Well, yachts is maybe not the right word, exactly, as these vessels are hardly what you might enjoy a leisurely Sunday afternoon sail on! No, these boats are athletically sailed and designed for one thing and one thing only: speed. Their races have been described as "NASCAR on the water" or "Formula One racing" without the cars! Here is a recent CNN piece which explains it all much better than I could.
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The boats are space-age rocketships, rising out of the water to fly on foils, powered by towering wing sails, and crewed by "superhumans."
It can only be the 35th America's
Cup, which began Friday in Bermuda.
The latest edition of sailing's most famous competition is a far cry from yesteryear, when sleek but sluggish
monohulls dueled offshore.
It is being dubbed "F1 on
water" and the similarities are obvious - eye-watering speeds of more than
50 mph, cutting-edge design and materials, intensive telemetry and data-driven
development, and inshore racing close to the fans.
The prize is the Auld Mug -- the
sterling silver America's Cup itself -- first awarded in 1851 and known as the
oldest trophy in international sport.
The event begins with the Louis
Vuitton qualifiers, a round-robin matchracing competition from May 26-June 3
before the knockout series of challenger playoffs from June 4-12.
The America's
Cup Revolution has seen the shift to stadium-style racing, in venues like
Bermuda's Great Sound.
The 35th America's Cup between the
victorious challenger and defender Oracle Team USA (which also takes part in
the qualifiers) is scheduled for June 17-18 and June 24-27.
Each race will last 20-25 minutes
and involve several upwind and downwind legs on Bermuda's Great Sound before
finishing in front of the America's Cup race village.
This "stadium racing" is
an evolution of the last Cup in San Francisco Bay in 2013 and is designed to be
more fan and TV friendly to attract a new audience.
"From a sailing perspective and
also a fan perspective it is a great thing to bring the racing in close,"
says America's Cup chief executive Russell Coutts, a three-time Cup-winning
skipper.
In another break with tradition, all
six teams have been racing against each other in practice on the Great Sound,
throwing up some early contenders and generating plenty of gossip.
It's been a time of intrigue and
scrutiny as hands are revealed for the first time. Have they been showing their
full potential? Probably not. Are they all up to speed? Not yet. Are there
upgrades to come in equipment and new crew configurations in the pipeline? You
bet.
The
Defender
Oracle Team USA, skippered by Australian Jimmy Spithill. The Americans,
bankrolled by Larry Ellison, are aiming for a three-repeat after that remarkable 9-8 victory from 8-1 down against Team
New Zealand in San Francisco. The team includes Australian Olympic Laser gold
medalist Tom Slingsby as tactician.
The Americans have appeared quick in
practice, but they suffered a scare recently when they capsized, although
no-one was hurt and no damage was done to the boat.
"We've shown that we are a hard
team to close out. We're going to fight until the final race, win or lose. The
other teams know that," Slingsby said.
The Challengers
Emirates Team New Zealand are seeking redemption for their
defeat-from-the-jaws-of-victory loss four years ago.
They have a new skipper in
Australian Glenn Ashby, a multihull expert who won the Cup with Oracle in 2010
and was part of the Kiwi crew under Dean Barker in San Francisco. New Zealander
Peter Burling, a gold medalist at Rio 2016, will be on the helm.
The New Zealanders sparked a flurry
of pre-Cup gossip with the introduction of pedal-powered cycling-style grinders
to drive the winches instead of arm-operated ones.
They suffered a blip in practice
recently when Land Rover BAR hit their boat in a maneuver,
losing a day of training for repairs.
"We know Ben well, he is a good
guy but frustration is obviously getting to him and the red mist came down and
it's a lot of damage in a time we can't afford it," said Team NZ chief
executive Grant Dalton.
Land Rover BAR is the entry of four-time Olympic champion Ben Ainslie, who
was instrumental in Oracle's win last time. The Briton's oft-stated goal is to
take back the Auld Mug to the UK for the first time since the inaugural event
around the Isle of Wight in 1851.
Ainslie has assembled a largely
homegrown outfit which draws on the F1 prowess of its chief executive Martin
Whitmarsh, the former boss of McLaren Mercedes.
Land Rover BAR won the 2015-2016
World Series warm-up circuit, but has struggled with the pace of some of the
other teams in practice in Bermuda.
Ainslie played down the incident
with Team New Zealand, calling it a "love tap."
"I wouldn't lay my cards down
on who's got the speed or not until we start racing in the qualifiers,"
Ainslie told CNN.
"That will be the true gauge of
where the teams are. Then even through that series and into the playoffs and
the Cup itself, teams need to be developing if they are going to be
successful."
Artemis Racing is a Swedish syndicate led by Britain's two-time Olympic
champion Iain Percy, who doubles as tactician.
The team were devastated by the
death of Percy's Olympic partner Andrew Simpson in a tragic accident in San
Francisco ahead of the last Cup, but they have been the form team in practice
in Bermuda this spring with their boat dubbed "Magic Blue."
The team is skippered by Australia's
London 2012 gold medalist Nathan Outteridge, with his Olympic crewmate Iain
Jensen as trimmer.
"Our speed is quite comparable
with the top teams but that counts for absolutely nothing." says Percy.
"It's all about the relentless
chasing after improvements and in this team we are very motivated to keep
pushing."
SoftBank Team Japan is a new entry to the competition, but has at its helm Kiwi
veteran Barker, a winner in 2000 who will be sailing in his sixth America's
Cup.
Japanese sailing great Kazuhiko
Sofuku is also on the team alongside countrymen Yugo Yoshida and Yuki Kasatani.
Britain's Olympic bronze medalist Chris Draper is tactician and sailing team
manager. The team have worked closely with Oracle in the build-up.
"Every day you go out on the
water everyone is still improving at a very rapid rate," Barker told AmericasCup.com.
"It definitely rings true for
us that there are always gains to be had right from the first race to the last
race that you do."
Groupama Team France is another newcomer and is led by round-the-world and
offshore sailing great Franck Cammas.
The multihull expert and winning
Volvo Ocean Race skipper nearly lost his foot when he was thrown under the
foils during a training accident in 2015.
The French are considered underdogs
in Bermuda with a learning curve described as "exponential" by
grinder Nicholas Heintz.
The
boats
The boats are essentially identical
48-foot -- reduced from 72ft in 2013 -- twin-hulled catamarans with a 77ft high
rigid wing sail, which rise out of the water on hydrofoils the size of
surfboards to sail three times faster than the speed of the wind and more than
50 mph.
The America's
Cup has always been about pushing the limits of technology in sailing, and
foiling is no exception.
The cutting-edge design element
comes in the foil packages, and the systems developed to move the hydraulic
power around more efficiently.
With no stored power, all the energy
to drive the hydraulics, which adjust the wing and lower and raise the
daggerboards which support the foils, must come from the crew.
Foiling -- when the hulls rise out
of the water -- is the fastest way to sail as it reduces friction.
It was first introduced in 2013 when
the Kiwis spotted a loophole in the laws, and forced the other teams to
scramble to catch up. It has since exploded across every discipline of sailing.
The optimum state is "stable
flight," when the boat maintains a consistent platform on its foils,
particularly through turns. Foiling gybes (when the stern passes through the
wind) became the norm in 2013, foiling tacks (bow turns through the wind) are
now the holy grail.
"The game changer for me was
foiling, we got lucky really," Percy told reporters at a news conference
on London.
"Not only did it provide speed,
which was apparent immediately, but it allowed racing to be very tactical
because boats could turn very fast without losing speed."
The Crews
The AC 45Fs are manned by a crew of
six, broadly divided into the roles of helmsman, wing trimmer, a tactician who
doubles as a grinder and three other grinders.
Rules limit the total crew weight to
525kg, meaning an average of 87.5 kg per man (they are all men).
Teams tend to save weight in their
rear two sailors (helm and wing trimmer) to add to the engine room (the
grinders). In pre-2013 Cups grinders were 100kg-plus giants capable of short
bursts of power.
Now, endurance is key as they need
to keep grinding for the entire duration of a race.
Training programmes have changed
accordingly and sailors have become elite endurance athletes, and in the case
of Team New Zealand, elite cyclists.
"It's beyond anything physical I've ever done,"
Percy told CNN.
The following video from the Bermuda news service will provide a glimpse into what these boats do so well - go fast!
Click Here:
So to say the next couple of weeks will be exciting is a bit of understatement. Regardless of who ultimately wins (and the outcome is far from certain), it will be fun to watch. Check your local TV listings for times of coverage.
That's is for now, friends. Until next time,
Fair Winds,
Old Salt
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