The World Championship returned to Cagliari for the first time in over twenty years and delivered absolute bedlam on the water. Five drivers barrel rolled out of Sunday’s race in chaotic conditions, turning the standings upside down and handing the lead to Stefan Arand, F1H2O’s youngest competitor, who kept his head while others lost theirs.

A sharp westerly wind forced race officials to call a rolling start just minutes before the scheduled beginning. That decision proved consequential. Drivers bunched together immediately, nowhere to hide, with Shaun Torrente holding pole position but Rusty Wyatt and Arand snapping at his heels. The pressure told straight away. Torrente took Turn 3 too tightly on lap one, clipped the buoy but stayed upright. Wyatt seized the moment and went through into the lead, only for Sami Selio to fold his boat moments later at the same corner when he misjudged the chop. The Yellow Flag sent everyone back to grid order.

What followed was the race’s darkest moment. Once racing resumed, Wyatt and Torrente went at each other with complete abandon. Wyatt took the lead at Turn 2, Torrente snatched it back at Turn 3, and then both drivers paid the price for their aggression. Wyatt barrel rolled first, then Torrente sent his boat airborne at Turn 5. Both were gone. That left Arand out in front with 30 laps remaining and nobody ahead of him.

The Estonian never looked troubled. He laid down the race’s best lap time of 47.001 seconds on lap 27 and stretched his lead over Peter Morin to more than eight seconds. Behind them, Jonas Andersson had fought his way up from tenth after qualifying poorly, but his charge eventually stalled. Brent Dillard overtook him and then, caught up in his own moment, pushed too hard and rolled out at lap 30. Dillard became the fourth driver to barrel roll.

Arand held firm through the final restarts and crossed the line clear of his rivals. Morin, hunting second place desperately in the closing laps, pushed hard on Turn 4 and became the fifth and final casualty. Grant Trask took second place with Marszalek third, but the day belonged entirely to Arand. His masterclass in reading the conditions, keeping his boat level, and staying patient while faster pilots crashed around him has put him at the top of the championship table with plenty of racing still to come.














