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Sweden's Artemis and GeMera Lead at RC44 World Championship

31st August 2025
“Hugues
Hugues Lepic's Aleph Racing with Ireland's Cian Guilfoyle and Oisin McClelland onboard, competing in the 44 Cup World Championship in Scheveningen, Holland Credit: Andrew Conan/Sailing Energy

Positions on the leaderboard at the 44 Cup World Championship in Scheveningen are ebbing and flowing much like the tide here off The Hague. Unlike yesterday, today there was no torrential downpour or squall that caused multiple wipe-outs and man overboards. Instead, the penultimate day’s racing was held in 13 knots building to 20 from the more civilised southwest, ie blowing along the coast rather than offshore. Despite this, it was a high scoring day for everyone.

Going into today, the two Swedish teams were leading: Marcus Törnqvist’s GeMera just a point ahead of his father Torbjörn Törnqvist’s Artemis Racing. In today’s first race Artemis Racing won the pin, surged ahead out to the left and when she tacked onto port successfully crossed the fleet. She led from there, with GeMera second, evening the score with her, with Vladimir Prosikhin's Team Nika third.

“I think we're locking in, we're moding well, and we're getting our pre-start routine together,” commented Sarah Gundersen, Artemis Racing’s Team Manager, who was helming Artemis Racing today in place of Torbjörn Törnqvist. “It's shifty, it's wavy, it's tricky to steer, but the guys are really getting the boat working well around the course. There were some big waves out there. It was not too bad, but it was definitely challenging at times. The downwinds were fun.”

In today’s second race Chris Bake’s Team Aqua started at the boat end, immediately tacking off. Initially, this tactic seemed to be paying, but once the port tack outsiders flipped back onto starboard, they were crossed by those that had gone right later out of the start. Leading this group were Vladimir Prosikhin's Team Nika and Igor Lah’s Team Ceeref Vaider who just managed to get the inside berth going into the top mark, while having pulled out a small lead over Nico Poons’ third placed Team Charisma. Team Nika had a terrible downwind, as tactician Nic Asher later explained: “We got a little out of rhythm and then unfortunately we got pinned by the third boat and then were overlaid. It just snowballed from there…” Team Nika being down to ninth left Hugues Lepic’s Aleph Racing and Team Charisma in contention. Despite some close calls on the next upwind Team Ceeref Vaider clung on to win comfortably from Aleph Racing and Christian Zuerrer’s Black Star Sailing Team.

Team Nika bounced back for the third race. This was held in magnificent conditions, the sun finally out and the wind peaking at 20 knots. Again the right looked good early on, but eventually when Team Nika returned from the left, her nose was in front and she rounded the top mark ahead of Black Star Sailing Team and Charisma, extending on the next three legs. “It all came together,” explained Asher. “We had really good speed upwind and there wasn't a lot happening. So we got off the start line and a few boats were over which helped (Team Ceeref Vaider, Team Aqua and GeMera). Then we never looked back.

“Today it was really tricky to keep the boat going with the waves and the current. Downwind was really hard as well, with the rhythm of the waves.”

At the end of the day Team Ceeref Vaider was top scoring boat of the day but with a far from spectacular 5-1-5. Nonetheless this was enough to propel the Slovenian team to the top of the leaderboard, leading GeMera by just a point and with Team Nika just another point behind in third.

An experienced RC44 campaigner, Team Ceeref Vaider’s Igor Lah was not reading much into his lead. “It's a nice feeling, but we have one more day, so of course everything is still open. Today we were just fighting for each point, and if we were behind, we tried to pass some other guys. Everything worked well. It's evening out and there are four boats quite close still.”

In terms of today’s points, Aleph Racing’s 6-2-4 was only one more than Team Ceeref Vaider. “This one is super exciting - I love the racing, it's very interesting,” commented Hugues Lepic. “The course is not one way. There’s lots of shifts, current and obviously a great fleet. So it's been very exciting and I'm really enjoying it.

“Everybody seems to be having their day, and everybody seems to be having their lows: we had a reasonably bad second day. I guess the results will be very close in the end but that’s what makes this class so exciting.”

The white-hulled Lanzarote Calero Sailing was showing moments of promise today, often in the front half of the fleet at the top mark, second even in today’s first race. However they have been unable to hold on to this for the rest of the races.

“In general, we are happy. The results are not there yet, but I'm sure if we continue working as we are, they'll come,” commented Daniel Calero. “We are in the fight with the rest of the teams, which is something for us. Our motivation level is very high because we want to improve in each event. This time it's a world championship, but we are not yet seeing the results.”

Going into the final day there are already many ‘what if’s’. For example if Team Nika hadn’t lost seven places in the second race today she would now be leading by five points. But each boat has a similar story, the race that got away… “Losing seven points in this fleet is very costly. But everyone's having their moment.,” concluded Asher.

On Sunday racing will again begin an hour ahead of schedule, at 1100.

2025 44CUP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP:

1 Team Ceeref Vaider (11) Igor Lah 2 6 2 6 5 5 1 5 32
2 GeMera (30) Markus Tornqvist 6 1 5 1 6 2 6 6 33
3 Team Nika (10) Vladimir Prosikhin 7 5 1 4 3 4 9 1 34
4 Artemis Racing (26) Torbjorn Tornqvist 3 3 6 7 1 1 8 8 37
5 Black Star Sailing Team (27) Christian Zuerrer 5 8 7 3 4 7 3 2 39
6 Aleph Racing (17) Hugues Lepic 4 4 3 10 8 6 2 4 41
7 Team Charisma (15) Nico Poons 13 2 4 2 2 3 7 3 7 43
8 Team Aqua (28) Chris Bake 1 7 8 5 7 8 4 7 47
9 Peninsula Racing (29) John Bassadone 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 48
10 Lanzarote Calero Sailing (22) Daniel Calero 9 9 10 8 10 10 5 9 70
11 Wow! Sailing Team (25) Mehmet Taki & Murat Edin 8 10 9 9 9 9 10 11 1 76
12 Warp 5 (20) Jan Scholtes 10 11 11 11 11 11 11 10 86

Published in 44Cup
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About RC44

The RC44 is a light displacement, high performance one-design racing yacht competing in the 44Cup, a five-stop international racing tour. Co-designed by five-time America’s Cup winner Russell Coutts with naval architect Andrej Justin, the RC44 boats are strictly identical in terms of construction, shape of hull, appendages and weight/weight distribution, as well as a 50-50 split between amateurs and professionals in each eight-person crew. With everything, from the keel to the tip of the mast, made entirely from carbon, and with a powerful sail plan, the RC44 is rapid downwind, commanding upwind and performs exceptionally in both light winds and heavier breezes. The RC44’s innovative and technical design present an exciting new hybrid sailing challenge, with the crews expected to hike like a sports boat and grind as you would on a keelboat.

At a Glance - 44Cup 2026 Calendar

  • 4 - 8 February 44CUP CALERO MARINAS, Lanzarote

  • 22 - 26 April 44CUP PUNTALDIA - Sardinia

  • 24 - 28 June 44CUP MARSTRAND - Sweden

  • 23 - 27 September 2026 44CUP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP COWES - UK

  • 4 - 8 November 44CUP CARTAGENA - Spain

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