Azzurra, the Italian boat with the old name and the young crew, defeated Britain’s TEAMORIGIN in the closest of four hard-fought races on the opening day of the Louis Vuitton Trophy Auckland.
Italian skipper and helmsman Francesco Bruni snatched a victory from
Britain’s three-time Olympic gold medallist Ben Ainslie at the first weather
mark of their race as their boats rounded the mark overlapped. Sailing above the
mark, Ainslie tried to luff his opponent only to see the Italian execute a swift
spinnaker set, sail clear and go on to win.
“Azzurra sailed a good race
today, they seem to have a knack of overtaking us which is getting very
frustrating!” Ainslie said. “We were fully in contention at the top mark and
tried to hold them up, we were unfortunately set up for a gybe set and they were
set up for a straight hoist which allowed them to gain some distance.”
In
their efforts to stay on schedule, the race committee spent a long first day on
the water. In the morning, cloudy skies killed any chance of a sea breeze
developing and delayed racing. The Rangitoto Channel entrance to Auckland
Harbour was so glassy at late morning that Principal Race Officer Peter Reggio
joked that it appeared to have been paved.
The long wait for wind ended
at 2:45pm as the first pair started on the Blue Course at the mouth of the
channel between Rangitoto Island and the Takapuna cliffs. The breeze was five
to seven knots from the northwest. After a second race in similar conditions,
the breeze switched to the south for the third race inside the harbour. The last
race didn’t start until 7:10pm and finished after sunset just before
8:00pm
Race One: All4One def. Mascalzone Latino Audi Sailing
Team, 00:44 – In the draw last night, the German/French boat All4One
chose the starboard entry for the start and they protected the right side in the
pre-start today. They split before the gun with All4One going out to the right
on port tack, while Mascalzone Latino Audi enjoyed an early lead on starboard.
All4One skipper and strategist Jochen Schümann said a man up the mast had
spotted wind out to the right and they chose to concede an early lead to reach
the stronger pressure. All4One eventually tacked to starboard to cover and Gavin
Brady steering the Italian boat initiated a tacking duel. However Sébastien Col
on the helm of All4One had already worked out to a controlling lead on the right
that he never relinquished.
Race Two: Azzurra def. TEAMORIGIN,
00:53 – Great Britain’s TEAMORIGIN enjoyed the starboard entry in its
match against Italy’s Azzurra and used it to advantage in a dialup that took
both boats well above the line before they sailed back with Ben Ainslie on the
British boat chasing Italian Francesco Bruni. Ainslie grabbed the right as they
split away at the gun but Bruni kept it close and when they crossed for the
first time Ainslie on starboard came down and hunted the Italian who tacked
close to leeward and forced the British boat away. It happened again before they
came into the weather mark overlapped, with Ainslie holding his opponent out
from rounding. They tacked above the mark and the British boat luffed the
Italian until Bruni capitalized on a miscommunication on Ainslie’s boat. Bruni
was first to set a spinnaker and rolled over TEAMORIGIN forcing the British boat
to gybe away. From there the Italians controlled the next three legs, finishing
with a comfortable 53 second margin.
Race Three: Emirates Team
New Zealand def. Artemis, 01:40 – Dean Barker overcame the handicap of
a port entry in the pre-start to grab the right side of the course off the start
line. Strong outgoing current and shifty breezes played a major role as Terry
Hutchinson steering Artemis took the fight to Emirates Team New Zealand but
trailed by 55 seconds at the weather mark. Artemis came charging back on the
run to close within 12 seconds at the leeward gate but then lost ground in
lighter air under North Head. The Kiwis extended to win
comfortably.
Race Four: ALEPH Sailing Team def. Synergy Russian
Sailing Team, 03:26 – The Russian boat steered by Karol Jablonski
dominated Bertrand Pacé’s French entry in the pre-start only to see ALEPH
wriggle clear and lead by three boat lengths at the gun. Jablonski kept it very
close, pressuring Pacé on the first beat and was only 11 seconds astern at the
top mark. As the sun set over the Auckland City skyline it was also sunset for
the Russians as they ran over their spinnaker at the leeward mark. The French
sailed away to a comfortable victory.
LIVE Sport Sailing 103.0 FM is
featuring all-day live coverage of the Louis Vuitton Trophy. On television,
during the seven days of the round robin, TVNZ is carrying nightly reports on
its sports news. From March 16, during the elimination rounds, TVNZ will feature
nightly half-hour reports. For the finals on 20th and 21st March there will be
live coverage of the racing from noon to 4:00pm.
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