time WASZP Games Champion Sam Street, also from New Zealand and he sits 7th overall.

"It was great to get four races [on the Bravo Course] in today in very streaky conditions," said Street.

"I'm just trying to keep the races really simple. The fleet is very quick and making little mistakes very costly. Definitely looking forward to some more racing tomorrow," continued Street.

It was another challenging day of racing for the fleet, split across two courses. Coutts and Pye are also split, with Coutts on the Alpha Course (yellow) and Pye on the Bravo Course (blue). There is excitement building across their fan bases to see these two line up on the same race course once the finals start on Wednesday 8th January.

Hattie Rogers (GBR) is leading the charge in the women's division sitting 35th overall with Sinem Kurtbay (FIN) in second (46th overall) and Nicole van der Velden (ESP) in third (52nd overall)

Oscillating breeze, 20 degree wind shifts, with the wind going from 12 knots to 20 knots in seconds with the squalls falling over the cliffs and onto the race course.

Bravo Course (blue) headed out to their course area for an 1100 hour start, with the race getting away roughly on time. However there was a massive delay between the first and second race of the day due to the changing conditions, and once the race finally started, unfortunately it was blown up half way through thanks to the conditions going well above the Moth class upper limit meaning it was unsafe for the sailors to continue.

The fleet headed back to shore to wait it out, before heading out again, this time with Alpha Course (yellow) in tow, with the races across both courses now insync.

Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli Team and Olympic Gold Medal winning coach, Hamish Willcox, spoke at a North Sails sponsored post-race debrief and promtpted the sailors to focus on their strategy, plan, and stick to it. He also reminded sailors to not only just look at the water, but at the clouds, which greatly assist with understanding where to place yourself on the course.

Five qualifying races have now been completed, with one more day of qualifying to go before a well deserved reserve day kicks in on Tuesday 7th January. The PredictWind Moth World Championships wraps up with two days of finals racing, with the fleets split into gold and silver, before a world champion can be confirmed.

Since being recognised as an international class, only one Kiwi has ever won the Moth World Championship. Peter Burling won the event back in 2015 in Sorrento, Australia, and while Jacob Pye won the only two races of the 2023 World Championship in Weymouth UK, the lack of races due to the lack of wind meant the event never crowned an official world champion.

Full results available here.

Related Articles

Moth Lowriders Cobwebaway Breaker at Bartley
Show us what you've got... For those of us of a certain age, Bartley SC was a hotbed of 1980s and 90s International Moths in the Midlands, with half a dozen or more afloat each weekend in club racing. It was agreed that Bartley would be the ideal opening to the UK Lowriders season. Posted on 11 Mar
19 Winners Crowned at Foiling Week Pensacola 2025
Nineteen winners have been crowned and the inaugural Foiling Week Pensacola Nineteen winners have been crowned and the inaugural Foiling Week Pensacola has come to a close after seven days of racing, community events, and social engagements. Posted on 4 Mar
Foiling Week Pensacola reaches halfway mark
As USA's Given wins Kite Foil Regatta The kitefoil regatta officially hit the books as the first regatta of Foiling Week Pensacola and was joined by a host of other special events to complete an impressive opening program for the inaugural week of festivities. Posted on 28 Feb
Battle for the Bar
The unofficial name for the Capel Sound Invitational, from the stellar waters and the drinks By their own admission, this is the unofficial name for the Capel Sound Invitational. Yes, it pays reference to the location where they serve drinks, but it is also for the stretch of water it is named after. Posted on 24 Feb
Foiling Week flocks to Pensacola
With high-speed racing and community events The world-renowned Foiling Week is set to make a splash for the first time in Pensacola, Florida in an exciting expansion following 11 successful editions in Lake Garda, Italy. Posted on 24 Feb
P&B POSH preview
Paignton Open for Single Handers will also host the Fire Nationals Paignton Sailing Club are pleased to announce that entries are now open for their 2025 POSH regatta being held on the 10th and 11th May and this year is being sponsored by P&B. Posted on 17 Feb
Race the best
International Moth class is returning to the RYA Dinghy & Watersports Show After a decade or so's absence the International Moth Class association is returning to the Dinghy Show. Exhibiting under the theme 'Race the best' the class aim to dispel some of the misconceptions. Posted on 15 Feb
The engine room
Without them we are lost. This is about the things aloft both ahead and behind the stick. Without them we are lost. This is not about the tiny little room under the companionway stairs. Rather, it is about the things aloft both ahead and behind the stick.Yes. The rags. Only, they are anything but for wiping up spills. They are supreme tech. Posted on 9 Feb
2025 Moth Lowrider Australian Championship
A group of Moth enthusiasts raced their more traditional Moths at Saratoga Sailing Club in NSW A group of Moth enthusiasts raced their more traditional Moths at the Australian Scow and Lowrider Australian National Championship, hosted by the Saratoga Sailing Club on the NSW Central Coast. The championships consisted of ten races in early January Posted on 13 Jan
Zhik's Team Riders dominate Moth Worlds
Hattie Rogers and Jacob Pye on the podium in New Zealand Zhik, world leader in performance sailing apparel, proudly celebrates the exceptional achievements of its sponsored athletes at the awesome 2024 Moth World Championships in New Zealand. Posted on 9 Jan