Americas Cup Report - Who Won, Who Lost, And More
by Selwyn Manning
YOUNG AMERICA SUFFERS MASSIVE DAMAGE - NEARLY SINKS
It was like a replay of the sinking of OneAustralia off San Francisco in 1995. The New York Yacht Club's Young America yacht split almost in two while racing in heavy wind today.
Young America suffered massive cracks in her hull and deck just behind the mast during her match against Japan's Asura.
Cracks were visible from the shear line to well under the waterline, both ends of the boat lifting from the water as the hull went banana shaped.
When the yacht began to split, crew members were forced to abandoned ship.
Two crew members returned to the striken yacht to retrieve gear. Pumps and flotation bags were taken aboard and the boat was taken under tow for home.
No crewmembers were hurt.
Other big Americas Cup challenger wins today went to Luna Rossa, the Italian yacht which continues unbeaten in the Louis Vuitton Cup challenger series. And, Abracadabra just beat Dennis Conner's Stars & Stripes - by a mere three seconds.
ASURA WON, YOUNG
AMERICA RETIRES DAMAGED
Peter Gilmour on Asura
(JPN-44) forced Young America (USA -53) to windward and to
the left of the start line. Baird broke free, bore off,
gybed and started at the pin end of the start line with full
speed on port tack. Gilmour tried to dip towards the start
line but was stalled and lost valuable seconds. Young
America rounded the top mark first, 10 seconds in the lead.
On the run Nippon lost a few seconds when it had to re-hoist
another spinnaker. The delta increased in favour of the
Americans to 21 seconds. A big left-hand shift dominated the
next beat and run. Delta was 26 seconds at the last bottom
mark. Gilmour was catching up. On the third beat near the
windward mark Young America was leading Asura by three boat
lengths when the hull of Young America experienced
catastrophic structural failure and folded at deck level
just behind the mast. The boats were one and a half minutes
from the last weather mark at the time of the incident.
Young America's crew started to get as much gear and as many
sails off as possible. Most of the crew were in the chase
boat already. After that the crew determined the boat wasn't
going to sink immediately, some of them got back on board to
set up pumps and flotation bags, and they started towing the
severely damaged boat back to the dock. Nippon went on to
finish the race alone.
BRAVO ESPAÑA BEAT LE DÉFI,
DELTA - 00:19
Bravo España (ESP-47) sailed by Pedro
Campos won this race by a small margin, staying in control
after the first half of the first weather leg and staving
off a very determined and resilient Le Défi (FRA-46). Campos
chased his opponent away from the line before the start,
following the French boat and holding in place on Le Défi's
starboard hip, before the two boats split for an even start,
with the French boat starting at the pin and the Spanish at
the committee boat. After one set of tacks, French skipper
Bertrand Pacé sailed Campos out beyond the port tack
layline. But the Spanish skipper was able to convert his
small lead into a 15 second advantage at the weather mark
and maintained his lead for the rest of the
race.
AMERICAONE BEATS BE HAPPY, DELTA -
03:29
The Swiss be hAPpy (SUI-59) was looking to
string together two wins in a row during its race against
AmericaOne (USA-49). Paul Cayard however, had other ideas.
The two boats started evenly, but AmericaOne pulled away by
pointing higher, and this race was won on pointing ability.
The Swiss couldn't match the Americans upwind, giving away
10-15 degrees to the wind. The Swiss be hAPpy did look good
on the downwind legs, gaining between 15 and 25 seconds when
going to leeward. But AmericaOne gained over one minute on
each upwind leg and was never threatened in the
match.
LUNA ROSSA BEATS YOUNG AUSTRALIA, DELTA -
03:34
This match featured the leaders in the
standings Luna Rossa (ITA-45) against Young Australia
(AUS-31), the team at the bottom of the standings.
Australian skipper James Spithill had another good start,
forcing Francesco de Angelis to tack around at the committee
boat end, and return late to the start line. Young Australia
started with a 19 second lead but couldn't match the speed
of the Italians. Luna Rossa gained on each split tack,
eventually crossing ahead of Young Australia halfway up the
leg. The Italians gained time on every leg of the course,
and were never threatened.
ABRACADABRA BEATS
STARS & STRIPES, DELTA - 00:03
In the closest racing
seen yet on the Hauraki Gulf, Abracadabra (USA-50) beat
Stars & Stripes (USA-55), after coming from behind halfway
through the race. After that, Abracadabra skipper John
Kolius held off a determined challenge by Stars & Stripes to
finish just three seconds ahead. The first lap and a half
had the two boats never more than a few lengths apart with
Abracadabra always trailing. The predicted left-hand shift
came through and even though Abracadabra was on the
unfavoured side, Kolius remained in touch. On the second run
Kolius gybed away early and then gybed back with some
separation and began to show better speed. Kolius sailed
steadily past his opponent to lead by 19 seconds at the lee
mark. This was also the biggest delta of the match as Read
fought unsuccessfully to retake the
lead.