Teams prepare to race for the 2025 International Six Metre World Championships from 22 to 26 September
Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club welcome the competitors in style with a spectacular sunset Opening Ceremony
His Majesty King Juan Carlos of Spain gifts a brand-new perpetual trophy to be presented to the winner of the Classic Six Metre Worlds, the Copa Rey Juan Carlos
20 September 2025 – Oyster Bay, NY, USA – The Opening Ceremony for the 2025 International Six Metre Open and Classic World Championships saw the 29 participating teams from nine nations gather on the waterside lawn of the Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club (SCYC) for a delightful evening of camaraderie, generous hospitality and a very special presentation by the reigning Six Metre Classic World Champion, His Majesty King Juan Carlos of Spain.
Proceedings got underway with welcomes from SCYC Regatta Chair Hugh Jones and SCYC Commodore Robert W. Fagiola, who paid tribute to the historic connections between the club and the Six Metres, which go right back to the 1920s. He also thanked the competitors for travelling to Oyster Bay for this first SCYC based championship since 1987 and wished everyone great sailing and great fun.
International Six Metre Association (ISMA) President Louis Heckly responded, thanking the SCYC for their warm welcome and all their hard work in making the event possible, and he echoed Robert’s thanks to the sailors for being here. He then asked His Majesty King Juan Carlos to join him on the stage.
Three-time Classic Six Metre World Champion and reigning Classic World and European Champion, His Majesty’s commitment to the class is exceptional and has seen him play a key role in revitalising the Six Metre fleet in Spain. His surprise announcement to the gathered fleet was the presentation of a spectacular new perpetual trophy, the Copa Rey Juan Carlos, which will be presented to the winner of the Classic Six Metre World Championship, alongside the historic Djinn Trophy.
The stunning new trophy, a large, embellished silver cup, was personally commissioned by His Majesty, who was also directly involved in the preparation of its Deed of Gift. In accepting the new trophy on behalf of ISMA, Louis Heckly not only thanked His Majesty for his most generous gift, but also took a moment to share a joke with him. The two men have been vying for the Classic Six Metre World title for several years now, with his Majesty currently having won it three times and Louis once. Louis jokingly laid down a challenge that the very first name engraved on the King’s new trophy will be that of his own FRA11 Fun – a challenge the King naturally accepted!
For the sailors the evening was a chance to catch up with old friends and make new ones, as they enjoyed the hospitality for which SCYC is world renowned. The Opening Ceremony was followed by an informal club buffet supper and as the sky put on a spectacular sunset display the teams looked forward to an exciting competition ahead.
Twenty-nine boats from seven nations will challenge for the championships, with 17 racing for the Open Championship’s Six Metre World Cup Trophy, and 12 for the new Copa Rey Juan Carlos. The newest boats racing have both been launched just in time for this event – Rainer Müller’s new Ian Howlett designed SUI144 Eau Vive, which is being raced this week by defending Open World Champion Jamie Hilton of the New York YC, and 2022 World Champion Dieter Schoen’s Judel/Vrolijk designed IBV145 Momo II, sailing for the Royal BVI Yacht Club, both of which are fresh out of the box. Whilst the oldest boats racing, both over 100 years old, will be USA14 SYCE, which was built in 1922 to a John G Alden design and is raced by Robert and Farley Towse of the New York Yacht Club, and SCYC Regatta Chairman’s Hugh Jones and Russell Byers’ USA21 Madcap, a 1924 Fredrick M Hoyt design.
Racing for the championships will get underway on Monday 22 September and continue until Friday 26, with up to eight races scheduled. You will find a full entry list here, and can follow updates via the ISMA Facebook and Instagram pages and at 6metre.com.
Members of the press wishing to attend the event or requiring additional information or images should contact ISMA Press Officer Fiona Brown on email fiona.brown@fionabrown.com or Tel/WhatsApp +44 7711 718470.
Oyster Bay, USA – 21 August 2025 – With just a month to go until the start of the 2025 International Six Metre World Championships at Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club (SCYC), boats are starting to converge on Long Island Sound, NY in preparation. The Open and Classic Six Metre World Championships will run concurrently from 22 to 26 September with at least 30 teams travelling from across North America and Europe to participate.
The crews from Greece, Canada, Germany, Sardinia, Spain, Switzerland, France, The British Virgin Islands, California, the Pacific Northwest and along the US Eastern Seaboard will compete for seventeen historic and prestigious trophies, including the stunning Six Metre World Cup Trophy, which was presented to the class in 1973 by the Puget Sound Six Metre Association and the Port of Seattle.
SCYC’s links to the Six Metre Class go back over a century and the class is delighted to be returning once again to this historically important venue, as International Six Metre Association President Louis Heckly explains:
“Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club has a long and illustrious association with the Six Metre Class and so we are delighted to see our beloved yachts returning to Oyster Bay and Long Island Sound for this year’s Worlds. With its beautiful waterside clubhouse, well-deserved reputation for excellent race management and superb hospitality, we know we are in good hands at SCYC and look forward to a fantastic week both afloat and ashore. I am also delighted to note that thirty teams have already registered with a month to go, and that the fleet is split very evenly between the Open and Classic divisions. With the arrival of many newcomers in the Class, including three brand new boats, I look forward to some great competition and plenty of fun!”
Registration and measurement checks for the regatta will open on Wednesday 17 September and continue until Friday 19 September. Practice racing is scheduled for Saturday September 20, and Championship racing will take place from Sunday 22 to Friday 26 September, with up to 8 races scheduled. The extensive social programme will commence with an Opening Reception and Competitor Briefing on Saturday 20 September and will conclude with the Championship Prize Giving on Friday 26 September. Further information can be found at 2025.6metreworlds.com.
Open Championship Contenders
At any Six Metre Championship we can expect competition to be fierce and this year we have three brand new boats racing in their very first championship, making it even harder to predict who might claim the Open Championship victor’s laurels.
Reigning Open World Champion Jamie Hilton, who claimed the title off Cowes in 2023 aboard USA126 Scoundrel, will be racing Rainer Müller’s brand-new Ian Howlett designed SUI144 Eau Vive, and tells us how he comes to be sailing this new boat:
“The Scoundrel team was looking for a Six Metre to charter or borrow for the 2025 Worlds. I had chartered Scoundrel in 2022 and 2023, and the charter had run its course. The team had grown enamoured with the Six Metre Class and the people who sail them.
“Last winter good fortune connected me with Rainer Müller. After several conversations Rainer and I decided to combine the new boat project he’d started with Ian Howlett and boat builder Matt Lingley of Demon Yachts with the Scoundrel crew and me.
“Suffice to say, we are all very excited to have the honour of sailing Ian’s latest creation. Eau Vive is as gorgeous as all of Ian’s boats. Matt built a boat that is absolutely first rate in every detail. Rainer over saw the whole project with an experienced and watchful eye. Now it’s up to the crew of Eau Vive – Addison Caproni, Dave Hughes, Mike Marshall and me – to get all we can out of her at Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club in the 2025 World Championship.
“Speaking for the former Scoundrel now Eau Vive crew, we are honoured to be part of this project. We understand the long history of Six Metre sailing at SCYC, and the many legendary names who have sailed Sixes there over the years. We hope we can get all of Eau Vive’s enormous potential out her as the field of competition will be fierce this September!”
The second new boat will be Dennis Conner’s latest Javi Cela design, which is a development of his very successful Ginkgo Too. Dennis last sailed in a Six Metre Worlds in 2017 in Vancouver, where he raced USA87 May Be VII to fourteenth place. He has been racing the boat out of San Diego for the past couple of months and the international fleet is eagerly anticipating the chance to line up against Dennis and his crew in this new boat.
The third brand new boat will be Dieter Schoen’s IVB145 Momo II, a Judel/Vrolijk design only being launched just in time for this regatta. Typically, one would say it takes a couple of seasons to get a Six Metre fully up to speed, but in their original Momo, also a Judel/Vrolijk design, this team won the 2022 World Champion fresh out of the box in Sanxenxo, so one would be a fool to underestimate them.
Travelling from Finland comes the reigning European Open Six Metre Champion, Henrik Andersin’s Allan Savolainen designed FIN81 Oiva, which was built by Red Sky Yachts. Launched just in time for the last World Championship in Cowes, she finished that regatta in 13th place, but this super strong team brought the boat on in leaps and bounds, and in 2024 they won the European Championship in Sanxenxo, making them another strong contender for this year’s World title.
Whilst the arrival of new boats is always exciting, one of the great strengths of the Six Metre Class is the longevity of the boats. One boat to always look out for in the Open Division is the legendary SUI77 Junior, also owned by Rainer Müller, which was designed by Pelle Petterson and built by Båtbyggarna Ab in 1981 for Baron Edmond de Rothschild, which is widely regarded as one of the most successful Sixes of all time with five World Championship wins to her name. She also enters the regatta as the defending Corinthian Open World Champion, so is definitely one to watch.
A strong contingent of some eleven boats will be travelling across North America from the Pacific Northwest, including five boats from Canada. In the Open Class, Erin Parker’s USA125 Tempest, designed by Sparkman & Stephens, built by Eric Goetz Custom and launched in 1986, is a mainstay of the Pacific Northwest Fleet and we can expect a strong showing from this hugely committed team.
Classic Championship Contenders
Challenging for the Classic Six Metre World Championship will be some of the most beautiful and elegant race boats in the world. But don’t be fooled by all that gleaming varnish and polished brass, the Classics are raced every bit as hard as their Open counterparts and no quarter will be given in what promises to be a fierce competition.
The hot favourite for the Classic title has to be the reigning Six Metre Classic World Champion His Majesty King Juan Carlos of Spain, who will defend his title aboard the Arvid Laurin designed ESP16 Bribon, which was built by Plym in Neglinge, Sweden for Harry Nystrom in 1947. She underwent a significant rebuilt at Eric Jespersen Boatbuilders in the mid 2000s, and in 2009 she won her first Classic World Championship, skippered by Eric Jespersen, who was crewed by both his father and his son. His Majesty took over the boat in 2017, winning his first Worlds in her in Vancouver that year, his second in Hanko in 2019 and his third in Cowes in 2023. Bribon is also the reigning Classic European Champion, so this is definitely the boat to beat.
The oldest boat competing and one of the very latest to enter, is Robert & Farley Towse’s USA14 SYCE. Designed by John G Alden, built by G Lawley & Son of Massachusetts and launched in 1922, SYCE’s last World Championship outing was in 2009 at Newport, RI. At 103 years old Syce may be the grand dame of the regatta, but she can still put in a great performance on the day.
The second oldest boat will be USA21 Madcap, which was designed by Frederick M Hoyt, the renowned America’s Cup helm, yacht designer and sailing broadcaster, and built by the Henry B Nevins of City Island, New York. Launched in 1924 she has been beautifully restored and maintained and still puts in a racing performance that belies her 101 years under the leadership of local Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club members Hugh Jones and Russell Byers.
Also fast approaching her centenary is Willets Meyer and William Mooney’s USA40 Saleema, which was launched in 1928 and is another Nevins boat, this time designed by the unrelated Frederick M Hoyt. Saleema narrowly lost the 1928 Seawanahaka International Challenge Cup to Figaro V when Hoyt took the boat to Sweden. When she returned to the USA after may races throughout the Nordics, the boat went to California at the end of the 1928 season and has not been back to Seawanahaka in 97 years, so it is exciting that she will once again race for Seawanhaka CYC.
From Spain comes Mauricio Sanchez-Bella’s stunning ESP72 Titia, which was designed by David Boyd and built in 1952 by Woodnuts in Bembridge, Isle of Wight, UK, for Sir Kenneth Preston and Robert Steele, to represent Great Britain at the 1952 Olympics. In the 1960s she came under Canadian ownership with Fred Brock, and she raced from the Rothsay Yacht Club for many years, before being sold to Nantucket in the early ‘70s. She was discovered by Matt Cockburn and brought to Cornwall in the UK, where she was beautifully restored by Brian Pope and Andy Postle. At her first post restoration outing in 2006 she won the French Classic Championships, winning six of the nine races. A regular podium finisher at major championships Mauricio will be hoping that this is finally the year he can engrave his name on the Classic Worlds trophy.
Matt Brooks will be racing the stunningly restored USA55 Lucie. Launched in 1931 by Nevins to Clinton H Crane’s final and arguably best Six Metre design for legendary America’s Cup Skipper Briggs Cunningham, Lucie was part of victorious US Teams in the 1932, 1934 and 1936 British American Cups. After a successful 75-year racing career she was rebuilt to match her original construction, which included shellac between her double planked hull, by Brion Rieff’s boatyard in Maine. Matt Brooks purchased Lucie in 2011 and oversaw the completion of her restoration in time to ship her to Helsinki for the 2011 World Championship, where she finished in sixth place and won the Baum + Koenig Trophy for the highest placing boat with a wood mast and Dacron sails.
International Six Metre Association President Louis Heckly will be racing his Olin Stephens designed FRA11 Fun, which was built by Nevins in 1937 and was also part of the 1938 winning USA Team in the 1938 British American Cup. Louis won the 2022 Classic World Championship in Sanxenxo aboard his previous Six, Dix Aout, and finished fifth sailing Fun at last year’s Classic European Championship, so will definitely have his eyes set on a podium finish this time around.
Further information about the International Six Metre Class can be found at www.6metre.com
Members of the press wishing to attend the event or requiring additional information or images should contact ISMA Press Officer Fiona Brown on email fiona.brown@fionabrown.com or Tel/WhatsApp +44 7711 718470
Designed by Starling Burgess to the Six Metre rule and built by the Herreshoff Manufacturing Company in 1921. She was part of the first ever team of American 6m yachts to be campaigned in England and she carried sail number US4.
After the racing she remained in the UK and her well documented history took her cruising around Scotland, Ireland and over to Norway with various owners who have written books and memoirs about their time with the boat.
A major 2015 refit included refastening of the hull and plenty of structural repairs, but also gave her a new gaff sloop rig to replace her original Bermudan rig design. Although her original rig and spars are with the boat still, she has been raced very successfully in recent years as a gaffer and won a lot of silverware.
When purchased by the current owner in 2020 a lot of time and money was put into the boat to optimise her for racing. The hull was strengthened and the rig design looked at carefully, replacing all hardware with modern equipment such as Harken CarboAirs and Black Magic Airs blocks. She has a complete integrated B&G system with 4 x H5000 displays.
The boat is engineless as she was originally and the interior has been stripped out for racing.
She has proved to be a very competitive boat, winning Suffolk Yacht Harbour Classic regatta and has consistently been at the head of the fleet in other regattas and local races. In recent years she has won at Fowey Classics, Dartmouth Classics, Cowes Classic Week and Hamble Classics twice. She was overall winner of the West Country Classics series. She has the potential to do extremely well in classic events both here and in the Mediterranean and could be a cost effective yacht in which to enjoy these regattas with a good chance of winning some silverware.
Carvel planked in 3/4″ Honduras mahogany all bronze screw fastened to steam bent oak timbers at 6″ centres. 90% of the hull was re-fastened in 2015.
Hull is splined throughout, these splines were all renewed in 2015.
Wooden structural floors across the centreline. All centreline bolts from stem to stern replaced in phosphor bronze in 2015.
External lead ballast keel of 2.5 tons fastened with bronze keel bolts. Half the bolts replaced in phosphor bronze in 2015. 4 new bolts fitted 2024.
New hanging knees in way of the mast form an effective ring frame the strengthen the hull.
Deck laid in T&G yellow pine, overlaid with 1/4″ Robins marine plywood and sheathed externally with epoxy glass cloth. Deck re-painted in 2024. Varnished Honduras mahogany toe rails and rubbing strakes.
Pair of circular cockpits, one for the helm and one for the crew, both with varnished teak coamings.
Tiller steering with a new rudder from 2015. All new hangings and rudder stock.
Rig
Gaff sloop rig.
Keel stepped varnished spruce hollow mast with an internal plywood structural web, new in 2016. The bare mast only weighs 40kg.
Varnished hollow spruce boom and gaff. Hollow spruce spinnaker pole plus a carbon fibre pole.
Stainless steel standing rigging to internal bronze chain plates. New bronze chain plate bolts in 2015. Rigging and rigging screws new in 2024.
Running back stays run below decks and tensioned on the winches.
3 x self tailing Harken winches mounted on the deck and 3 x self tailing Harken winches below decks.
Mainsail 2016, topsail, 3 x Jibs from One Sails (2022 & 2023). Jackyard topsail re-cut 2023. Asymmetric by One Sails 2024.
All modern Harken blocks. Carbo Airs and Black Magic Airs.
Running rigging all new with Southern Ropes Beige SuperT braid on braid (dyneema equivalent core)
Halyards all controlled below deck with Lewmar clutches.
Original bermudan rig complete with rigging and sails still with the boat and able to be fitted directly back in if required, uses same chain plates and mast step .
Electrical Systems
12 volt battery with a Solar Panel from Hartnell Marine. Powers bilge pump and instruments.
Equipment
Integrated B&G system 4 x H5000 displays – compass, traducer, wind sensor and receiver B&G GPS screen Harken rig hardware Mainsail – 2016 Jib – One Sails 2023 Jackyard topsail – re-cut by One Sails 2023 Asymmetric spinnaker – One Sails 2024 3 x Harken self tailing winches Electric auto bilge pump Manual bilge pump Custom designed all over coverMainsail cover
The 2026 International Six Metre European Championships will be hosted by the Society Nautique de Geneve on beautiful Lake Geneva, Switzerland. The event website is now live and the Notice of Race is available to download.
The Championships will take place from 19 to 24 July and will be preceded by the Swiss Championship on 15 to 17 July, which will act as a warm up regatta for the Europeans.
Further information about these events will follow in due course.