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Youngster Takes Early Lead at SB20 Worlds

14th December 2012
Youngster Takes Early Lead at SB20 Worlds

#sb 20 – Racing kicked off today in the Hamilton Island Resort area in Western Australia for the 2012 SB20 World Championships hosted by Hamilton Island Yacht Club. Early results are in, showing youngster Ben Saxton having early success with two wins in the first two races. Current world champion Geoff Carveth only managed a 5 & 17 in comparison.

The Russian team led by current European Champion and hot favourite Rodion Luka, are in 3rd just behind Italian Pietro Negri onboard Stenghele. Although none of the Irish crews travelled to the event citing cost as a major factor, one Irish boat is in fact entered. Perth based Irish sailor Declan Keogh, who works for sponsor UON Power Air Water will be sailing his boat Sidewinder in the World Series.

Declan has also just announced that he has just secured the distribution rights for Western Australia for the SB20 Sportsboat (formerly the Laser SB3) from UK based distributor and manufacturer Sports Boat World.

It's been a case of the apprentice showing the masters on the opening day of the Championships at Hamilton Island with Great Britain's 22 year-old Ben Saxton scoring two bullets.

With an average age of 23 among the four crew on the SB20, Bango Powered by SLAM, the youngsters won the first race having led the fleet around the course in Turtle Bay, to the east of the award winning island, in a 12-14 knot easterly breeze.

It was no fluke, the young Brit picking up the second gun of the day after match racing the Italian team of Stenghele, led by Pietro Negri, around the track to a photo finish just four seconds clear when it counted.

When asked between races whether the first bullet was a surprise, the winner of the Endeavour Trophy, the UK's Dinghy Champion of Champions event, grinned from ear to ear, "not at all" he said with typical Gen-Y confidence.

"We hoped both races would be easier, but we finished feeling like we'd worked really hard, which is a credit to the rest of the fleet. The line-up has some serious quality to it and that's the reason we are here," added Saxton. "We looked at the entry list and thought 'we have to get involved in that!'"

On their prospects at the end of the six-day world title the skipper commented, "We'd like to be in the game going into the last day".

Current SB20 world champion, Geoff Carveth, who has also won the Endeavour Cup, has in the past affectionately referred to Ben and his twin brother Tim as "the pesky kids".  Ben Saxton was a credentialed British Sailing Team 470 development squad sailor who has transferred to the Nacra 17 mixed catamaran for the Rio Olympics.

Sailing four-up with his brother Tim, Maria Stanley, 24, and Johnny McGovern, 26, on the bow, Saxton joked dockside this afternoon, "We have a bit of wisdom at the front of the boat to tell us where to go". McGovern also has Olympic designs, in the 470 class, while Tim's happy to let his brother shoot for the stars. "I have a real job," he jests.

Behind the young Brits, the minor placings shuffled at each top mark rounding in race one with 2010 SB20 world champion Jerry Hill's Sportsboatworld and Australia's own Glenn Bourke on Club Marine grabbing vital opening points from the 42 strong fleet.

In the slightly pressured up race two, the Italians found their mojo in the Med-like conditions, Steghele and Andrea Racchelli's Altea placing second and third.

The best placed Australian in race two was Bourke, a multiple Laser world champion, who was buried on the right side of the course when the breeze unexpectedly came out of the left.

Denis Thompson and his heavyweight team of international umpires, including Oracle Team USA's rules advisor Richard Slater, New Zealand's Bevan Woolley and American Charlie Arms, reported a  great opening day in light to moderate easterlies.

Tomorrow's forecast is for sunny skies and SE-E winds at 8-14 knots.

Two races have completed so far with provisional results posted here,

Published in SB20
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SB20 (formerly Laser SB3) information

Designed by Tony Castro, the SB20 is a British-built strict one-design 6.15m keelboat conceived as a wide appeal, affordable, competitive sportsboat for teams of three or four sailors. It is also, arguably, the most successful sportsboat in the world with 800 owners competing regularly in a programme of exciting local, national and international events.

Originally known as the Laser SB3, the SB20 continues to deliver on its pioneering promise: a boat that is fun, fast and easy to sail by anyone of any age; the best value-for-money sportsboat in the market.

The Laser SB3 was designed by Castro and launched in 2002. In 2007 the Laser SB3 was awarded ISAF Recognised Status and the first World Championships were held in Ireland in 2008. In 2012, Tony Castro appointed a new builder, Sportsboat World. At this time, the Laser SB3 was renamed the SB20 and building was returned to the UK from Malaysia. The ethos of the class continues.

The boat is a strict one-design class, economic to buy and campaign, easy to sail with a simple deck layout and electric downwind performance delivered by the generous sail plan. The boat has a lifting keel, can easily be launched from a slipway and towed behind a family car.

Previous SB20 World Champions

2008 GBR: Geoff Carveth, Roger Gilbert, Roz Allen & Sarah Allan

Host National Yacht Club, Dun laoghaire, Ireland

2009 GBR: Craig Burlton, Stephen White, Adam Heeley

Host Clube Naval de Cascais, Cascais, Portugal

2010 GBR: Jerry Hill, Grant Rollerson, Joe Llewellyn

Host Circolo Vela Torbole, Lake Garda, Italy

2011 GBR: Geoff Carveth, Andy Ramus, Ian Mills & Emma Clarke

Host Royal Torbay Yacht Club, Torquay, UK

2012 GBR: Geoff Carveth, Lesley Dhonau, Roger Hudson & Asenathi Jim

Host Hamilton Island Yacht Club, Queensland, Australia

2013 GRB: Craig Burlton, Stephen White, Adam Heley Host COYCH Club, Hyeres, France