Spithill Out But Competition Tough in Semi Finals
Spithill Out But Competition Tough in Semi Finals
Defending champion Dean Barker and his Emirates Team New Zealand crew continued their march through the Auckland Match Racing Cup by winning the double round robin and earning top place in the final four.
But, it was a close run thing with three teams completing the 18 matches with 13 wins each. It took race officials some time to work out the countback and declare Barker the round robin winner, which gives him the right to choose his semi-final opponent.
Englishman Ian Williams and Frenchman Mathieu Richard also completed the round robin phase of the regatta on 13 wins, while local young gun, Adam Minoprio and his Blackmatch crew took the fourth slot on 10 wins.
Barker said the plan for today was just to keep solid results going. “It is tough to be consistent in the conditions we have had. We have not had our best day, but we have done enough to get through to the semis.”
He will decide who to race against before the start of the semi-finals tomorrow. “It is a tough decision,” he said. “All of them have their moments. There are definitely no easy choices.”
At the conclusion of three days of intense racing on Auckland’s tide-dominated Waitemata Harbour, the four semi-finalists in the Auckland Match Racing Cup regatta had one surprising absence.
Coming into the regatta, the form guide probably favoured the two America’s Cup works teams, Dean Barker and James Spithill with his Luna Rossa team. In the event, it was Spithill who was the surprise omission from the top four.
Halfway through the second of two round robins, Spithill was still in with a chance, but an uncharacteristic run of losses today put him out of the hunt.
Williams, ranked no. 2 in the world, usually sails with a crew of English sailors plus one American, but he came to Auckland alone and raced with a pick-up crew of New Zealanders. “We struggled a bit a first,” he said.
“We have been working on our communications and we had a much better day today.” In fact, the Williams team put together the only perfect score of the day, winning six out of six matches.
“There are five or six teams here that have had very tight battles with each other, all slugging it out for a place in the semis,” he said.
Richard, who is ranked no. 3 in the world, attributed their success in the round robins to good starts, good crew work and good boatspeed, all vital match racing ingredients. “We expected the racing to be very close,” he said. “I was sure it would be tight with so many good teams competing here.
“It is obviously satisfying to get through to the semis, but it is not going to be easy. Our plan is to continue as we have in the opening days and hopefully keep our momentum.”
Minoprio’s result proved his top-four finish behind three top America’s Cup crews in the New Zealand match race nationals last year was no flash in the pan. However, he did not like today’s performance with three losses.
“We were pretty upset with ourselves. A whole lot of little mistakes cost us races,” said the young skipper, who with a team of Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron Youth Programme sailors embarked on a professional match racing career a year ago.
But, even if the day started badly, it ended with a place in the semis, which was always the first objective. “We just have to hope for a better day tomorrow than we had today,” he said.
Ten teams from seven nations are competing in the Auckland Match Racing Cup, which is hosted by the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron.
Tomorrow’s racing will see the two semi-final pairs racing off in best-of-five matches to decide the two finalists. The rest of the fleet will sail best-of-three matches, 5 vs 6, 7 vs 8 and 9 vs 10 to decide the minor placings.
The final and petite final are scheduled to be raced on Sunday.
POINTS TABLE 1. Dean Barker 13 wins / 5 losses 2. Ian Williams 13 / 5 3. Mathieu Richard 13 / 5 4. Adam Minoprio 10 / 8 5. Eugeny Neugodnikov 9 / 9 6. James Spithill 9 / 9 7. Simon Minoprio 6 / 12 8. Brian Angel 6 / 12 9. Simon Dickey 6 / 12 10. Takumi Nakamura 5 / 13
Today’s results:
Flight Four
Neugodnikov beat A.Minoprio by 41s
Barker beat Richard by 1m14s
Williams beat Spithill by 2s
S.Minoprio beat Nakamura by 28s
Angel beat Dickey by 7s
Flight Five
Richard beat Spithill by 2m10s
Williams beat Nakamura by 29s
S.Minoprio beat Dickey by 37s
A.Minoprio beat Angel by 23s
Neugodnikov beat Barker by 20s
Flight
Six
Williams beat Dickey by 59s
A.Minoprio beat S.Minoprio by 7s
Angel beat Neugodnikov DNF
Spithill beat Barker by 44s
Richard beat Nakamura by 34s
Flight Seven
Angel beat S.Minoprio by 51s
Neugodnikov beat Spithill by 47s
Barker beat Nakamura by 29s
Richard beat Dickey by 28s
Williams beat A.Minoprio by 27s
Flight Eight
Spithill beat Nakamura by 54s
Barker beat Dickey by 2m15s
Richard beat A.Minoprio by 26s
Williams beat Angel by 19s
Neugodnikov beat S.Minoprio by 57s
Flight Nine
Dickey beat Spithill by 1m01s
Richard beat Angel by 35s
Williams beat S.Minoprio by 33s
Neugodnikov beat Nakamura by 1m44s
Barker beat A.Minoprio by 2m50s
Competing teams:
Dean Barker (NZL), Don Cowie, Terry Hutchinson, James Dagg, Jeremy Lomas
James Spithill (AUS), Michele Ivaldi, Magnus Auguston, Joey Newton, Torben Grael
Ian Williams (GBR), Laurie Jury, Graeme Sutherland, Stu Molloy, Sam Tucker
Mathieu Richard (FRA), Greg Evrard, Thierry Briand, Olivier Herledant, Yannick Simon
Eugeny Neugodnikov (RUS), Aleksander Ekimov, Konstantin Besputin, Michael Pozhidaev, Nikolay Kornev
Simon Minoprio (NZL), Michael Bullot, Sam Bell, Ryan Houston, Matthew Johns
Brian Angel (USA), Payson Infelize, Logan Fraser, David Hochart, Nick Bastow
Takumi Nakamura (JPN), Kazuhiro Hahara, Yasuhiro Okamoto, Tatsuya Sasaki, Masahiro Nagao
Adam Minoprio (NZL), Dave Swete, Josh Puckey, Tom Powrie, Nick Blackman
Simon Dickey (NZL), Guy Pilkington, Garth Ellingham, Lukasz Wosinski, Marcin Banaszek
ENDS
The Auckland Match Racing Cup is a
grade-one international event and entry to the competition
is by invitation only. The majority of the New Zealand
America’s Cup Race Committee has been reconvened to
oversee the event and the competition has been officially
sanctioned by the International Sailing Federation
(www.sailing.org).
The Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron has hosted international match racing events since 1979, initially as the Citizen International Match Racing Series, then the Steinlager Cup and now there is the new era of the Auckland Match Racing Cup.
For more information please visit www.aucklandmatchracingcup.co.nz