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HomeSailingElliott 5.9Six winners, one champion: Revelry takes Rotoiti in a battle for the ages

Six winners, one champion: Revelry takes Rotoiti in a battle for the ages

The Burnsco Elliott 5.9 Traveller Series #1 at Lake Rotoiti turned on a tactical showcase over the weekend of May 2-3, providing an intense freshwater battle for the opening round of the series. Despite initial forecasts of light conditions and concerns over how much racing would be possible, the lake delivered. While the breeze shut down during Race 2 on Saturday, it returned enough to complete five races on day one. Sunday offered slightly more pressure before fading in the early afternoon, allowing Adrian and his race team to successfully get all 10 races away—a fantastic effort from the BOPTYS officials.

Words by Gareth Howard. 

The regatta was defined by its incredible depth, with six different winners across the 10-race series. Dirty Circus emerged as the early pace-setters, showing great form to hold the lead at the end of day one. When they came out and won the first race of day two, they looked poised to take a stranglehold on the contest. However, the technical nature of lake racing eventually took its toll, and they were unable to secure the results needed in the final races to hold off the charging pack, ultimately finishing fourth overall. Nevertheless, they will be pleased with their performance in these testing conditions and have high hopes for success in the upcoming regattas.

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Revelry was always in the hunt, lurking just behind the leaders on day one. They found another gear on Sunday, putting together a strong final day to wrestle the title away from Dirty Circus. Led by the experienced trio of Becs Costello, her husband Ben Costello, and Richard (Bicky) Bicknell, Revelry showed that clinical consistency is the key to winning on the lake. This was another impressive performance following their second-place finish at the highly competitive Nationals. This time, the win was achieved with a slightly different crew configuration with Zib Campbell sitting out this regatta and assisting on one of the support craft, allowing Becs to enjoy success in her maiden Elliott 5.9 event.

Bloodline secured second place overall, though it was a rollercoaster weekend for them. After carrying some high scores, they balanced the scales with two race wins on day one and three solid podium finishes on day two. This was just enough to hold off a fast-finishing Reggae Shark. Skippered by Michelle Bain in a highly anticipated comeback regatta, Reggae Shark proved they haven’t lost a step. Their third-place finish was well-deserved and signals that they will be a major force throughout the rest of the series.

While they didn’t quite reach the podium, the youth boat NYX, led by Ollie Davidson, sent a clear message to the fleet. With a race win, a second, and five fourth-place finishes, they proved they are a legitimate threat for the future. Zoot Allures rounded out the top five, once again proving their expertise in lake conditions, while Slam Dunk, Class Act, and Razorback all had moments of brilliance in what was one of the most competitive mid-fleet battles in recent memory.

Boating New Zealand Insert

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Revelry takes Rotoiti in a battle for the ages

BURNSCO ELLIOTT 5.9 TRAVELLER SERIES  • ELLIOTT 5.9 CLASS ASSOCIATION

Pauline Courtois completed Round Robin 1 at the KDY Women’s Match Race without dropping a match, sweeping all seven races to lead the first stage of the 2026 Women’s World Match Racing Tour. The French skipper, a five-time consecutive world champion, beat every sailor in the field to finish the opening round undefeated — a result entirely consistent with her recent form but no less commanding for it.

The more intriguing story of the day came from Kristine Mauritzen. Racing on familiar Copenhagen water — the Royal Danish Yacht Club is her home club — Mauritzen posted a 5–2 record to sit second overall at 71%, outperforming both Anna Östling and Lea Vogelius, who finished tied on four wins apiece. Mauritzen’s only losses came against Courtois and Vogelius, but she recovered sharply to beat Östling, Aartsen, Carlsson, D’Amodio and Olesen. For a sailor who was eliminated in the qualifying round at the 2025 Worlds, this is a notably stronger showing.

Östling and Vogelius share third place on 57% with identical 4–3 records, though they split their head-to-head — Östling taking that match. Denmark has three sailors in the eight-boat field (Mauritzen, Vogelius and Louise K Olesen), and all three are in the top five after day one, suggesting home conditions on the Øresund are playing a role. Olesen sits fifth at 43%, having beaten Vogelius and D’Amodio but losing to the top four.

Julia Aartsen and Martina Carlsson share sixth place at 29%, each with a 2–5 record. Julia D’Amodio sits alone at the foot of the standings with a single win in seven races. Round Robin 2 begins tomorrow with the format unchanged — a full double round robin determines the semi-final qualifiers.

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Race-by-Race

R1 Revelry leads off with a gun. Dirty Circus second, Reggae Shark third. Bloodline score a costly ninth in difficult conditions.
R2 Reggae Shark takes the win ahead of Revelry. The dying breeze bunches much of the fleet, six boats sharing fourth on the results sheet.
R3 Dirty Circus fires their first gun. Zoot Allures second, Bloodline third. Revelry slip to sixth as the lead changes hands.
R4 Bloodline strike for their first win. Slam Dunk second, Dirty Circus third. NYX suffer a ninth to make their early tally costly.
R5 Bloodline back-to-back. Dirty Circus second. They head into day two on 12 points, six clear of Bloodline in second.
R6 Dirty Circus takes their second gun of the series. Bloodline second, Class Act third. Revelry fourth and still very much in touch.
R7 NYX announce themselves with their first race win. Reggae Shark second. Dirty Circus drops to seventh — the door opens.
R8 Zoot Allures takes their sole win of the series. NYX second. Dirty Circus eighth; their title hopes effectively over.
R9–10 Revelry closes it out with back-to-back wins. Clinical consistency across the series proves the decisive factor. NYX and Zoot Allures finish level on 40 points in an extraordinary mid-fleet tie.

Full Results

9 entries  ·  10 races  ·  1 discard per boat  ·  bold = race win

Pl Boat # R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 R8 R9 R10 Pts Ttl Dsc
1 Revelry 42 1 2 6 6 3.5 4 3 3 1 1 24.5 30.5 6
2 Bloodline 90 9 4 3 1 1 2 8 7 3 2 31 40 9
3 Reggae Shark 48 3 1 5 5 5 5 2 4 5 3 33 38 5
4 Dirty Circus 08 2 4 1 3 2 1 7 8 6 8 34 42 8
5 Zoot Allures 43 7 3 2 4 6 6 9 1 2 10 40 50 10
6 NYX 16 4 4 4 9 9 8 1 2 4 4 40 49 9
7 Slam Dunk 00 6 4 8 2 3.5 7 5 5 7 5 44.5 52.5 8
8 Class Act 56 8 4 7 8 7 3 6 6 10 7 56 66 10
9 Razorback 41 5 4 9 7 8 9 4 9 8 6 60 69 9

The Elliott 5.9 one-design racing continues to produce amazing, top-level sailing. The class continues to attract high-caliber sailors and is particularly pleased to see the strong performance of female skippers and crew, alongside the ongoing progress of the youth teams involved.

The social side of the Elliott 5.9 class remains as strong as ever. The fleet enjoyed a great burgers and beers evening at the Okere Falls Store on Friday night, providing the perfect buildup to the racing. To wrap things up, the Bay of Plenty crew put on a bonus sausage sizzle for the Sunday prizegiving—a great finish to another awesome contest. The fleet now looks forward to the next stop of the Burnsco Traveller Series at Marsden Cove in June. If the parity seen at Rotoiti is any indication, the 2026 title is anyone’s for the taking.

Follow results and pictures online www.facebook.com/elliott5.9 and for more information on the Elliott 5.9 Class Association visit www.e59.org.nz

Previous results can be found here https://elliott59.weebly.com/results.html

About The Elliott 5.9

​​The Elliott 5.9 emerged in the early 1980’s as a high performing trailer yacht and continues to deliver competitive one design racing in a welcoming fleet of world-class sailors and novices alike. The boats started a revolution with their well-balanced and cost effective design, and quickly became the boat of choice for top club training schemes and a breeding ground for NZ’s America’s Cup, Ocean Race and Olympic champions.

Sailed by a crew of three, the Elliott 5.9 remains a low maintenance sailboat with an efficient single spreader fractional rig, a well-balanced sail plan and practical deck layout. Whether sailing among mixed trailer yachts, sport boat fleets or in a one design setting, the 5.9 is celebrated for its responsiveness and outstanding value.

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