There are four days of racing still to go, with six events still in action at the Paris 2024 Olympics on the Bay of Marseille…
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Preparing USA for the 37th America’s Cup
The New York Yacht Club American Magic team knows all about ‘so-close-yet-so far’ in this game, and they are more than determined to bring the America’s Cup trophy back to the club on West 44th Street that held it continuously for 132-years.
The Americans have hired well and are delivering consistent, high-level, ultra-competitive performances that have made everyone sit up in the Port Vell. From a pure design perspective, they didn’t take the middle path with a low-profile, full-on aero AC75 that is bristling with innovative thinking all over the boat.
Out on the water, day after day, they have been pushing the limits and working hard on the design details, trim perfection, and pure out-and-out racecraft. The results are there for all to see and with Terry Hutchinson, the world class skipper and campaigner guiding the campaign, it has been Tom Burnham who has brought the immensely talented squad up to speed.
Now in his fifth America’s Cup campaign, Burnham graduated from the University of Rhode Island in 1993 and lives in Newport. He previously sailed on Young America in the 2000 America’s Cup, before joining Luna Rossa for their 2003 and 2007 campaigns, and was head coach of the Swedish team, Artemis Racing, in 2017…
Paris 2024 Olympics – Full House for Sailing Day 8 at Marseille
After eight day of Olympic sailing the final two events take to the Bay of Marseille – the Men and Women’s Kite – there first time in the Olympics…
America’s Cup: Final Practice session – Video
Justin Busuttil, a member of the now disbanded AC37 Joint Recon Team has shot some more videos in his “Rooftop Recon” Series. These show all the teams training around some official marks off Barcelona…
Paris 2024 Olympics – Sailing Day 7 – Medal day for Windsurfers as Multihull join racing
The seventh day of Olympic sailing and the mixed multihull Nacra 17 joins the racing…
Paris 2024: USA get Bronze in Men’s Skiff
Marseille, France (August 2, 2024) – The Men’s Skiff is one of 10 Sailing events held at the Paris 2024 Olympics. Using the 49er equipment, 20 teams competed in the 12-race Opening Series on July 28-31, with the top 10 advancing to the single, double-points Medal Race on August 1. When light air prevailed that day, the race was postponed to today to finalize the cumulative scores. Here’s the final report:
For all competition reports, click here.
Event details – Results – Notice Board
Diego Botin and Florian Trittel (ESP) fulfilled a lifelong dream by mastering the Men’s Skiff to become Olympic champions.
The Spanish pair sailed impressively throughout the regatta, finishing top of the Opening Series by a narrow five-point margin. Botin and Trittel had not won an individual race heading into the decisive Medal Race, but they saved their best for last, dominating the fleet in an exceptional show on the water to cross the line first.
New Zealand’s Isaac McHardie and William McKenzie followed in the footsteps of fellow countrymen and Tokyo 49er silver medalists Peter Burling and Blair Tuke, placing second overall. The Kiwis wrapped up the silver medal with an important third placed finish in the Medal Race, which saw them overtake Ireland’s Robert Dickson and Sean Waddilove.
The Irish crew began the day in second, but dropped to fourth overall after an early crossing of the start line meant they had to restart the Medal Race.
USA’s Ian Barrows and Hans Henken, entering today in fourth, benefited from the shift in positions, managing to secure bronze after a brilliant fourth in the final sail.
“It’s a dream come true,” Botin said. “After years of putting the work in with the best team, with our families here, it doesn’t get any better…”
2024 Star Worlds in San Diego welcomes new talent
The Star World Championship returns to San Diego, California, for the first time in over a decade, September 7-13, 2024. San Diego Yacht Club (SDYC) expects upwards of 60 Star boats on the starting line under sunny, SoCal skies…
bombshell!
North Sails (NorthTechnology Group) has been thought to have purchased both Quantum Sails and Doyle Sails, in their entirety.
To say this is potentially earth-shattering is to put it mildly! So far we have heard there are no plans to change any of the organizations day to day business, and for the short term, that is likely true, but we highly doubt that the staus quo will continue in the longer term.
What that will look like remains to be seen is of wild speculation, but we can bet there will a fair bit of dead wood to be tossed. Speaking of that, there are a couple of tossers at an inferior “loft” here in SD who will likely be sent packing! We just received the press release from NTG.
And of course, there a thread here that promises to be rollicking!
America’s Cup: Fickle breeze for Practice Day 2
All teams except for American Magic were on the water off Barcelona for the second day of official Practice. Unfortunately Barcelona copped the same weather pattern that frustrated the Olympic sailors at Marseille…
no baby
It’s getting to be a habit. Yet another major Australian offshore race has ended with a controversial protest involving boats that placed first and second on handicap.
Keen followers of last weekend’s Sydney-Gold Coast race will have noticed the official results showed a tiny asterisk against the name of the winning yacht, Voltstar Yeah Baby (above). The * footnote confirmed that there had been a protest against the Class 40, but that the protest was dismissed.
What happened? As ever, it’s complicated and the facts are in dispute.
Rupert Henry, the owner/skipper of Mistral, the yacht that came second overall, believed that Yeah Baby had set a flying headsail during the race not listed on the boat’s IRC certificate.
Yeah Baby finished at 03:00. Mistral crossed at around 11:00am. Henry then asked the Race Committee to send a measurer to check Yeah Baby’s sail inventory for compliance.
Time now becomes critical.
SA has obtained a copy of the Protest Committee finding. It confirms the measurer didn’t come aboard Yeah Baby until 15:00 – 12 hours after the Class 40 had finished. The protest finding goes on to note that “the boat had been cleaned up, washed down and alterations made to the sail inventory”.
It is the nature of those “alterations” that was the crux of the protest. The measurer identified a Fractional Code 0 on the boat in addition to its declared sails. But the Committee concluded that “no evidence was presented to show that the Fractional Code 0 was on board or used during the race”. Protest dismissed.
It is understood that the owner of Yeah Baby attested that the extra sail had been put aboard after the race for the delivery.
In pursuit of the Holy Grail
by Jim Teeters, Head of the Offshore Ratings Office at US Sailing, and Alan Gilbert, former Chief Engineer, and Executive Vice President at S&S Swan, provide unique insights into yacht design and how rating systems have shaped competitive sailing over the decades:
The history of rating and handicapping sailboats goes back almost 200 years. As soon as two dissimilar boats raced each other, attempts were made to determine which yacht won. The approach used was to measure what was perceived as the critical speed producing characteristics of a yacht and plug these numbers into an algorithm.
That algorithm calculated the inherent speed of each of the two yachts in the form of a rating, typically expressed in units of length such as feet or meters. The rating difference would be converted into a time allowance given to the slower yacht. This time allowance reduced the slower boats elapsed time to what is termed “corrected” time. The boat with the faster (smaller) corrected time would be the winner. – Full report
Paris 2024 Olympics – Sailing Day 5 – Skiff medal racing abandoned, ILCA 6 & 7 first races and IQFOIL medal fleets
Following two attempts the men’s 49er skiff Medal race was abandoned to Friday, along with the women’s FX skiff Medal race…
Ep11: Road to the 37th America’s Cup
Matt Sheahan and his PlanetSail team share the latest episode in a regular series of features about the road to the America’s Cup that will take us from the first official event in Vilanova to the Cup match itself in October 2024 in Barcelona, Spain. Here’s the episode synopsis:
No matter what angle you look at American Magic’s new Cup boat, she looks slippery. Low drag above and below the waterline characterizes the boat that the team hopes will take them all the way through to the America’s Cup.
This low-profile appearance also makes her look like the smallest boat in the fleet and explains why some argue that Patriot is the slickest of the Challengers.
But aside from their impressive AC75, when you look at the statistics, the NYYC American Magic team have clocked up the most time on the water with an estimated 338 days afloat across all of their boats.
So, we went to Barcelona to talk to the team to find out how they were feeling about their campaign and the new boat.
Following the publication of the AC37 Protocol and AC75 Class Rule on November 17, 2021, the AC75 Class Rule and AC Technical Regulations were finalized on March 17, 2022. The entry period was from December 1, 2021 until July 31, 2022, but late entries for the 37th America’s Cup could be accepted until May 31, 2023. The Defender was to announce the Match Venue on September 17, 2021 but postponed the reveal, finally confirming Barcelona on March 30, 2022. The 37th America’s Cup begins October 12, 2024.
Teams revealed to challenge defender Emirates Team New Zealand (NZL):
• INEOS Britannia (GBR)
• Alinghi Red Bull Racing (SUI)
• Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli Team (ITA)
• NYYC American Magic (USA)
• Orient Express Racing Team (FRA)
2023-24 Preliminary Regattas
September 14-17, 2023 (AC40): Vilanova i la Geltrú, Spain
November 30-December 2 (AC40): Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
August 22-25, 2024 (AC75): Barcelona, Spain
2024 Challenger Selection Series
August 29-September 8: Double Round Robin
September 14-19: Semi Finals (Best of 9)
September 26-October 7: Finals (Best of 13)
2024 America’s Cup
October 12-21: 37th Match (Best of 13)
Additionally, 12 teams will compete in the 2024 Youth & Women’s America’s Cup.
Noticeboard: https://ac37noticeboard.acofficials.org/
Event details: www.americascup.com/en/home
mo money
The Biz
Founded in 1966, Nautor Swan today boasts a comprehensive range of services. These include high-profile offerings through Nautor Swan Charter and Brokerage, Nautor Swan Global Service—which provides global assistance—and ClubSwan Racing, the sport division managed by professionals in the sailing world. Additionally, ClubSwan serves as a virtual yacht club, bringing together all Swan owners and fans under one roof.
With effect from today, following its strategy to evolve and never revolutionize, 60% of Nautor’s shareholding passes to Sanlorenzo ownership – a very important and positive step – a very important and positive step to facilitate continued growth and strengthen its reputation as one of the most important sailing shipyards worldwide.
The Boatbuilding Technology Centre (BTC) in Pietarsaari, Finland, remains the main production site for sailing yachts underpinning Nautor Swan’s heritage, together with the pillars of its DNA: elegance, quality, performance and reliability, and enhance the culture and the secular craftmanship, proper of the Ostrobothnia region.
iQFOiL: Right project, Right moment
The USA proved again at the 2024 Youth Sailing World Championships to be one of the top sailing nations, but the challenge has been to convert the young talent into Olympic contenders. An obstacle has been an interruption in training, as many pursue collegiate dinghy racing rather than further refine technical skill.
But of the ten Olympic events, the Windsurfer and Kiteboard athletes are immune to this issue, and may even benefit from college competition. Could this be the new frontier for the USA Olympic Sailing Program? Coach Adrien Gaillard provides this report on progress with the new Olympic iQFOiL windsurfer:
The windsurfing youth summer block has just been as busy as it was successful for the America One Racing iQFOiL squad…
The Technology of the 37th America’s Cup
It’s sometimes hard to wrap your head around all that’s evolved since 1851, when a syndicate of owners from the newly minted New York Yacht Club brought their schooner America to the UK for a summer of racing and returned with the trophy that would become the America’s Cup.
It helps to remember that no matter the era, the Cup has always been as much a contest of cutting-edge yacht design as it is of high-level sailing skills. Seen through that lens, the foiling monohulls that are racing in this year’s 37th America’s Cup, reaching—and likely exceeding—50 knots and resembling fighter jets more than sailing yachts, make sense.
It also helps to look back. When the Americans returned with their new prize, a syndicate member authored the Deed of Gift to create an international trophy to be contested between two yacht clubs—defender and challenger. Vast fortunes were often wagered to contest and defend a trophy that the original winners are rumored to have considered melting down into medals, and over time, the Cup’s mythos far exceeded any rational worth.
But this irrationality became an important part of the Cup’s gravity, and the contest’s winner-takes-all ethic galvanized. Sir Thomas Lipton, for example, challenged five times, spending staggering sums, but ultimately sailed home empty-handed…
Record fleet at the M32 Europeans
Thirteen M32s from five countries assembled for the European Championship. After a 15-race series, “Rated X” took the win; however, the rest of the fleet is close on Jake Julian’s heels, with only a few points separating the rest of the podium.
From the Editor: Sweet Ride
Some of the best gifts come in small packages. So it was when my sister-in-law asked me and my husband if we would race her Herreshoff 12½ in the Annapolis Yacht Club’s Wednesday night series. Sidelined while recovering from back surgery, she couldn’t bear to see her beloved boat beached as well.
It was an intriguing offer, one you might say we couldn’t refuse. We had long admired the classy lines of this cheeky little sloop that Cindy had, for many years, sailed the wheels off of in the AYC series. We never got into the predictably Byzantine controversies surrounding the boat and its class (simply called H Class) including debates over rigs (Marconi or gaff-rigged), hull provenance (fiberglass versus wood), etc. When a boat has been in continuous production for 110 years—110 years—you can expect some kerfuffles.
All we cared about was the chance to spend time sailing this design, which Nathanael Herreshoff drew in 1914 to a brief from one Robert W. Emmons II and several of his friends. They asked the Wizard of Bristol—he of the likes of America’s Cup defender Columbia and countless other majestic and ultimately historic yachts—for a small boat suitable for children to manage even in the feisty breezes of Buzzards Bay (hence her first nickname, the Buzzards Bay Boy’s Boat). The goal also was a boat in which kids could “become familiar with the characteristics of the type of larger sailboats to which they might graduate later on,” according to the H Class Association website.
“It is unlikely that in 1914 or 1915 the genius of Nathanael G. Herreshoff or the inspiration of Mr. Emmons could have foretold the unique popularity and longevity of the design we have now seen for more than 100 years,” the website continues. “She is still considered to be one of the finest, if not the finest, small sailing yacht designs ever created. And as it turned out, the boat was perfect for all ages in the family, not just the kids.”
She really is a little big boat, with a full keel and a displacement of 1,500 pounds plus 735 pounds of ballast helping provide a profound stability we ran into on our first race day when the jib halyard block broke before the start. No problem, Johnny said, we’ll just sail over to a dock where we can get high enough to careen her a bit to reach the spar and replace it. Hah! Not a shot. We were DNS that day.
At 16 feet LOA, the 12½ refers to her waterline length of 12 feet, 6 inches, which sounds really tiny, yet her flared topsides and fine entry mean she can handle a chop (Buzzards Bay, remember), she rarely gets on her ear, and even if splashed now and then, you feel totally secure in her roomy cockpit.
You also feel like you’re in a Winslow Homer painting. The first time we sailed her, I found myself channeling Gatsby and Daisy. It would not go amiss, I thought, to include sloe gin fizzes in the gear bag.
That DNS, though, gets to the other reason we couldn’t refuse Cindy’s offer. It’s been many moons, two kids, a couple of houses, several jobs, six dogs, and several thousands of cruising miles since we’ve been on the racecourse together. What better way to ease back into it than this forgiving little boat which, in spite of its size or perhaps because of it, inspires a certain genteel intensity in those who sail her. Or intense gentility. Sometimes it’s not clear which.
But last night at the start, I looked over as five of us crossed the line together in a row, those jaunty bows glimmering in the late-day light, and I thought how remarkable it is that more than a century later, this little big boat can still be teaching us how to sail fast and well, and with joy.
Keep on sailing,
Wendy
wclarke@aimmedia.com
August/September 20247
Welcome to WASZP Island
180 WASZPs are descending on Sandefjord Norway and WASZP Island (Seilerholmen) in what is set to become one of the most incredible events ever hosted!
Olympic Diary: July 30 – Breeze changes everything
What a difference a day makes. Or rather how some breeze can change everything. After two days of light winds, surprisingly there was some very exaggerated points movement as a Force 3-4 breeze kicked in…
Beach weather continues for Paris 2024
Marseille, France (July 29, 2024) – All four events on the schedule at the Paris 2024 Olympics – Men’s and Women’s Skiff and Men’s and Women’s Windsurfing – completed races today, but temperatures up to 86°F and low winds continued for the second day of competition. While the heat is expected to remain, more wind is in the upcoming forecast.
Event details – Results – Notice Board
Men’s and Women’s Windsurfing:
Today saw the first ever slalom races in the history of Olympic sailing. A bit more wind in Marseille opened the window for some short-course downwind competition in the Windsurfing.
Unfortunately, the weather window didn’t stay open for very long, but in the Men, France’s Nicolas Goyard powered his iQFOiL board to victory in the one and only heat that took place. In the Women, event favorite from Great Britain, Emma Wilson, scored a first and second in two heats to take the early lead.
North America Results:
Men:
5. Noah Lyons (USA)
Women:
9. Mariana Aguilar Chavez Peon (MEX)
18. Dominique Stater (USA)
Men’s and Women’s Skiff:
Three more races in the Men’s and Women’s Skiff takes them pretty much to the halfway stage of the regatta. With predominantly light winds, the conditions seems to be suiting the New Zealanders, Isaac McHardie and Will McKenzie very nicely in the 49er Men.
Of the six races completed, the Kiwis have won three of them, and the only other team to keep all their scores inside the top 10 are the Irish in second place.
Yet to win a race but sailing solidly and chipping away are the Spanish, Diego Botin and Florian Trittel, who have climbed up to third, albeit they’re nine points back on the Irish.
As for the Germans, well if any national Olympic committee is wondering whether or not it’s worth sending a team that barely looks worthy of the place, then take a look at Jakob Meggendorfer and Andreas Spranger…
57th Governor’s Cup overall
Cole Tapper (AUS), Jack Frewin and Hamish Vass representing the CYCA came back from a 2-0 deficit against defending two-time GovCup winner Jeffrey Petersen (USA) and crew Daniel Pegg and Enzo Menditto of Balboa Yacht Club to win the best-of-five finals…
Paris 2024 Olympics – Sailing Day 1 Schedule and Results
The sailing events at the Paris 2024 Olympics start on Sunday 28 July…
US Sailing Team set for the Paris 2024 Olympics
Over the course of 12 days, 13 American athletes in nine classes will take to the Bay of Marseille for competition at the Paris 2024 Olympics, following a shortened runway of three years due to the delayed Tokyo 2020 Games…
Olympic Diary: July 27 – Light winds forecast
The 2024 Olympic Sailing Regatta starts tomorrow, Sunday when the Womens Windsurfer face the starter at 1213hrs, for the first of four races to be sailed in their Event, on Day 1.
55-foot carbon fibre catamaran lightest in class
The new Cure 55GT nears launch, sets new standards in weight and performance and utilises in-house composites technology…
Clipper Race Fleet to finish off Portsmouth Harbour Saturday 27 July
Gunwharf Quays in Portsmouth will be hosting the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race fleet from 27 – 29 July, after the official Race Finish of Portsmouth…
Toronto-area storm rips boats, docks into Lake Ontario
Windsurfing will open the racing at Paris 2024 Olympics
The men and women’s iQFOiL events will open the racing for the sailing events at the Paris 2024 Olympics on Sunday 28 July…
21st International Canoe Worlds day 1
The 21st International 20 square meter Canoe World Championships kicked off in boisterous conditions on the first Monday of Travemünder Woche on the Baltic shores of Germany…
the oracle hath spoken
All six America’s Cup teams are now established and sailing in Spain. As an exclusive service to SA readers, we consulted the ancient Oracles at Delphi (just up the road from Barcelona – not the Ellison Oracle). We sought their predictions about the coming series. As is customary, their response was given in seven stanzas of iambic heptameters in Attic Greek. Our regular contributor, Anarchist David, has kindly translated those verses for us into English:
’Twas dawn in Barcelona when the AC hopefuls met,
To settle who was ‘primo’ in the mono-foiling set,
Each team arrived with fervent hopes to lead the yachting news,
In truth their job was advertising auto tyres and booze.
First Luna Rossa sallied forth for Prada and Pirelli,
But soon their main hydraulics failed and turned the oil to jelly.
INEOS Britannia flew fast across the Bay,
Until their carbon mast collapsed beneath a splintered stay.
Alinghi Red Bull Racing had been twice-triumphant champs,
Their cyclors all pulled muscles and succumbed to painful cramps.
Team France arrived with national pride and loads of Gallic grace,
But capsized when a foil arm broke – and never won a race.
The New York Yacht Club turned up late with Magic USA,
A syndicate of millionaires all keen to join the fray,
Delamination rent their hull which sprang a fatal leak,
Reminding them of ’83 (of which we dare not speak).
Then finally New Zealand came with sponsors Emerati,
At last the true professionals had deigned to join the party,
Yet just before the starting gun their country’s hopes were dashed,
The Kiwi team refused to race without a lot more cash.
So, fans could only wonder what the Cup had now become,
A contest of technology (that mostly came undone),
A demolition derby for low-flying aeroplanes,
A frantic form of yachting where the dollars hold the reins.
Let’s mourn the days when sailing skill and tactics were at stake,
Of Turner, Conner, Mosbacher; of Hardy, Coutts and Blake,
Recall the great 12-metre jousts (alas to no avail),
The boats, it’s true, were slower then – but boy, could those guys sail!
Eight Bells: Gloria Melges
Gloria Melges, 93, a beloved member of the sailing community and an esteemed race committee officer, passed away peacefully on July 20, 2024. Born in New Jersey on May 27, 1931, Gloria was raised spending summers aboard a Great Lakes cruising sailboat out of Chicago, where her father served as Commodore of the Columbia Yacht Club. This unique upbringing instilled in her a lifelong passion for the water and sailing.
Gloria pursued higher education at Northwestern University Dental School, where she graduated with honors. During her time at Northwestern, she met and fell in love with Wisconsin yachtsman Harry C. “Buddy” Melges Jr. Their relationship blossomed, but their time together was interrupted when Buddy went to serve in the Korean War. Despite the distance, their love grew stronger through the heartfelt letters they exchanged while he was away.
Upon Buddy’s return, he proposed to Gloria, and they were married shortly thereafter. Their deep bond and unwavering love for sailing became the foundation of their 69-year marriage, a passion they passed on to their three children: Laura, Harry III, and Hans. During their seven decades together, Gloria was a steadfast supporter of Buddy’s illustrious career, cheering for him both on and off the water.
Gloria’s legacy extends beyond her family. She was the first female Commodore of the Lake Geneva Yacht Club on Geneva Lake in Wisconsin, a testament to her trailblazing spirit.
Her contributions to the sport were highlighted by her outstanding work as a crew member in Classes A, E, and C, and her esteemed role as a Race Committee member and Principal Race Officer for Lake Geneva Yacht Club fleets, as well as at national and international events, including the Star Class World Championship, Pan American Games, and America’s Cup competitions.
In recognition of her exceptional service, Gloria was honored as the first recipient of the Huse Inland Lake Yachting Association Sportsmanship Trophy in November 2019. She also earned accolades as a US Sailing Senior Race Officer and an Inland Lake Sailing Association Senior Race Officer.
Her remarkable contributions were further acknowledged with the Ed Malone Judges Trophy as Inland Lake Yachting Association Race Committee/Judge of the Year, the Bilge Pullers Cannon as Outstanding Inland Lake Yachting Association Race Management Corps Volunteer, and twice with the Dr. and Mrs. Will F. Lyon Award for Outstanding Race Committee Service from the Lake Geneva Yacht Club.
Many sailors considered Gloria a “second mom,” having cultivated a warm and welcoming sailing community throughout the world. One of Gloria’s many favorite activities was hosting international competitors at their home on Geneva Lake. Along with Buddy, she helped create an environment where young sailors could thrive, learn, and develop a lifelong love for the sport. Her nurturing spirit left an indelible mark on the sailing world.
Beyond the water, friendships formed from her passion for crafts; participating in sewing, rosemaling, and rug-hooking clubs, as well as having served as the President of the Questers Association.
Survived by her three children, Laura Melges, Hans Melges, and Harry C. Melges III (Suzanne), Gloria is also remembered by her grandchildren, Olivia Arbaugh, Hunter Arbaugh, Harry C. Melges IV, Monroe Melges, Hans Melges, Maxx Melges, and Maverik Melges.
She is preceded in death by her husband, Harry Clemons “Buddy” Melges Jr., her brother, Dr. Alfred “Boody” Wenzel, her sister-in-law, Marilyn Snudden, and by her parents, Alfred and Laura Wenzel. Family was the center of Gloria’s world, and she will forever be remembered for her infectious smile, hospitable nature, and her adoring love for Buddy.
Gloria will be deeply missed, but her gracious spirit will forever sail on in the hearts of those who knew and loved her.
If you would like to honor Gloria’s memory, donations can be made to the Geneva Lake Sailing School in the name of the Buddy Melges Sailing Center located at 1250 South Lake Shore Drive, Fontana, WI 53125.
A Celebration of Life for Gloria and Buddy will be held this fall.
America’s Cup: Rigs and Sail sheeting analysed
America’s Cup analyst Tom Morris (Mozzy Sails) looks at two aspects of the AC75 developments – the rigs – and visits North Sails and Southern Spars facilities in UK.
The oldest footage of the Flying Dutchman class
We delve into the past, and round-up all videos which show sailing in the Flying Dutchman class of racing dinghy…
MOB recovery success story from Race to Mackinac
In the thick of Saturday night storms with winds approaching 40 knots, Callisto crewmember Shawn Dougherty was moving forward on the deck to assist the spinnaker takedown and got knocked overboard when a large gust jolted the boat…
Never again! (Except for next time…)
What’s it like to take a Cruiser/Racer racing? Not just any racing, mind you, but two of the world’s most famous courses. The Transpac and the Hobart. This was the premise presented to Charles Ettienne-Devanneaux ahead of our most recent chat…
SailGP Championships & looking ahead to Paris 2024
One of the most interesting storylines in SailGP’s Season 4 has been the question of whether the Australia SailGP Team could clench a fourth-straight season championship. Instead, bragging rights went to the Spanish…
hey look, a feelgood story!
Bet you didn’t see that coming…!
Maximilian Maeder and Lauriane Nolot have established themselves as the gold medal favorites for the men’s and women’s Formula Kite classes at the 2024 Olympics. Both kiters are current double world champions, having clinched titles in the 2023 and 2024 championships. Their back-to-back victories solidified their status as the best in the world, showcasing their ability to perform under pressure—a crucial trait for Olympic success.
Despite their shared dominance, their paths to success in Formula Kite have been markedly different. One forged a solo path, while the other thrived with the support of an established national development and Olympic program, demonstrating multiple routes to high-performance sailing success.
SailGP: Three teams put on Notice
The announcement of SailGP’s Season 5 racing schedule and venues, along with the publication latest edition of video ‘Racing on the Edge’ reveals plenty on the shape and momentum of the professional sailing league.
America’s Cup: Can France make history?
The French involvement in the America’s Cup dates back to the 1970 event, and despite their success elsewhere in the sport, this has been a mountain they’ve yet to summit. After an early exit during the 2017 edition, they return again in 2024 to change history.
But to do so, they must overcome long odds. They were the last team to enter, and the only team to not design their own boat, having bought the technical details from the New Zealand defender. But French skipper and co-pilot Quentin Delapierre, 31, remains an optimist.
“The 75 is a beautiful boat which we are really proud of,” he reports. “The tech team did an unbelievable job, which they had to do in a rush, which is not easy, but the French nation showed we are able to build this kind of boat. The main challenge for us now is to bring everything together, and make sure the systems are reliable.”
As the last of the five Cup challenger teams to get on the water, Delapierre and his crew have no illusions about the challenge ahead even before racing starts, but he paid tribute to the tech and electronics teams who were able to create a simulator which made an enormous difference to their transition.
“When we went sailing in the AC75 it felt familiar. We had been in the AC40 sailing manually of course, and when we transferred to the 75 it was certainly very different, but the hours and hours we had spent in the simulator made the transition easier — I would say we felt very much at home.
“The simulator is a new tool for sailing over the past few years, and since the arrival of the AC75 we have been pushing hard to translate all that we have learnt. It has been a really good start, but we have a way to go.”
While winless in the America’s Cup, the French are not alone among the challenges as Italy has been trying since 1983 to hold the trophy, and British futility dates back to 1870. Will a new nation win in 2024? Standing by.
Following the publication of the AC37 Protocol and AC75 Class Rule on November 17, 2021, the AC75 Class Rule and AC Technical Regulations were finalized on March 17, 2022. The entry period was from December 1, 2021 until July 31, 2022, but late entries for the 37th America’s Cup could be accepted until May 31, 2023. The Defender was to announce the Match Venue on September 17, 2021 but postponed the reveal, finally confirming Barcelona on March 30, 2022. The 37th America’s Cup begins October 12, 2024.
Teams revealed to challenge defender Emirates Team New Zealand (NZL):
• INEOS Britannia (GBR)
• Alinghi Red Bull Racing (SUI)
• Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli Team (ITA)
• NYYC American Magic (USA)
• Orient Express Racing Team (FRA)
2023-24 Preliminary Regattas
September 14-17, 2023 (AC40): Vilanova i la Geltrú, Spain
November 30-December 2 (AC40): Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
August 22-25, 2024 (AC75): Barcelona, Spain
2024 Challenger Selection Series
August 29-September 8: Double Round Robin
September 14-19: Semi Finals (Best of 9)
September 26-October 7: Finals (Best of 13)
2024 America’s Cup
October 12-21: 37th Match (Best of 13)
Additionally, 12 teams will compete in the 2024 Youth & Women’s America’s Cup.
Noticeboard: https://ac37noticeboard.acofficials.org/
Event details: www.americascup.com/en/home
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