2025 Garmin ORC World Championship poised to start in Tallinn

August 9, 2025 - Tallinn, Estonia - Over the last few days teams and their boats entered in the 2025 Garmin ORC World Championship have been arriving at the new marina facilities at Kalev Yacht Club and the Tallinn Olympic Yachting Centre for their registration and inspection formalities to prepare for six action-packed days of inshore and offshore racing starting on Monday August 11th and concluding on Saturday August 16th.

In all there will be 548 sailors racing 65 yachts that range in length from 28 to 47 feet and represent 9 nations from throughout Europe. Nine teams will race in Class A, 22 yachts in Class B and 34 yachts in Class C. These teams will be competing within each of their respective classes with a racing program of two offshore races and up to six inshore windward/leeward races. Winners will be awarded the title 2025 ORC World Champion in each class, and all-amateur teams will be recognized with Corinthian division awards.
The competition in each class promises to be tough, but there are some favorites to watch for in each class.
In Class A there is a team to watch that is actually new to ORC competition but has a proven track record at numerous Grand Prix-level racing events. Niklas Zennstrom’s Carkeek Fast 40+ RAN is very much an international team: Zennstrom and his boat are flagged from Sweden, but the boat was built in the UK where it has spent much of its competitive life in the Fast 40 class since being launched in 2018, and the team is an assembly of some of the sport’s top talent from the US, UK and New Zealand.
This team is well-tuned: besides racing this RAN in Spain and France earlier this season, they are also coming off competing at the Admiral’s Cup in Cowes where some raced on Zennstrom’s TP 52 of the same name while others competing on other teams.
“We’re excited to be here,” said tactician Adrian Stead, whose last ORC Worlds was in 2018 in The Hague racing with Tillmar Hansen on his TP 52 OUTSIDER. “The venue and organization is impressive, and the turnout of entries is impressive, there is a great energy here. The boat is really fantastic to sail, especially when the wind is over 8 knots or so, and we’re looking forward to the mixed format of offshore and course racing. We’re pretty new to ORC racing and still learning, but expect this to be competitive and fun.”

Other contenders include Jani Lehti’s GP 42 MERCEDES BENZ (FIN), Bronze medallist in Class A at the 2021 ORC Worlds here at the same venue, and Mati Sepp’s innovative Matteo Polli-designed ECO 44 CLEAN ENERGY (EST), built locally with only sustainable materials used in its construction. Sepp is coming off a Gold medal-winning performance in Ubico Class B last week in his modified X-41 TECHNONICOL (EST) at the ORC European Championship held at the Copa del Rey MAPFRE in Palma.
Class B in Tallinn may likely be a tough fight between several veteran teams with proven track records up against some promising talent that is racing an exciting new design making its ORC Worlds debut at this event.

Marcin Sutkowski’s Grand Soleil 44P WINDWHISPER (POL) has an impressive record in this class: 4 consecutive World titles, including last year’s earned in Newport USA. His team is back now in Tallinn where they won their first Class B title in 2021, and it would be safe to say they are the team to beat here this year.
Yet this will not be easy: there is an exciting new design from X-Yachts that has made an impressive debut this year in ORC racing throughout the Baltic region and which will be in the hands of four quite capable teams from Germany and Denmark this coming week in Tallinn.

The new XR41 is the product of extensive research and development for optimal ORC-rated performance and has a different design philosophy to the Grand Soleil 44 benchmark design in this class. Rather than being large and heavy at over 9 tons, the XR 41 is slightly smaller but over 2 tons lighter and thus more nimble and versatile in a class that will have 22 boats on both the start line and throughout the Class B race course.
Jesper Radich is one in a long line of talented Danish sailors, and throughout this season, he has been intimately involved with the development of the XR 41 program. For this event, he is the skipper and tactician of FORMULA X (DEN), leading an all-Danish team that includes a rising new talent at the helm, Jeppe Borch, who last month won the latest World Match Racing Tour event at GKSS Match Cup Sweden.
“This XR41 project has been exciting, the best high-level program in Danish sailing in years,” said Radich. “Besides winning five of our five regattas we raced this year, we have been able to put in 15 days of on-the-water time in preparation for this event. We feel this design is very versatile and not pushed hard into any one direction, and so we feel confident in the conditions we expect to have here in the coming week.”
Yet Radich acknowledges the competition will be tough. “We will not feel safe in this group, we will have to push hard in every race because there are some tough teams and many past champions in our class.”

Another XR41 contender is Jens Kuphal with his eXciteR (GER). Kuphal is a veteran to numerous ORC championship events, winning the Europeans in Class B in 2022 racing his Landmark 43 INTERMEZZO (GER). He is upbeat about this new design, which in a sense represents a generational challenge because of the dominance of X-41’s in previous ORC championships and their continued relevance as a competitive threat. Besides TECHNONICOL winning last week in Palma, the 2024 ORC European Championship in Åland was won by another Estonian team, Tiit Vihul’s OLYMPIC, and the first-ever Estonian ORC World Champion team - Jaak Jõgi’s FORTE - were also sailing their X-41 in Kiel in 2014.
“X-Yachts deserves recognition for this new design they’ve created,” Kuphal said at the boat’s racing debut at the MaiOR regatta in Kiel. “From a sporting perspective, X-Yachts was the biggest winner of this regatta. To sit down today, spare no expense or time, and release such a new level of quality—it’s truly impressive. We are expecting a very tough competition because there will be four XR’s on the line and we've raced against each other before. And what's really special for us is that our technician, Max Gurgel, is a big part of the design team of the XR, so for him, it's even more special than for us to race on that boat during this championship.”

While there are not any new designs that have come to Tallinn to conquer Class C, this is the largest class at event with 34 entries, many of whom are past champions and highly-experienced in competing in big crowded fleets like this.
Just as WINDWHISPER has established a heritage of dominance in Class B, there are three teams that have done the same in Class C.

The first has to be the mixed Estonian and Italian team on Ott Kikkas’s Italia 9.98 SUGAR (EST), who on their slightly larger Italia 11.98 of the same name have 3 World and 2 European titles in the past 6 years. Another mixed nationality team of Estonians and Italians are racing on Aivar Tuulberg’s Arcona 340 KATARIINA II (EST) who have also been successful in this class, winning the ORC Class C European Championship three times and been on the Worlds podium twice in Class B racing on Tuulberg’s Swan 42 in the Mediterranean.
Another strong contender in this class has been relying on only all-amateur talent, routinely winning the Corinthian division along with several podium performances in overall scoring at several Worlds and European Championship events in the last 11 years.

Yet Patrik Forsgren, this year, has a new squad on his modified First 36.7 GARMIN TEAM PRO4U (SWE), composed of a gender-balanced mix of 20-30-year old amateur sailors who have been training and sailing a lot in the run-up to Tallinn. The bow-pit team of Emil Forsgren and Noa Bergstrand explained.
“We have done a lot go regattas this season and arrived here early to train and observe the conditions in the local waters - this is my first time in Tallinn,” said Bergstrand. Having been to the Worlds before, Forsgren said, “There are a lot of really good teams here, so I think since we know how to sail the boat, the most important thing will be for us to remain focused and sail our best.”

Except during the 2020 pandemic pause, the ORC World Championship is an annual event held at various locations in Europe and in the USA. It attracts local and international professional and amateur teams to compete for a week of mixed inshore and offshore racing among offshore-capable yachts. Because the entries are of various boat sizes and types, the ORC’s measurement-based system is used to equalize the competition while racing under handicap.
This system is popular and in use around the world, with over 14,000 certificates issued in 40 countries, the largest international rating rule system recognized by World Sailing.
“This is our system’s 25th annual World Championship,” said ORC Chairman Bruno Finzi. “It continues what is now a long tradition of offering the offshore racing community this unique and popular opportunity to compete at a high level using the fairest possible system of handicap racing.”
Follow the 2025 ORC World Championship in Tallinn, Estonia:
Official Website: www.orcworlds2025.com
ORC Website: orc.org/worlds2025
Notice Board: manage2sail.com
Entry Lists, Scratch Sheets & Results: https://data.orc.org/public/WEV.dll?action=index&eventid=uxauu
Facebook: facebook.com/orcestonia
Instagram: instagram.com/orcworlds2025tallinn
YouTube: youtube.com/@KalevJahtklubi
Photo galleries: ORC Flickr albums & Kalev Yacht Club Flickr albums
Follow the fleet in real time via TracTrac - powered by SEB
#ORCsailing #Garmin #orcworlds2025tallinn #poweredbygarmin #roadtotallinn2025
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