Please select your home edition
Edition
ETNZ-STORE-728X90 one B TOP

Liz Williams holding her own at Henning Harders OK Dinghy Australian Nationals

by Di Pearson, OK Dinghy media 11 Jan 2017 19:24 NZDT 9-13 January 2017

Anyone would be daunted taking on the opposite sex in sport, but Elizabeth Williams is right at home and holding her own in the otherwise male domain taking part in the OK Dinghy National Championship at Drummoyne Sailing Club this week.

Originally from Victoria, Williams is the eldest child and only daughter of eminent Victorian yachtsman, John Williams, of Bacardi, Georgia and Calm fame.

"I have three younger brothers - Bruce, Michael and Peter. Dad would go off big boat racing and we four would go to Black Rock Yacht Club and sail our Sabots."

All four are still sailing. Williams graduated from the Sabot to a 420, to Sharpies, Europes then returned to Sharpies. And she sailed big boats with her dad on occasions. "I loved the Sharpies," she says.

"I sailed on a couple of TP52s, mostly on Calm (co-owned by her father). It was fun roaring around in a bit of carbon. I also sailed a little bit on Georgia," a Farr 53 owned by her father (a 26 Sydney Hobart veteran) in partnership with another Victorian stalwart, Graeme Ainley.

"I did one Hobart – on Calm, bur my favourite race was the Sydney-Gold Coast. It makes more sense to me to turn left out of Sydney Harbour and head somewhere warm." And during these times, she has sailed with all her brothers, "In Sharpies or on big boats."

And despite her declaration of "I perform better as part of a crew, I love the camaraderie," Williams started sailing OK's "because my husband (Erik Thompson) sailed big boats then sailed racing OKs at Black Rock - and I'm not good at watching - so I got one too."

The two moved to Queensland and sail at Sandgate Sailing Club and Southport Yacht Club (Qld) and both are competing at these Nationals. Williams is currently in 11th overall with four races completed, while Thompson is 35th from 36 competitors.

"We always sail at opposite ends of the fleet. If she's at the front end, I'm at the back and vice versa," Thompson says wryly.

At Southport Yacht Club, Williams has two other women for company in the fleet, but it doesn't matter either way, because the OK guys are a friendly do-the-right-thing bunch, evidenced by lack of protests at regattas. One of the women is a junior – which is great – good to see young people having a go. Dad's secretary, Emma, is the other one."

Williams says that because the rules and technology have evolved, including the use of carbon masts, "and also being able to use smaller sail, keeps the OK sailable for me.

"The thing I love about it is it's such good racing - there are very good sailors in the class. It's lots of fun. We get up to 15 boats at Southport and usually have 10 to 12 sailing each weekend.

"My results are highly associated with wind strengths. The last two days have played into my hands," she says of the light to moderate breezes that have saturated the course on upper Sydney Harbour at the Nationals where she scored a third place in Race 4.

"Mark Skelton (currently second overall) reckons if the race had gone another 100 metres I would have won. I had a bad start, but kept moving forwards through the race to finish third."

"It's a pretty good class. The people make it. Everyone does their penalty turns, you see few protests. There is longevity in the class too – like the Blasse brothers (Andre Blasse is racing here and in third overall)," says Williams who had only sailed an OK twice when she entered her first Nationals, at Hobart in 2011.

"My brother Mike won – and no, I didn't finish last – I was 28th out of 33 in a borrowed boat.

"I've learnt a lot since then. I'm much more confident in heavy weather. Time has enabled to practice in strategy and tactics. I'm happy with my progress. To improve much more, I would need to spend much more time on the water."

Full results of the Henning Harders OK Dinghy Nationals at www.sailingresults.com.au/ScoreItV2/Public/index.php

Follow Elizabeth Williams and the rest of the fleet at www.drummoynesailingclub.com.au

Related Articles

New British OK Dinghy Ranking System
With a view to maximising attendance at key event for the 2025 season With the OK End of Season Championships (kindly sponsored by P&B) coming up, the British Class Association has been putting plans together with a view to maximising attendance at key event for the 2025 season. Posted on 12 Nov
2024 OK Dinghy Europeans at Palma overall
Luke Deegan becomes first non-European OK Dinghy European Champion Luke Deegan, from New Zealand has won the 2024 OK Dinghy European Championship in Palma after a shortened week of challenging conditions with only four races completed. Posted on 4 Nov
Affordable Precision: How Atto Changes the Game
Weighing just 75g and capable of measuring 250 kg working load Digitalisation has changed sailing. Technologies once reserved for Grand-Prix are permeating every level of the sport, giving sailors the ability to adopt elite racing and training practices - elevating the game across the board. Posted on 4 Nov
2024 OK Dinghy Europeans at Palma Day 4
Luke Deegan takes lead after one more race held on Saturday Luke Deegan, from New Zealand has taken the lead at the 2024 OK Dinghy European Championship in Palma after just one more race was sailed on Saturday. Overall, Britain's Charlie Cumbley dropped to second while Sweden's Niklas Edler climbed to third. Posted on 2 Nov
2024 OK Dinghy Europeans at Palma Day 3
With an orange weather alert in place, no racing was possible With an orange weather alert in place, no racing was possible on the third day of the OK Dinghy Europeans in Palma. Posted on 2 Nov
Single Handed Regatta at Big River Sailing Club
The regatta at Clarence River at Harwood attracted 62 entrants Tucked away in the cane fields on the northern bank of the Clarence River at Harwood, Northern NSW, lies the beautifully groomed parkland and grounds of the Big River Sailing Club. Posted on 1 Nov
2024 OK Dinghy Europeans at Palma Day 2
Three races, three winners Charlie Cumbley, from Britain, leads the OK Dinghy European Championship in Palma after the first three races were sailed on Thursday in Palma Bay. Luke Deegan, from New Zealand, is second, on equal points with Britain's Matt Howard. Posted on 1 Nov
2024 OK Dinghy Europeans at Palma Day 1
Get set, ready... wait Despite a forecast for good wind, the first day of the OK Dinghy European Championship in Palma was abandoned late afternoon with not enough wind to run racing. Posted on 31 Oct
2024 OK Dinghy Europeans at Palma opened
82 sailors from 14 nations complete registration for the event The OK Dinghy European Championship was opened in Palma Tuesday evening with 82 sailors from 14 nations completing registration. Hosted by the Real Club Nàutico de Palma, it will be the first ever international OK Dinghy championship to be held in Spain. Posted on 29 Oct
2024 OK Dinghy Europeans at Palma preview
The event will mark the first ever international OK Dinghy championship to be held in Spain The OK Dinghy European Championship is being held this coming week at the Real Club Nàutico de Palma. Nearly 80 sailors from 14 countries are expected to arrive in Palma in the coming days. Posted on 28 Oct
Lloyd Stevenson - AC INEOS 1456x180px BOTTOMPredictWind - Wave Routing 728x90 BOTTOMU-DECK 2023 - No.4 728x90 BOTTOM