James Spithill and crew share post-race refreshments with fellow
competitors ETNZ. Oracle4 won both the Fleet Racing and
Match Racing portions of the ACWS in San Diego, and now trail the
Kiwis by just one point in the season overall standings.
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget |
America's Cup World Series San Diego
Sunday Nov 20:
Fleet Race Championship (One 40-minute Fleet Race) following
Speed Trial (2 runs per boat).
Race at 1:55 pm PT.
Sunday Outlook and
Results
On this page (click links or scroll down):
Feature Stories | Race
Results
Race Reports:
Port Cities Challenge
San Diego Day 1:
Team
Statements
San Diego Day 2: Wins for ETNZ,
Aleph, Artemis, and Energy Race
Report |
Team Statements
Match Race Championship:
Wednesday Nov 16: Seeding (Fleet)
Thursday Nov 17: Qualifying (Match)
Friday Nov 18: Semi-finals (Match)
Saturday Nov 19: Finals and Place Matches
Where to Watch the Racing:
America's Cup YouTube Channel |
Live WebCam
Read more about ACWS TV/Online Broadcasts
Animated Virtual Coverage:
VirtualEye |
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ACWS San Diego
Stories:
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From the Finn to
the Cup
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles
Martin-Raget
Ed Wright,
crew on GreenComm: "On these boats, it’s pure
multitasking. You have to be able to pick up
one second and put it down the next second, do it
very quickly, and have your head both inside and
outside the boat. So it’s very physical and
you have to be very aware. I admire the guys
at the top at the moment, it’s just incredible how
they’ve been able to test everything so quickly
and we’re still learning how to get these
techniques down."
Read more with Ed Wright
Tornado Skills in
the ACWS
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
Charlie
Ogletree, Skipper of China Team: "I thought
the wing sail, being a hard wing, would be
completely different from a sail. But the
feeling on the boat is the same -- you still have
depth, you still have twist, you still have a
sheet. So you sail the boat the same, there
are just nuances on how you adjust it and tune it
that are different from a soft sail, but the basic
concept and the feeling on the boat is still the
same."
Read More with Charlie Ogletree
More ACWS Stories:
Sailor and Broadcaster Peter
Isler: "...For me it’s great to have been a part of it
and to continue being part of telling the Cup story but I’m in
awe of the America’s Cup and it keeps changing and it continues
to evolve. It’s unlike any other event anywhere and that’s
the thing about the Cup."
Read more at SailBlast
Guests Onboard the AC45s:
"Some of (the guests) probably wanted to scream, but they are not
allowed to," said Vasilij Žbogar, skipper of the Spanish team
GreenComm. "There was one guy who was with us, he was doing
this ..." Žbogar bowed his head and muttered furiously, then
looked up smiling. "When we looked at him, we thought he was
praying."
Read more at SFGate.com
Tricks of the Bay - Local
Knowledge Helps Kiwis:
Dean Barker: “The track is very difficult with the current and
the wind. It’s a one-sided sailing track making it a quite tricky
venue. The light, patchy winds and the tide punishes mistakes.”
Rod Davis: “All the little
tweaks of San Diego Bay started coming back to me last spring
when we raced the RC-44 sloops over the same course,” said Davis.
“Those races refreshed my memory.”
Read more at SignOnSanDiego
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Tiger Team
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
Team Korea's Chris Draper,
skipper of the White Tiger Challenge:
"We’ve been working so hard to
improve our match racing that we’ve let the fleet
racing slide a little bit, so it’s important that
we get the balance back. But we’re really
pleased to be where we are -- we’re under no
illusions of where we are actually at. We’re
very aware that those are pretty good results and
we’re pleased with that."
Read More with Chris Draper
AC45 Tech:
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles
Martin-Raget
What's new in SD?
To the right of the America's Cup-winning
billionaire in the above photo is the latest
addition to the Cup cats, the Christmas Tree.
What does it do?
Read
more at CupInfo
Bringing the Cats
to San Diego
SEA San Diego's John Laun. Photo:©2011 Christy
Radecic
John Laun watched the America’s
Cup making its “victory tour” around San Diego in
2010 and knew the city still had the interest and
the ability to run a Cup regatta. With Chuck
Nichols he formed Sailing Events Association San
Diego to make that a reality. On the eve of
the America’s Cup World Series in San Diego, Laun
talked to Diane Swintal about the steps they took
to secure the regatta, lessons learned, and what
it will take for the event to be a success in his
view:
“We always knew it would be
hard, because we had a very compressed time frame.
And there was a lot to learn -- the RC44 regatta
and the America’s Cup World Series are very
different in terms of our role, and certainly the
America’s Cup World Series is a much more complex
event."
Read interview with John Laun at CupInfo
Italians To View
ACWS San Diego
The Luna Rossa Team, which in
recent weeks became an official late entry for the
2013 America's Cup, will send team members to San
Diego for the America's Cup World Series, November
12-20, on an observational basis.
Read Luna Rossa Press Release
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Results:
Also see Full ACWS SD Results Page
|
Sunday
Nov 20:
Congratulations for Spithill and crew as they add
the San Diego Fleet Race Championship to their
total. Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
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America's
Cup World Series San Diego
Championship Fleet Race: Sunday Nov 20
Fleet
Race Championship Final:
One 40-minutes Fleet Race
Start schedule for 2:00 pm PT.
AC 500 Speed Trial, two runs each boat.
Fleet
Race:
Underway! Spithill and Oracle4 leading,
Korea and Energy fighting for second. Onto
the 6th of 9 legs, it's a 29-second lead for
Oracle4. Korea, ETNZ, and Energy in a tight
pack behind them about 30 seconds. Oracle
maintains at the next mark, Korea still
second at rounding, but ETNZ gains, crosses
ahead of Korea into second. Second to last
leg, ETNZ has 5 seconds on Team Korea.
Oracle
rounds the last mark and wins the Fleet
Racing Championship Race, making a sweep for
Spithill this weekend. ETNZ 2nd, Energy
3rd, Aleph 4th by barely meters, Korea 5th,
Artemis catches China on the last leg for
6th, China 7th, GreenComm8th, Oracle5 9th.
Oracle4 wins
the San Diego Fleet Race Championship, to
bookend their Match Racing Championship
victory yesterday, and now trail Emirates by
just one point in the
combined 2011-12 Season standings.
Conditions:
Winds S 13 mph becoming SE 15 mph (WindFinder).
Winds S 6-11 kts, rain and thunderstorm
possible late afternoon (NWS).
Low tide 11:21 am, High Tide 5:07 pm.
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Photo:©2011
Guilain Grenier/Oracle Racing
ETNZ and Energy waged a fierce battle in
Oracle4's wake, vying along with Korea for
second place. The Kiwis eventually
claimed it, which protected a one-point
season lead for them, and Energy took third.
OR5 flirting with disaster in the Speed
Trial.
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
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Saturday Nov 19:
Energy and Oracle4
in a Match Racing Showdown, Saturday. The
#1-seeded French challenger, skippered by Yann
Guichard, lost 2-0 to James Spithill and crew.
Photo:©2011 Guilain Grenier/Oracle Racing
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America's
Cup World Series San Diego
Finals: Saturday Nov 19
Match
Race Championship Final:
Energy versus Oracle4
Best of Three Series
Also
Placing Matches preceding the Final:
ETNZ versus Artemis (3rd-4th)
Aleph versus Oracle5 (5th-6th)
Korea defeats GreenComm (7th-8th)
Placing matches are one race each pair.
China has placed 9th
See Brackets
First race
start scheduled for 1:05 pm PT.
Race 1
(7th-8th Placing):
Korea versus GreenComm. Despite penalty
at the start, Korea sailed conservatively,
until they found separation and passed the
Spanish. Team Korea places 7th, beats
GreenComm who places 8th.
Race 2
(5th-6th Placing):
Aleph versus Oracle5, start at 1:50 pm.
Aleph rolls Oracle5 early, 16-second delta at
first leeward gate. 30 seconds lead to FRA at
the top gate. Oracle5 closes slightly, but
the French maintain a lead coming into Gate 5
while Oracle finds a hole and drops back, the
lead slipping from 90m to 300m. Aleph wins by
48 seconds to take 5th place, Oracle5 6th.
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Race 3
(3rd-4th):
ETNZ versus Artemis, start at 2:15 pm, early
lead to ETNZ delta 12 seconds, they take the
right side with better pressure. ETNZ
turns left, bad wind shift forces Artemis to
follow at the last minute, ceding more time
to ETNZ, 200m lead downwind. Aggressive
moves from the trailing Swedes on the last
upwind, lead closing to 140m, but the Kiwis
give a loose cover with the last windward
gate coming up. The boats split on the
last downwind, ETNZ taking the right side,
taking a calculated risk, but no room for
Artemis to exploit it. Kiwis cruising
to the finish, beating Artemis to claim 3rd
place.
Finals:
Energy versus Oracle4 (Spithill) in
best-of-three series. First race
underway at 2:40. Early lead to Energy.
Spithill find better wind on Leg 5 and reels
them in, getting a left shift, tries to
cross, and makes it. Dial down before the
mark punishes Energy more. 18-second
delta for Oracle at the top gate.
Oracle wins and takes a 1-0 lead in the
Finals. Second race, Oracle does it again,
this time a slight lead that they maintain
throughout the race, wins the Match Race
Final 2-0 over Energy!
Conditions:
Winds WSW 9 mph (WindFinder).
Winds SSW 6-8 kts becoming W, morning rain
should clear by 10 am (NWS).
Low tide 10:18 am, High Tide 3:50 pm, flood
current for most races, maximum current
predicted at 12:55 pm, slack water at 4:00
pm.
back to top
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Energy ramped it up on Friday, beating Artemis
2-0, to meet Oracle4 in the Finals.
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
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Friday:
The Boss Stick: Larry
Ellison takes the helm of Oracle4 following their
victory in the Semi-Finals.
Photo:©2011 Guilain
Grenier/Oracle Racing |
America's Cup
World Series San Diego
Semi-Finals: Friday - Nov 18
Match Race
Championship:
Semi-Final Match
#1:
#2 Seed ETNZ vs. #3 Seed Oracle4 (Spithill)
Semi-Final Match
#2:
#1 Seed Energy vs. #4 Seed Artemis
First Race Start
Scheduled for 1:05 pm.
Each Semi-Final Match is best of three races.
Friday Races:
SF1 Race 1:
Oracle4 beats ETNZ to take 1-0 series lead.
SF2 Race 1:
Energy beats Artemis to take 1-0 series lead.
SF1 Race 2:
Oracle4 beats ETNZ again, taking the match 2-0 to
advance to the Match Race Finals.
SF2 Race 2:
Underway! Artemis ahead early but Energy passes
on Leg 2, still leads by 23 seconds after Leg 3,
and continues to extend with the last gate coming
up. Wind is slipping, and Artemis loses
pace. Energy gybes home for the finish line,
and Loďck Peyron's "Dudes" beat Artemis 2-0 and
move on!
Energy and
Oracle4 Spithill) will meet in the Match Race
Final Series on Saturday.
|
Energy advances to the Match
Race Final.
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
Thursday
Outlook:
Conditions: Wind SW 6-7 mph (WindFinder).
SW 5-7 kts, light and variable (NWS).
High Tide 2:20 pm.
Preview:
The Swedes find themselves the meat in a
French sandwich today, having battled a sizzling
hot Aleph yesterday to get to the Semi-Finals and
race Energy. With a 1-3-5 finishes, Energy
placed at the top of the fleet in the seeding
races, suggesting that the longtime French
affinity for multihulls is beginning to show
dividends in the America's Cup.
ETNZ vs. Oracle4
(Spithill) is a good pairing, too, a rematch of
the Cascais Match Race Championship Final, which
Spithill won 2-0 over the Kiwis.
|
Emirates was not fast
enough to derail James Spithill and Oracle4 in the
Semi-Finals. Photo:©2011 Chris Cameron/ETNZ
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Thursday:
Photo:©2011
ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
Artemis Racing put an end to Aleph's charge from
8th seed. The French beat their first three
opponents and had taken the lead in Q5 when the
match had to be re-started. Artemis won a
back-and-forth battle on the second try and
advanced to Friday's Semi-Final. |
America's
Cup World Series San Diego:
Thursday - Nov 17
Match
Race Championship:
Qualifying Races Today
First Race Start Scheduled for 1:05 pm
Each qualifying match today is a single
18-minute race between the competitors,
pairings as follows:
Match |
Aleph (W) |
Q1
|
China
(L) |
Oracle5 (W) |
Q2 |
GreenComm (L) |
Korea
(L) |
Q3 |
Aleph (W) |
Oracle5
(L) |
Q4 |
Aleph (W) |
Artemis (W) |
Q5 |
Aleph
(L) |
Artemis
advances to Semi-Final Friday |
See Full MRC Pairings/Brackets |
Q1:
Complete! Aleph beats China.
Q3: Q3 will
be the second match held today, with Q2
delayed due to problems on Oracle5. Start at
1:45 pm. Aleph gets a jump at the start and
round ahead of Korea at the first mark. Aleph
wins again!
Q2: Start at
2:15 pm. Oracle5 into early lead. Oracle5
beats GreenComm, advances to face Aleph in
Q4.
Q4: Start at
2:45 pm. Aleph leads, but Oracle5 gaining
with two legs to go. Aleph wins a third time
today!
Q5: Aleph
takes a penalty in pre-start for late entry,
manages to catch up in first beat,
port-starboard situation near boundary
green-flagged by umpires. Minutes
later, with Aleph flying away on a 4-knot
speed differential the race was cancelled due
to technical difficulties as Race Management
loses ability to manage course boundaries.
Q5 Re-Rerun:
Second start, Aleph fails to keep clear, gets
penalized again in pre-start and is 35
seconds behind at Mark 2, wind dropping to 4
knots. Artemis extends lead to 1:04
after first upwind. Big pressure for
the French who chose the correct left side,
flying a hull with 3+ knot speed advantage to
claw back 100m from Artemis midway through
the fourth leg. With one gybe less than
Artemis, the French recoup another 75m by the
Mark 4 rounding and capture the lead at
beginning of last beat!
"Aleph likes the left!" shouts Geordie
Shaver, as the top boats exchange the lead on
VirtualEye. At Mark 5, Artemis finds
the two meters they need to tack ahead of the
French. Terry cheers "We're in a
Match!" Seven seconds ahead, the Swedes
are first to gybe, opening the door again and
leaving the French on the left side of the
course. Iain Percy guides Artemis to a
nice line of breeze as they extend to finish
40 seconds ahead of the French. "Live
to fight another day," Terry Hutchinson
declares, congratulating the team for a race
well sailed. Artemis will race Energy on
Friday in the Semi-Finals.
The loss puts an end to Aleph's outstanding
performance, which notably was Pierre
Pennec's first Match Racing exercise onboard
an AC45, beating China, Korea, and Oracle5
(Coutts)!
|
Aleph
dispatched China, Korea, and Oracle5 before
nearly beating Artemis, too. Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles
Martin-Raget
Thursday
Outlook:
Conditions:
Wind WNW 10 mph, dropping to 8 mph late
afternoon (WindFinder).
Wind NW 7 kts (NWS).
High Tide 12:46 pm, ebb tide during racing.
Preview:
Two teams stand out to watch in the
Qualifying Match brackets. Korea
stormed from a #6 seed into the Match Race
Finals in Plymouth, and by team skipper Chris
Draper's own admission they have focused much
more preparation on match racing than on the
fleet racing that gave them a #5 seed this
time. The newest face at the helm here
is Darren Bundock, stepping in for Russell
Coutts on sixth-seeded Oracle5.
Yesterday, Bundock rocketed into an early
lead in Seeding Race 1 and stayed there,
showing a good hint of why Russell picked
him. But what does Bundock bring to the
table for match racing? Fans and
competitors will be curious to find out.
Which is not
to look past Aleph and China, who both
notched their first fleet race wins this
week, and GreenComm, who improved to a third
in Race 3 yesterday. The reward for the
hot boat among the bottom five seeds is a
battle against Artemis for a slot in Friday's
Semi-Finals. Everybody is getting
better, and Match Racing today should provide
a good gauge of progress across the line-up.
Darren
Bundock's ACWS Match Race debut was a Q2
victory over GreenComm, but Oracle 5 lost to
Aleph in Q4. Photo:©2011 Guilain
Grenier/Oracle Racing
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Wednesday: |
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Oracle5 made it look easy at first, winning the
first of the three Match Racing Championship
seeding races Wednesday. The 6th Seed
overall, they will face GreenComm in Q2 Thursday.
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget |
America's
Cup World Series San Diego:
Wednesday - Nov 16
Artemis won
Race 2, earned 4th seed, and will race
Thursday in Qualifier 5. Photo:©2011 Chris
Cameron/ETNZ
Match Race
Championship starts today:
Three Seeding Fleet Races: Start time 1:05 PM
PT
One Long (40-min)/Two short (18-min)
Followed by Speed Trial (Two Runs per Boat)
Race 1:
Complete
Oracle5 (Coutts), skippered by Bundock sails
into the lead and stays there. Delta 39
seconds to ETNZ in second, Energy third, with
2 legs to go. And they finish in that order!
Korea 4th, Oracle4 (Spithill) 5th, China 6th,
Artemis 7th, GreenComm 8th, Aleph 9th.
Race 2:
Complete
Started at 2:10 pm. Korea into early
lead, followed by ETNZ and Energy.
Penalty before the start for Oracle5. Finish:
Artemis wins! Korea 2nd, ETNZ 3rd, Oracle4
4th, Energy 5th, Aleph 6th, China 7th,
Oracle5 8th, GreenComm 9th.
Race 3:
Complete
Started 2:50 pm. Oracle4 was OCS. GreenComm
into the early lead, Energy 2nd, Artemis 3rd.
Energy rounds top mark first, GreenComm close
in second, Artemis 3rd. At the finish: Energy
1st, Oracle4 2nd, GreenComm 3rd, Artemis 4th,
ETNZ 5th, Oracle5 6th, Aleph 7th, Korea 8th,
China 9th.
Energy wins,
and takes the top seed for Match Race
Brackets!
See results and Thursday's Qualifying
Pairings
|
Conditions:
Winds WNW 8 mph (WindFinder).
Winds E 5-10 mph, becoming N (NWS).
High Tide 11:32 am/Low tide 7:18 pm means ebb
current during racing.
Watch it:
Full streaming coverage online
YouTube Channel and some in-state
television options, plus the
webcam.
Team New Zealand didn't win a race today, but
performed consistently enough to lock up the
#2 Seed. Photo:©2011 Chris Cameron/ETNZ
Wednesday
Outlook:
Things get more serious today after
Tuesday's relatively light hearted
press conference with the skippers.
Today's three fleet races serve to set up the
qualifying brackets for the next three
days of match racing to determine the San
Diego Match Race Championship. The top
three seeds have a much easier path, but as
Team Korea proved in Plymouth, seeding is not
destiny.
Forecast is
for lighter winds, along with some currents,
which may put a little more premium on
exploiting local knowledge. The seeding
races in Plymouth were topped by the familiar
names or ETNZ, Artemis, and Oracle5 (Coutts),
but last Sunday's exhibition fleet races saw
ETNZ and Artemis battling it out just to
avoid last place in the second race of the
day, evidence of how quickly these races can
get away from anyone.
Also of
interest to watch in these races is how the
new OCS rule and signaling system will
promote aggressiveness about being over the
line or not.
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Sunday: |
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America's Cup
World Series San Diego:
Sunday - Day 2
Cats on the move in San
Diego.
Photo:©2011
ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
Fleet Racing
Today Nov 13: Three Races
First Race start scheduled for 1:05 pm PT.
One 40-minute
race followed by two 18-minute races. If time
permits, the postponed Race 3 from Saturday will
also be sailed.
Race 1: Underway!
ETNZ leading handily takes first. Oracle4
(Spithill) 2nd, Energy 3rd, Korea 4th, Aleph 5th,
Artemis 6th, China 7th, Oracle5 8th, GreenComm
9th.
Race 2: Start at
2:10 pm PT. Wind has picked up a bit. Energy in
the lead at the first mark, ETNZ got the shut out
at the line, blocked by the RC boat and had to
circle behind the line before starting. Two
penalties on Korea. Oracle5 into the lead,
edges past Energy, but gets a penalty in the
process and has to slow, letting Energy and Aleph
pass.
Aleph wins! This
is Aleph's first Fleet Race win, their best
previous finishes being two 4th places in
Plymouth. Korea 2nd, Oracle5 3rd, Energy 4th,
Oracle4 5th, GreenComm 6th, ETNZ 7th, China 8th,
Artemis 9th.
Race 3: Start at
2:50 pm PT. Artemis Wins!
Race 4 (Re-try
for postponed race from Saturday): Start at
3:30 pm PT. Energy Wins!
Read Day 2 Team Statements
ETNZ wins the
Port Cities Challenge overall. Oracle4 (Spithill)
is second, Artemis is third.
Click to see Port Cities fleet race results
|
Day 2 Outlook:
Weather:
Winds W 3-8 mph, veering northerly late (Official).
Winds WNW 8-10 mph (Windfinder).
Wind W 5 mph (Weather
Underground). Calm wind becoming W at 5
mph (NOAA).
Light showers this morning should clear up by race
time.
Upper Deck:
Beautiful weather brought out the crowds on
Sunday. Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
Update: Live
coverage is now streaming today on the
America's Cup YouTube Channel, despite earlier
word that the first two days of fleet racing would
not be carried on TV or the internet. This
is a "light" coverage" package without onboard
cameras or all four video feeds, but perfectly
workable for following the racing.
Day 2 Preview:
Light winds will again put a premium on
finesse in boat handling, and even more so on
wind-spotting. Representatives from local
towns will be sailing aboard the AC45's today as
part of the Port Cities Challenge. Even
small differences in weight can have a performance
impact on days like this, as weight distribution
and wetted surface influence drag, so as required
by the rules, a system of added weights will be
used to make sure that the boats carry a nearly
equal load even though onboard guests might vary
in size.
Energy was one of
two boats to bring home their first ACWS fleet
race win on Sunday. Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles
Martin-Raget
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Saturday: |
|
ACWS San
Diego:
Saturday - Day 1
Bill Koch,
1992 Defender of the America's Cup with his
America3, was the guest onboard
Oracle4 with James Spithill Saturday.
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
Fleet Racing
Today Nov 12: Three Races
First Race start scheduled for 1:05 pm PT.
Results:
Race 1: Underway in light winds.
Spithill off to an early lead, with guest
1992 America's Cup winner Bill Koch onboard.
At the gate, it's still Oracle4, then
Artemis, Aleph, and China. Wind staying
light, water f-l-a-t, it's Oracle5 into the
lead, followed by China. At the finish,
Artemis wins, ETNZ 2nd, Oracle4 (Spithill)
3rd, Oracle5 (Coutts) 4th, China 5th, Korea
6th, Energy 7th, Aleph 8th, GreenComm 9th.
Race 2: 2:25
pm: Start Abandoned due to wind shift.
Correction, despite earlier reports, racing
is not abandoned for the day, but PRO will
try to get another start at about 20 minutes
after the hour, 3:20 pm, now 3:30 pm looks
firm. RC is determined to get the race
in if possible. Race 2 is underway!
Wind is a bit better, though rain is coming
down steadily.
China wins
Race 2! Oracle5 2nd, Emirates TNZ 3rd,
Artemis 4th, Energy 5th, GreenComm 6th, Aleph
7th, Oracle4 (Spithill) 8th, Korea 9th.
The win for
China is their first in America's Cup AC45
Fleet Racing. Their previous best finish was
a third in the seeding fleet races on
September 15 in Plymouth.
See
Port Cities Challenge Results
Also:
See Day 1 Team Statements
Racing Resumes tomorrow, scheduled for 1:05
pm PT.
Artemis finding some air on Day 1. Click
image to enlarge and read more.
Photo:©2011
ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
Observations from
Day One of the America’s Cup World
Series in San Diego, from Diane Swintal:
Emirates
Team New Zealand and Artemis Racing finished
the day equal on points. However, ETNZ was
given the lead since they had finished higher
than Artemis in the second race.
San Diego
has been paying attention to what works and,
despite a Day One weather outlook that kept
all but the hardiest of sailing junkies at
home, put together a race village layout that
was simple and easy for spectators.
Team bases are concentrated mostly on the
Navy Pier, with the media center and viewing
areas on the adjacent Broadway Pier.
Rather than having the boats hidden behind
shrouds and ornate compounds, the AC45s are
moored between the two piers, with the public
able to watch the boats set up and head out
to the race course which is right in front of
both piers. And if you’re on the USS
Midway, high above the waterline, you have
the best seat in the house. Though on
the cold and rainy first day, the best seat
in the house might very well have been a
window seat at the (warm, dry, and well
lubricated) Fish House.
The crowd:
Interestingly, the ACEA has no plans to add
bleachers to the end of Broadway Pier,
preferring to maintain the “open space”
concept. Fine in theory -- but trying
to catch the action behind a five-deep crowd
isn't so easy in practice.
The art of racing in the rain, viewed from
the Broadway Pier on Day 1 of the America's
Cup World Series San Diego.
Photo:©2011
ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
The race
course:
Reaching legs, discarded for the ACC and
Version 5 Cup races, and multiple marks are
great for the AC45s, which accelerate off a
dime -- though a challenge for spectators or
announcers, since keeping track of where the
boats have been and where they are going (is
this Lap Two, or Lap Three???) reads sort of
like a Scandia Race Week course guide.
Passing
lanes:
The AC45s have passing capabilities the
monohull Cup boats could only dream of.
Case in point: Artemis Racing and Emirates
Team New Zealand had nightmare starts in the
first race on Saturday, well behind for much
of the early part of the race -- only to find
themselves on the correct end of wind shifts
and maneuvers that put them into first and
second place, respectively. If they had
been as far out of contention in the Version
5 boat as they were on Saturday, the
television coverage would have stopped
showing them.
The
announcers:
Cup veterans Peter Isler and Annie Gardner
ably handled the commentary for everyone
watching from the pier areas. Isler and
Gardner delivered the race analysis with a
good mix of information for the newbie and
insight for the seasoned Cup viewer.
Next up:
On Sunday morning, Mike Martin, the Director
of Umpiring and Rules Administration for the
America’s Cup Regatta Management, will give
us the 411 on the new illumination array on
the back of the boats dubbed the "Christmas
Tree” for its flashing red and green lights.
Y Flags are so last decade.
Read more about the Christmas Tree in AC45
Tech
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Sweden's
Artemis draws a crowd to the bow of the USS
Midway during training on Friday.
Photo:©2011 ACEA/Gilles Martin-Raget
Saturday Outlook:
The America's Cup World Series in
San Diego opens this weekend with the "Port
Cities Challenge", consisting of three fleet
races each day Saturday and Sunday.
Five of the nine teams will be representing
local California towns as a means of drawing
residents in to root for the crews.
Unlike the first two ACWS events, the first
two days of fleet racing will not be shown
live on TV or the internet, and coverage
will instead begin with the Match Racing
Championship begins on Wednesday.
Weather:
Clearing rain with winds becoming SSE to SSW
6-11 knots by race start, intermittent rain (Official
site). Winds S, 170 degrees at 9
mph, 80% chance of rain (Weather
Underground). Winds SE 17 Knots (Windfinder).
Winds S 10-15 mph, gusting to 20, 90% chance
of rain with possible thunderstorms late
afternoon (NOAA).
Low Tide at 4:07pm, currents will be near
maximum ebb around race time. A high
surf advisory is also issued for beaches in
the area, but this should not have a major
impact inside the harbor.
Preview:
With two regattas under their belts, some of
the experience and preparation factors should
begin to settle out among the teams.
Even the newer crews have had a chance to get
used to the wingsail and all teams are
adapting to the tactics demanded of the
unconventional race courses, rules changes,
and new technologies of the ACWS. This
is a chance to sail a bit more smoothly,
focus on execution, and continue learning in
anticipation of launching the big AC72 yachts
next year.
Event
organizers will also be hoping to show off
how the new racing program works both as
sport and spectacle close-in to a major city,
and demonstrate that the AC45 catamarans can
provide exciting racing here, dispelling
perceptions of light conditions and limited
excitement that linger in some minds from the
1992 and 1995 America's Cup Defenses.
The RC44 regatta in the same waters last
March was a good warm-up, and the reception
the ACWS receives in San Diego should be just
a little preview of what's to come in San
Francisco less than 20 months from now.
Day 1 Morning Report from Diane Swintal at
the ACWS:
Good morning from a rainy (and rather chilly)
San Diego!
For those of you wondering about the fact
that Southern California appears to actually
have weather, remember that following the
lyric “It never rains in California” come the
words “It pours, man, it pours….” With 20
minutes until the warning gun, Point Loma is
barely visible as a steady rain falls.
Click image to
view webcam. Image:© 2011 ACEA
Regatta Director Iain Murray will run three
races today and again tomorrow in the Port
Cities Challenge -- the first being a longer
race of three laps over a race course of
approximately one mile, and two shorter races
that most likely will be two laps on a course
anywhere from .5 to 1.5 mile, depending on
the breeze.
As Murray noted, it’s an “unusual” breeze in
San Diego today, due to the direction the low
pressure is traveling. Rain and wind
will be on the front of each system as it
moves through, with the wind direction
predicted to be from the east -- meaning the
top mark will sit underneath the public
viewing area on the Broadway Pier.
Like the Congressional Cup in Long Beach,
which parks the start line in front of the
Belmont Pier, prompting teams to all but use
the pier pylons as picks,
John Craig,
the Principal Race Officer (PRO), hopes to
bring the action as close to the spectators
as possible -- possibly alarmingly close.
“We will be sailing to a boundary as close as
John can physically do it,” said Murray.
“His goal is to set it two feet off the end
of the Broadway Pier. It creates
problems for us electronically if the mark is
within six lengths of the boundary, so we
have to make sure we can keep the mark
outside that distance. The start will
be just off the Midway."
The historic aircraft carrier will be a prime
viewing spot, and on the pier the lucky
front-row crowd will have a great view, but
less so for those in back with no bleachers
are set up, at least not yet.
“The breeze will fluctuate a great deal as it
comes through the city, so a lot of fortunes
will change approaching the top mark,
depending on how the gusts go through the
buildings. It will require the best
sailors in the world to be on their best to
make the most of today.”
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