Geelong Advertiser

Young sailors step up

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THE country’s top junior sailors will compete in Geelong this week when the Royal Geelong Yacht Club hosts the Cadet Class Australian championsh­ip.

A total of 112 sailors on 56 Internatio­nal Cadet Class boats are entered in the championsh­ips, running from December 27 to January 4.

Competitor­s are aged up to 18 and will include Geelong sailors as well registered crews from across Victoria, Tasmania, New South Wales and South Australia.

It will be the third time the Cadet nationals have been held in Geelong, with the RGYC also hosting them in the summer

2007.

RGYC sailors Jarrah Harris-Moore and Elliot Hughes are among a strong contingent of local sailors who will compete in the regatta.

Both young sailors represente­d Australia at the World Cadet Class championsh­ips in Poland earlier this year and are involved in the Barwon Sports Academy (BSA).

Hughes, 14, said he had his Dad to thank for getting him into sailing.

“One day we were out cruising on our boat in the Gippsland Lakes and saw some Tackers (young sailors aged seven to 12) kids out sailing and of 1998-1999 and

I thought I would like to have a go at it. It just evolved from there,” Hughes said.

“I started the Tackers program five years ago and have been sailing Cadets ever since.”

Following the nationals, Hughes will move into sailing 29ers (two-person, high performanc­e sailing skiffs) and compete in the 2020 Australian 29er championsh­ips on the Mornington Peninsula, from January 3 to 8.

“This is my last (Cadet) nationals so I am looking forward to catching up with all of my mates who are interstate and race them for the last time in the Cadet class,” Hughes said.

“What I love about the sport is that it’s very diverse. You can go from cruising around the world in a 40ft boat to foiling across the top of the water in a Moth (a one-man foiler) and doing 30 knots.

“There is a boat to accommodat­e all levels of skills and ages.”

Hughes was a finalist in this year’s prestigiou­s Lee Troop Excellence Award at the Barwon Sports Academy Awards earlier this month.

Meanwhile, Harris-Moore received this year’s Sailing Developmen­t Award.

Following the Cadet nationals, Hughes and HarrisMoor­e will get to join the crew on-board a TP52, which is the ‘grand prix’ division of hi-tech racing yachts with mainly profession­al crews, during the MacGlide Festival of Sails, which runs from January 25 to 27. This will give them valuable sailing experience in a major regatta and the chance to see how profession­al crews operate.

Harris-Moore, 16, said the MacGlide Festival of Sails was her “favourite regatta of the year”.

“It’s such a great atmosphere and so good to have everybody at the club all interested in the same thing,” Harris-Moore said.

Going into her fifth season of racing Cadets, she said she was really looking forward to the Cadet nationals being in Geelong and having the local knowledge of the area and different sailing conditions.

“Having a nationals in your home town is an amazing opportunit­y,” she said.

RGYC sailing manager Peter Kirman said “hosting major regattas gave Royal Geelong Yacht Club members a chance to see the best sailors in action and up close”.

“For the younger sailors, seeing or competing against the best sailors can often be the inspiratio­n they need to make the decision to stay involved in the sport of sailing,” Kirman said.

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