AMERICA’S CUP UPDATE

SAN DIEGO HARBOR
SAN DIEGO HARBOR

Hawaii, Newport, San Diego compete to host 2017 America’s Cup

BY RONNIE COHEN

San Francisco Thu Feb 13, 2014 7:12pm

(Reuters) – Hawaii and the coastal cities of Newport, Rhode Island, and San Diego are vying to entice billionaire Larry Ellison to let them host the America’s Cup in 2017, when the contest for the historic sailing trophy will next be held.

Ellison would by all accounts like to keep his Oracle Team USA sailing crew and the 35th America’s Cup matchup in San Francisco. Last year’s competition overcame a host of early difficulties and ended with an epic comeback win for Oracle and widespread praise for the spectacular racing venue on San Francisco Bay.

But despite strong support from San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee, initial negotiations between the city and Oracle team CEO Russell Coutts for the 2017 event have been rocky.

Local politicians who have long opposed any public subsidies for what they deride as a rich man’s yacht race have gained ammunition with a report this week showing that the 2013 regatta cost city taxpayers more than $11 million and created fewer jobs than expected.

That may create an opening for the port of San Diego and Newport, Rhode Island – both of which have hosted multiple Cup regattas in the past – as well as the state of Hawaii, where Ellison owns most of the Island of Lanai.

Coutts confirmed in an email to Reuters on Thursday that, though he is continuing to talk with San Francisco, he is evaluating alternative venues. In the meantime, he plans to release next month the rules for the 2017 event, calling for smaller, less-expensive catamarans than the 72-foot yachts that competed for the Cup last year.

The big boats provided an exciting spectacle. But sailors questioned their safety after a British sailor died in a training accident, while their prohibitive cost limited the field to just four teams and undermined the economics of the event.

It’s unclear whether other locations are being seriously considered or simply being used as negotiating leverage in the San Francisco discussions, but some prominent Cup participants say a return to San Francisco is anything but assured.

“There was a strong desire to go to San Francisco, and I don’t think there’s a lot of confidence that that’s going to happen anymore,” Iain Murray, who was race director for the 2013 contest and is now heading up an Australian Cup challenge, told Reuters this week.

Bob Nelson, chairman of San Diego’s port commission told Reuters that his city would be thrilled to see the return of an event that was held there in 1988, 1992 and 1995.

“As great as San Francisco is as a venue, if there’s no deal to be had there, San Diego is ready,” said Nelson.

“We’re wide-eyed on the fact that San Francisco has invested a great deal of money and that much of that infrastructure remains available,” said Nelson.

Brad Read, executive director of Sail Newport, told Reuters on Wednesday he is filling out a “request for information” to promote Newport as the host city for the next regatta. Read would not divulge the questions in the RFI, saying they are confidential.

Read’s public-access sailing center on Narragansett Bay would make a perfect amphitheater for the 2017 series, he said. Newport hosted the Cup races from 1930 until 1983, whenAustralia broke the United States’ long stranglehold on the 163-year-old trophy known as the Auld Mug.

“Newport is synonymous with the history of the America’s Cup,” Read said. “We have the fan base, and we have the track.”

Hawaii Governor Neil Abercrombie expressed a willingness to do whatever he could to accommodate the races and Ellison.

“The governor thinks it’s a tremendous opportunity, and he’s certainly doing his best to be sure that Hawaii’s favorably considered,” press secretary Justin Fujioka told Reuters.

Negotiations between San Francisco and Ellison’s team were also contentious last time around. Cup officials flew off to Newport at the 11th hour before finally reaching a deal with San Francisco.

Murray said San Francisco remains everyone’s favorite.

“I think every sailor loves sailing in San Francisco. If you did a worldwide poll of sailors, racing on the bay in San Francisco would be right up there,” he said. He praised the San Francisco Bay’s ideal geography, its predictable, strong winds and its scenic backdrop framed by the Golden Gate Bridge.

“All the stars lined up when San Francisco got created for sailors,” he said.

The mayor’s office did not return calls or emails. Lee told Coutts in a December letter that lessons learned from the 34th America’s Cup would guide his approach to the next event.

“I am committed to negotiating an agreement for the 35th America’s Cup in San Francisco … that maximizes the economic, cultural and other benefits for the City and eliminates unnecessary risks and uncertainty,” he wrote.

 

 

FOILING IS HERE TO STAY

Foiling is here to stay. We can never unsee the excitement it evokes.The America’s Cup exposed the world to foiling and anything less will never again be acceptable to the public. This event will be remembered as the defining moment of change in sailing as a sport.
I have predicted before and will state again the 2020 Olympic games will feature at least one foiling class if not two.

AMERICA’S CUP MUSINGS

America’s Cup: Rod Davis – still looking for answers after Cup defeat
11:51 PM Sun 5 Jan 2014 GMT 

‘Oracle Team USA vs Emirates Team New Zealand on the Final Race of the 2013 America’s Cup’    Carlo Borlenghi/Luna Rossa©   Click Here to view large photo


Emirates Team NZ coach, Rod Davis, admits he is still a bit stunned, three months after the conclusion of the 34th America’s Cup, and the shock loss by the Challenger, after being on Match Point. 

Part of Davis’ post-Cup frustration-relief therapy is to go sailboat racing every chance he can – and by is own admission, that is a lot of sailing, at present.

‘It’s still hard to believe that we out-prepared Oracle by that much, ahead of this regatta, and lost the regatta’, he says with the incredulity of the 9-8 result, still to fully register.

‘It is hard to come to grips with it. Normally when you out-prepare a team by that much in any sport, you come away with a victory. And it didn’t happen that way.’

‘Suddenly Oracle ended up with a better package, and that’s amazing and depressing!’

For sure, the America’s Cup Defender, Oracle Team USA, realized they were well off the pace in the early stages of the regatta, and began to play for time.

Their first ploy was using their Postponement Card on just the third day of racing when they only had one win from five races, and Emirates Team New Zealand were just two race days away from winning their third America’s Cup.

At the time Regatta Director Iain Murray commented that the Postponement Card was intended to allow boats to recover from structural damage, not call for a time-out to allow them to re-group. But this was not stated in the rules, and Oracle Team USA elected to pull the pin on the racing after being passed again, sailing to windward on Leg 3 – a race which Emirates Team NZ went on to win by 65secs.

‘If you look at the results, we had 19 races in the regatta, and at the near half-way point, after the first nine races, we were six wins and three losses’ says Davis. (Two Oracle wins where spent to offset a Jury imposed penalty, so the points score was 6-1 at that stage.)

‘And after the next ten races, we were two wins and eight losses. So the trend was that Oracle was getting stronger all the way through. But in the second half of the series, we couldn’t buy a break’, says the Olympic Gold and Silver medalist, with the frustration and disbelief still clear in his voice.’

‘We had three races taken off us, and we were leading in all three. As the clock went on Oracle were getting stronger and stronger. With hindsight maybe we should have pushed to do more racing earlier on in the series.’

‘We had an option to that and we didn’t,’ he says, referring to the decision by both teams not to use a reserve day to make up races lost, early on in the series. Oracle Team USA were later reported to have used the day to make substantial changes to their rudders.

‘Honestly I don’t think anyone appreciated, at that point, it was going make a difference’

08/09/2013 – San Francisco (USA,CA) – 34th America’s Cup – Final Match – Race Day 2  ACEA – Photo Gilles Martin-Raget?nid=118184

‘The call was made not to race on the Reserve Day (September 16)’ says Davis. ‘As to why? You’d have to ask Emirates Team NZ upper management.’

‘So you look back at it, and see it differently now’ he reflects.

Davis believes the key error made by Emirates Team New Zealand was showing their hand too early on the foiling of their first AC72.

‘The major mistake that I see in the campaign was letting the world know we were foiling way too early. From a Sponsor, Press and Public point of view it was a coup, but for the big picture and winning the Cup, it was a liability’ he says.

He discounts the notion that regardless of Emirates Team NZ’s first foil-borne flypast up the Waitemata Harbour, and subsequent foiling with TVNZ on board, the other teams, with their spy and surveillance programs, would have spotted the foiling AC72 anyway.

‘They didn’t know the extent of it, however. We could have kept the extent of it a lot quieter.’

‘It wouldn’t have happened in the Russell Coutts’ era of Team New Zealand. In 2000, they changed bows out on the water, out of sight of spies, so nobody knew they were doing it,’ he recalls.

‘It says something that if you want to keep secrets, then you have got to be damn serious, truly committed, about keeping secrets,’ he adds.

Responding to a question on the wind limits and the effect they had on the racing, Davis believes that both teams got it wrong.

‘The funny thing about the wind limits is that Oracle wanted to lower the wind limits and wanted them a lot lower. We said ‘no, we’ll go from 33kts to 25kts’, and Oracle wanted it down at 20kts, because they wanted to position the limit low in the wind range, because they thought they had a good downrange boat, and our big powerful boat was going to be a good up range boat.’

‘But we get into the America’s Cup and it’s all wrong!’

‘We’ve got the light air boat and Oracle have got the heavy air boat. Halfway through the series Oracle was pushing to have the wind limits increased again! (Wanted the base limit increased from 23-25kts, which was rejected by Emirates Team NZ as they didn’t want a change mid series click here).

‘How do both teams get it so wrong?’ he asks.

ETNZ fully lifted during a recent training day  Graeme Swan   Click Here to view large photo

Superstitious New Zealand fans should have known something was likely to happen in Race 13, given their team’s complete lack of luck in the preceding nine days of racing.

The abandonment of Race 13 when the New Zealanders had a lead of 1000 metres, just short of the finish when the 40 minute time limit expired, caused widespread disbelief, given that AC72’s had been sailing at speeds of up to 20kts.

‘I guess no-one really understood that you couldn’t start a race in eight knots and not finish within the time limit.’ Davis explains…..

‘I don’t think that Oracle knew that any better than anyone else at the time, although they may claim they did now, because Oracle was pushing to race in light with thinking (wrongly) they were going to be quicker in eight knots.

‘We knew the time limit was going to be close, but nobody that I know of can say that before that race started, that you could not finish, if you had to use a gennaker or Code Zero.’

‘Iain Murray never knew that, none of the other teams knew that. Oracle says they knew it after the fact.’

‘We had just never sailed a San Francisco race in that light a breeze before,’ he added.

Davis has sailed in 11 America’s Cup campaigns, for four different national teams – as a coach and a sailor. Many consider ‘Hot Rod’ to be the consummate hired gun. Now the tide is running the other way with many wanting a return to the stronger nationality requirements that existed prior to 2007, and even a return to the near absolute nationality rule that existed from 1958 to 1983, and was only seriously diluted after the 2003 America’s Cup, by new Defender Alinghi, who sailed in 2007 with one Swiss National aboard.

‘It’s not what I think (Davis says he is in favor of a nationality rule) but it’s what Oracle thinks’ he responds. ‘Oracle is talking about a nationality clause, but if you look at it, why would they want a nationality clause? They only had one American on the boat this time. It makes no sense.’

‘Sometimes you don’t listen to what people say; you watch their position and figure that they will do what’s best for them. I can’t see a nationality clause coming out of Oracle.’

‘I don’t think Larry Ellison cares if there are not a lot of Challengers, so long as he hangs onto the Cup. I don’t think we will see much change in the nationality rule,’ he concludes.

America’s Cup – Artemis Racing foiling on their AC45 in San Francisco  Sander van der Borch?nid=118184_- Artemis Racing ©

With the Protocol for the next America’s Cup now not expected to be announced until at March, a least. Davis is more than a little skeptical about the reality of cost reduction. With his long America’s Cup experience, he is well aware that cost reduction is a topic that is often discussed, but never delivered.

‘We might see some changes in the one-design components of the boat – to try and make the boats less expensive by saving on designer costs.’

‘To try and make the America’s cup less expensive is a difficult, difficult thing to do. All you need is one team, one guy, who is prepared to spend more money and time and that will drag everybody else in that direction to match them and be competitive.’

‘How are you going to trim the budget by 20%? I don’t see it happening in reality’

‘They want to have the AC45’s racing in the future and do the ACWS type circuit. But that has a cost to it. And should those 45’s be modified to be foiling like the AC boats? If so, that’s going to be more expensive, isn’t it? ‘

‘How do you practically pull cost back? I pity the poor guy who is responsible for that’, he says, shaking his head.

The cynicism that there will be any change in the Nationality rules, coupled with the re-signing of crew by existing teams, is perceived as making it difficult for new teams to get established – and having to start with completely new sailing talent.

As a highly experienced coach, at both America’s Cup and Olympic level, how would Davis approach crew selection and training with a new team?

‘From a sailing team’s perspective, with new young talent you would get stuck into some big, say 60+ feet multi hull racing. And try and get their heads around that. The AC45 will work for them to a certain extent as far as the wings and stuff, because I expect the wings to stay.’

‘You want a good balance of youth and enthusiasm and experience, then let the experienced guys teach the new sailing talent how to deal with these boats and what we know about starting and racing and all that. Then turn the youth lose to use their talent and do what what they love to do, race sail boats’

‘From a design standpoint you are going to have to draft in from other teams as much design talent as you can, but before you can do that you need to have protocol to know what/if you’re designing hulls, boards, wings…

The Challenger of Record, Team Australia look set to emulate this approach – having been unable to sign their established America’s Cup sailors. Instead they are looking to draw on a not insubstantial pool of Olympic and other talent and go without the America’s Cup ‘heavies’.

‘I don’t know if it guarantees a will to win the Cup with that sort of approach,’ says Davis, ‘but you will do a very good job. And the America’s Cup is up for a revolution anyway, in terms of younger, fresher talent in all the sailing teams. There has to be.’

The five time Olympian sees Emirates Team New Zealand as being in a similar situation, having to rejuvenate a long established team.

‘Team New Zealand has gone with the same team from 2007 and that is probably the same core team from more than ten years down the road.

‘I think there has to be a new group that comes in. That has to be good news for New Zealand, because New Zealand has got a really good crop of new young sailors coming through right now.

‘They might be a click young, but the passion and talent means they’ll close the gaps pretty damn quick.’

‘The tricky part, and the part that needs clever management is the balance of experience and youthful aggression. That is not something that just happens, it takes insight to all the different perspectives; the new talent, the experienced veterans, and both their Olympic and AC aspirations. All this has to be blended into dominant, across the board successes. It can be done, it’s tricky to do but must be done’

 

by Richard Gladwell

Rod is an old friend, we sailed against one another in the 1977 america’s cup summer in twelve meters, both of us were bowmen.  I always felt that a good bowman already knew what the helmsman would do before he did, being able to anticipate was key.

AMERICA’S CUP 34 LOOKING BACK

ac 1 ac2 ac3 ac4 ac5 ac6 ac7 ac8 ac9

 

The America’s Cup 34 will be remembered for many reasons. Perhaps the most significant is that it has defined sailing going forward. It will be the historical reference of the change from what was and what will be. Indeed the fulfillment of Russell Coutts prediction of the Flintstone generation and the Facebook generation.

I have stated before and will state again, the next Olympics, not the upcoming event, there will be at least one foiling class if not two.

PRETTY BOATS

INDEPENDENCE LOOKING AT COURAGEOUS
INDEPENDENCE LOOKING AT COURAGEOUS
COURAGEOUS BEGINNINGS
COURAGEOUS BEGINNINGS
ALMOST BLACK AND WHITE
ALMOST BLACK AND WHITE
CLASSICS RUNNING
CLASSICS RUNNING
NORTHERN LIGHT AND ONAWA
NORTHERN LIGHT AND ONAWA
VANITY
VANITY
COURAGEOUS TO WINDWARD
COURAGEOUS TO WINDWARD
COURAGEOUS WITH NEFERITTI
COURAGEOUS WITH NEFERITTI
INTREPID AND COURAGEOUS
INTREPID AND COURAGEOUS
EASTERNER
EASTERNER

Twelve meters are elegant yachts. It is practically impossible to photograph them poorly. I had a long relationship with the 12 meter class; having lofted and built “Courageous” and having sailed on “American Eagle”, Weatherly, “Easterner” and “Intrepid” in the sixties and seventies.

They are still eight knots boats and after the last America”s Cup we will never be satisfied with anything that does not foil and sails at less than thirty knots.

THE NUMBERS ARE OUT

San Francisco sees little economic benefit from America’s Cup

Posted on 

 

San Francisco is still in the red from hosting the 34th America’s Cup, which so far has cost taxpayers at least $5.5 million.

That’s according to draft financial figures from the regatta that the San Francisco Chronicle reviewed Monday.

However, that spending allowed the city to host an event that drew more than 700,000 people to the waterfront over roughly three months of sailing and generated at least $364 million in total economic impact, according to draft figures from the Bay Area Council Economic Institute.

That figure rises to more than $550 million if the long-planned construction of a new cruise ship terminal, which the regatta served as a catalyst to finally get built, is factored in, according to the Chronicle.

But even the higher number is well below the $902 million in economic benefit that was projected in March, a few months before the races were held, the newspaper reported. And it’s a far cry from the $1.4 billion economic boost that was originally predicted in 2010, when the races were billed as trailing only the Olympics and soccer’s World Cup in terms of economic impact.

The real costs and benefits of hosting the regatta — which the Chronicle called the most prestigious competition in competitive sailing and this year was the source of one of the most stunning comebacks in international sports — are expected to be in the spotlight as Mayor Ed Lee prepares to submit a preliminary proposal for hosting the next Cup by a Dec. 22 deadline.

The city spent $20.7 million to hold the event, according to the latest figures from Lee’s office. That number does not include more than $180 million in long-planned improvements around the waterfront that were finally completed in advance of the event. The most notable was the new cruise ship terminal at Pier 27, which is only partially finished.

Ongoing private fundraising, which was intended to help cover the city’s event costs and initially pegged at $32 million, has so far only reimbursed $8.65 million to taxpayers while also covering other obligations. If the net increase in city tax revenue of $6.6 million during the event is factored in, that still leaves taxpayers $5.5 million in the red.

ORACLE
ORACLE
NEW ZEALAND
NEW ZEALAND
ORACLE AND NEW ZEALAND
ORACLE AND NEW ZEALAND

EVER CHANGING SHAPE OF SPEED

SHAPES OF SPEED 2
SHAPES OF SPEED 2
SHAPES OF SPEED
SHAPES OF SPEED
RAGAMUFFIN AT THE NEEDLES
RAGAMUFFIN AT THE NEEDLES
AMERICAN EAGLE REACHING THROUGH THE ANCHORAGE
AMERICAN EAGLE REACHING THROUGH THE ANCHORAGE
UFFA FOX AND COWSLIP
UFFA FOX AND COWSLIP
DICK CARTER AND RED ROOSTER
DICK CARTER AND RED ROOSTER
THE GRAND PRIZE "THE ADMIRAL'S CUP"
THE GRAND PRIZE “THE ADMIRAL’S CUP”
THE NEW BENCHMARK
THE NEW BENCHMARK
SPEEDBOAT
SPEEDBOAT
VOLVO 70
VOLVO 70

Every sailor wants a boat that is faster than his opponent. An edge that allows for errors in judgment. The achievement has been interrupted often because of rating rules; which attempt to make unequal boats equal. The disparity has now grown to a point where it is silly. Not that it was ever perfect.

Uffa Fox sitting on the upper balcony of his house in Cowes watching over the boats returning from a day’s racing, worked towards planing hulls, light and strong.

Dick Carter, so well known for fast boats that two of his designs were chosen for Admiral’s Cup teams before they were finished; i.e. untested.

Süd Fischer’s “Ragamuffin” , for me was not only the fastest of her time but the best sailed.

The just finished America’s Cup has changed the paradigm of the search for speed under sail.

GOODBY STRETCH

We are in San Diego racing in the International Masters Regatta with a contingent from 1977 when we received a telephone call with the news.
Eight Bells for Stretch Ryder

We are very sad to report from Port Washington, New York, the passing of a wonderful friend and sailor- Gould “Stretch” Ryder.  Stretch is best known as the winch grinder for Ted Turner aboard Courageous for the 1977 Americas Cup defense against Australia (one).
Stretch fought cancer for the past ten months and leaves behind wife Gerry, sons Michael and Christopher, and many family and friends.
Over the past few weeks Stretch received visitors and calls from all over the country. Every member of the Courageous crew called or visited Stretch. A highlight was last Friday’s visit by half the crew of Courageous, flying in from Montana with Ted Turner on his jet.  Ted, Gary Jobson (tactician), Bill Jorch (navigator) and John “LJ” Edgcomb (bow) exchanged hysterical stories (mostly true) about the 1977 Cup.
Stretch was his communicating and humorous self up to the end. Stretch grew up sailing and playing football and basketball.  Winning the Bacardi Cup racing a Star with Frank Zagarino was a major sailing highlight. At AlfredUniversity he was a tight end.  While serving in the Army, Stretch coached football and flew helicopters in Southeast Asia.   Since 1982 Stretch worked with John Thomson, running marinas, the famous “Barge” Restaurant, and Ventura Aviation.  He raced for decades on John’s famous series of ocean racers and Farr 40s named “Infinity”.  Stretch has been a longtime member of the Storm Trysail Club.
There will be a celebration for Stretch at the Manhasset Bay Yacht Club at 2 pm next Friday afternoon November 1.  All his friends are invited.