After challenging race disruptions over the four-day event, caused by the current weather system sitting over Australia's east coast, it was a welcome finish for the close to 400 competitors from all across Australia and from 18 countries.
One and half years out from the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Australian Sailing Team sailors presented themselves in strong form on home waters and took home the wins across most of the Olympic classes.
Australian Sailing Team's Rio 2016 Olympic silver medallists Mat Belcher (QLD) and Will Ryan (NSW) continued their winning series on home waters and took home the win in the 470 class at Sail Melbourne. The pair won all but one race of the seven race series ahead of the two boats from Japan with Daichi Takayama and Kimihiko Imamura in second and Kazuto Doi and Naoya Kimura in third.
"The racing was pretty close and pretty tricky out there with some really big shifts and challenges for the race committee, but we had two first and one third and it's been a great competition all week," Belcher said.
And looking ahead he added, "It's definitely getting closer to the games and the pressure starts to come in a bit more, the training increases and we are getting excited and are all looking towards Tokyo, but at the moment I'm just looking forward to spending a little of time with the family and having a nice Christmas."
The 470 fleet was one of the most competitive fleets including sailors from seven countries and featuring Spanish 2018 World Championships bronze medallists Jordi Xammar Hernandez and Nicolás Rodrigues Garcí-Paz, who finished fifth, behind Germans Simon Diesch and Phillip Autenrieth in fourth.
2018 Laser World Championships silver medallist Matt Wearn (WA) won the last race of the day in a world-class laser fleet to take home the overall win ahead of New Zealanders Thomas Saunders and Sam Meech.
"We did enough to win. I didn't have the best day, but luckily, I had a bit of a margin. This week has been a bit crazy weatherwise, but I have been here before and in general there are great waves, good sailing and I'm looking forward to next year's Gold Cup," Heiner said.
New Zealand's Andy Maloney moved up into third after winning the second race of the day, while Olympic gold medallist Giles Scott (GBR) won the last race of the day. But a UFD in the second race saw Scott drop out of the medal ranks into fourth.
In other Olympic class results, Australian Sailing Teams David Gilmour (WA) won the 49er together with his brother and Australian Sailing Squad sailor Lachlan Gilmour. The pair had a strong race series with three wins, two second and two third places over the two days of racing for the 49er fleet. Jim Colley (NSW) and Shaun Connor (NSW) finished second.
The 49erFX was won by Australian Sailing squad's Tess Lloyd (VIC) and Jaime Ryan (QLD) who won two out of the four races on the final day. They won both the women's as well as open fleet with John Cooley (NSW) and Simon Murnaghan (NSW) finishing second and Australian Sailing Squad's Natasha Bryant(NSW) and Annie Wilmot (NSW) finishing third.
"I think Melbourne has really outdone itself this week, but today the wind came in. We're really happy about how we went and we are hoping we will be able to step it up again. We've been training and working hard and hopefully will see some improvements from that when we head overseas next year," Jaime Ryan said.
Port Phillip will be hosting the 49er/FX/Nacra17 World Championships out of Geelong Royal Yacht Club in February 2020 and local Victorian Tess Lloyd is already looking forward to more international events on her home turf.
"It's been really exciting with all of the people from overseas here and I'm looking forward to our worlds. They are a long way away and we have a lot of work to do in-between now and then, but I think we are just taking the right steps at the moment and we are definitely improving together as a team," Lloyd said.
In the women's 470 Australian Sailing Squad's Nia Jerwood (WA) and Monique Devries finished second behind German 470 sailors Frederike Loewe and Anna Markfort, who won six out of seven races.
The Laser radial was won by Swiss top laser radial sailor Maud Ayet, closely followed by Australian Sailing Squad's Mara Stransky (QLD), who was the second ranked female and fifth overall.
The Nacra17 was one of the few fleets that got ten races in and Victorians Tayla Rietman and Lachlan White made the most of it with five race wins and winning the class ahead of Jake Liddell (NSW) and Emma Jones (NSW) in second and Queenslanders James Fraser and Olivia Jozefowski in third. These three boats also took out the podium in the Australian Nacra Championships with Sail Sydney and Sail Melbourne results counting towards the nationals' win.
Sail Melbourne International also featured the inaugural Australian Para-sailing Championships with 2018 World Para-sailing champion Chris Symonds(TAS) taking out the win in the Hansa 303 one-person event. Father and son Colin and Bradley Alderton (NSW) won the Hansa 303 Double, while Queenslanders Ross Manning and Maximillion Quan won the SKUD. The 2.4mR was won by Michael Leydon (ACT) with Victorian Neil Patterson the top para-classified sailor and overall.