Louis Vuitton Trophy Dubai: Press Releases
Fleet Racing - Regatta Day 1
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Day 12:
Fleet Racing Changes Up Winners

November 25, 2010

 

Photo:©2010 Gilles Martin-Raget/BMW Oracle Racing
Mascalzone andAll4One won in Fleet racing on Day 12 of the LVT Dubai. Semifinals begin Friday.
 


On this page, LVT Dubai Fleet Racing/Day 12 Statements:
Louis Vuitton Trophy: Mascalzone Latino and All4One win
BMW Oracle Racing: Getting Ready to Face All4One in Semis
Mascalzone Latino: Italian Team Gives America's Cup Class Appropriate Goodbye
Also: See more photos at Official Event Site and watch live video at SailTV



Mascalzone Leads Fleet Racing at Louis Vuitton Trophy Dubai

   

 

The six international crews at the Louis Vuitton Trophy Dubai hosted local dhow skippers today in three fleet races when competition resumed off the Dubai International Marine Club.  Italy’s Mascalzone Latino Audi won the day handsomely with skipper Gavin Brady scoring two first places.  The French/German team All4One and Sweden’s Artemis Racing were second equal, while Emirates Team New Zealand was third. 

Saeed Hareb, CEO of the Dubai International Marine Club, presented the fleet race trophy to Gavin Brady and  presented commemorative medals to Brady and all his crew. 

The Emirates Team New Zealand crew raced today wearing black arm bands and with their ensign at half mast in a somber reminder of the Pike River coal mine explosion in New Zealand that claimed 29 lives.  The team is planning a brief on-water ceremony tomorrow morning to pay their respects to the lost miners.

Skippers of the four semi-finalists chose their starting positions and their boats tonight.  BMW Oracle Racing chose to race fourth-seeded All4One while Emirates Team New Zealand will start against Synergy Russian Sailing Team.

“We chose All4One simply for the fact that they finished in fourth place,” said James Spithill, skipper of BMW Oracle Racing.  “It’s never an easy decision but at the end of the day you have to go out there and beat them.  It’s going to be a tough race.  They’re not an easy team to race against.”

In the semi-finals the winners will be the first boats to win two races.  The winners will race the finals on Saturday in a best of five series. 

In today’s fleet racing, each of the four teams raced twice over the course of three races. 

Brady’s finishes have been uneven over the past two weeks of racing in Dubai but today he and his afterguard of tactician Morgan Larson, navigator Steve Hayles, and masthead wind spotter Cameron Dunn, made no mistakes on flat water in a very shifty five to seven knot north westerly breeze. 

In his first race Brady claimed the pin end of the line and pulled out to an early lead that increased as the race wore on.  In his second race, Brady went for a port tack start behind the fleet before going up the middle of the course.  He emerged at the weather mark with a commanding lead that he held until the finish.

“We wanted the left in the first race,” Brady said.  “In these light air races you can’t be conservative.  You have to really go for it so we went for a pretty aggressive start down at the pin end.  For the second race we wanted to start to the right.  We didn’t want to sacrifice a tack to get the right so we decided to do something that no-one else has done here and start on port tack and take the stern of all the boats at full speed.”

Race One
Gavin Brady and his Mascalzone Latino Audi pulled off a perfect start at the leeward end of the line, taking command of the left side.  ETNZ made a good start to weather of the Italians but were squeezed out by Synergy Russian Sailing Team which was bow forward and right on top of the Kiwis.  In the early minutes the Kiwis were squeezed out the back and tacked away to port only to have All4One, the right hand boat, tack on top of them leaving them in last place.  The Italian team played the shifts well and extended.  Dean Barker and the Kiwis sailed a good tactical race to pull up to second but finished 01:06 behind Brady. 

Race Points and Overall Points
1.  Mascalzone Latino Audi, 1 pt
2.  Emirates Team New Zealand, 2 pts
3.  All4One, 3 pts
4.  Synergy Russian Sailing, 4 pts

Race Two
New Zealand’s Dean Barker got the best start, bow out on BMW Oracle Racing to leeward and ahead of Sweden’s Artemis Racing and France/Germany’s All4One, both to weather.  Sebastien Col and All4One tacked away to the right while ETNZ spearheaded the group going left.  They converged below the weather mark with Col forcing all three port tack boats to duck behind him.  They rounded overlapped with All4One shooting the mark, Artemis second and the Kiwis third.  The Americans trailed.  The fleet stretched out on the run, rounding in the same order.  They retained the same order on the beat as BMWOR closed up on the New Zealanders and then gybed away.  Positions had not changed at the finish although the Americans brought wind into the finish and almost caught New Zealand.

Race Points
1.  All4One, 1 pt
2.  Artemis Racing, 2 pts
3.  Emirates Team New Zealand, 3 pts
4.  BMW Oracle Racing, 4 pts

Race Three
With dusk approaching fast, the course was shortened to two legs.  BMW Oracle Racing claimed the pin end of the line at the start while.  Mascalzone circled before the gun and started on port tack, ducking the fleet.  Artemis tacked and followed but continued out to the extreme right when Gavin Brady and his Italian crew chose to go up the middle of the course.  The Swedish team found themselves badly overstood in a big shift but still did better than the boats on the left.  Mascalzone rounded the top mark first, followed by Artemis, then Synergy, with BMWOR last.  They finished in that order as the sun set. 

Race Points
1.  Mascalzone Latino Audi, 1 pt
2.  Artemis Racing, 2 pts
3.  Synergy Russian Sailing, 3 pts
4.  BMW Oracle Racing, 4, pts

Overall Provisional Points
  1.  Mascalzone Latino Audi, 1-1, 2 pt
=2.  Artemis Racing, 2-2, 4 pts
=2.  All4One, 3-1, 4 pts
  4.  Emirates Team New Zealand, 2-3, 5 pts
  5.  Synergy Russian Sailing Team, 4-3, 7 pts
  6.  BMW Oracle Racing Team, 4-4, 8 pts

The Louis Vuitton Trophy Dubai is under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Ahmed Bin Saeed Al Maktoum, Chairman and Chief Executive of Emirates Airline and Group, the principal sponsor of the event. 

-- From Louis Vuitton Trophy

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BMW Oracle Racing to Face All4One in Semifinals



Photo: ©2010 Gilles Martin-Raget/BMW Oracle Racing
 

BMW Oracle Racing, winner of the 33rd America’s Cup, will meet All4One, the combined French/German team, in the semifinal round of the Louis Vuitton Trophy Dubai. 

Led by skipper James Spithill of Australia, BMW Oracle  Racing won the right to choose its semifinal opponent by winning the round robin with a 13-2 record. 

“It’s never an easy choice, but we chose All4One simply for the fact that we won the round robin and they finished fourth,” said Spithill, who also could’ve chosen Emirates Team New Zealand (2nd place) or Mascalzone Latino Audi Team (3rd place). 

BMW Oracle  Racing went 2-1 versus All4One in the round robin.  The American team won the first two races in Round 1 and All4One won the only meeting in Round 2. 

“Everyone’s geared up for tomorrow, it should be fun,” Spithill said. 

The winner of the match will be the first to score 2 points in a best-of-three format.  The two semifinal winners advance to the final of the event, scheduled for Saturday.  The wind conditions tomorrow are forecast to be light and racing likely won’t begin before 1:00 pm.

--From BMW Oracle

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Mascalzone Latino Salutes End of America's Cup Class Reign

Fabio Cannavaro, the former captain of Italy’s national football team, World Champion in 2006, will once again be onboard Mascalzone Latino Audi Team in the first match of the semifinals at Louis Vuitton Trophy Dubai.  Stemming from Naples, just like Vincenzo Onorato, he has already been the 18th man onboard Mascalzone Latino in the 32nd America’s Cup pre-regattas.  Cannavaro is a long-time friend and since last June he is in the United Arab Emirates in order to be a defense player, and captain, of Al-Ahli Club, one of the teams taking part in the UAE’s top professional league.

Louis Vuitton Trophy Dubai’s one and only day dedicated to fleet races was sailed today on the waters off the revolutionary Palm Island in very light conditions and was clearly dominated by Mascalzone Latino Audi Team.  Although it was a series of exhibition races that don’t count towards the overall leaderboard, it was impossible to tame Gavin Brady’s (NZL) spirits and the kiwi star match racer showed his aggressiveness since the first race.  A stroke of genius in the first prestart put the “Latin Rascals” ahead of the other three yachts, spot on the pin end of the line.  Mascalzone squeezed out Emirates Team New Zealand and All4One, got an early lead in the first beat and extended up to the first weather mark.  The remaining three yachts were unable to threaten the Italians that bagged their first victory of the day.

The other match sailed by the “Latin Rascals”, third and last of the day, was definitely quieter but nonetheless hardly-fought by Mascalzone Latino: after its initial inconsistent days, the Italian crew couldn’t get enough victories.  Once again, the team sporting the colors of Club Nautico di Roma gave the best of them and fully showed its potential.  After waiting for the right moment to attack the first yacht off the starting line, Artemis, three quarters up the first beat Morgan Larson’s (USA) strategy was starting to bear its fruit and Virtual Eye was showing Mascalzone Latino’s bow ahead of the fleet.  From that point and thanks to a wind shift that was brilliantly spotted, Mascalzone’s lead kept increasing and the race was virtually over.  Brady rounded the first weather mark one minute ahead of his opponents and crossed the finish line in spectacular manner after the race was shortened to two legs.

With these victories Mascalzone Latino writes a piece of history.  It was in 1991 when the legendary “Moro di Venezia”, owned by Raul Gardini and skippered and helmed by Paul Cayard (USA) that won in San Diego, California, the first ever ACC world Championship.  In that occasion too it was in fleet racing.  Today, the last opportunity ever to watch an ACC fleet race, 19 years later, it was again an Italian team, this time owned by Vincenzo Onorato, to dominate the rest of the fleet.  A cycle that will enter the annals of history for being opened and closed with two Italian victories.

During the post race press conference, BMW Oracle Racing chose to face the German-French alliance of All4One in the semifinal races, meaning that Mascalzone Latino Audi Team will have to race against Emirates Team New Zealand in a first-to-two-points series.

Quotes of the day

That’s what Gavin Brady (NZL), skipper and helmsman of Mascalzone Latino Audi Team, had to say about today’s two victories in fleet racing:

“It was a fun day and a good practice for the semifinals that start tomorrow.  We are all competitive, in all the teams, and whenever we get on the start line on these boats to race it’s good to be competitive.  These boats are pretty unique and probably people have mixed feelings but sometimes the fleet racing is as fun to watch as the match racing.  There’s lots of race within the fleet and it was good.  These boats are just fine for fleet racing.”

Gavin went on saying: “Fleet racing is more common but at the end of the day the fundamentals between fleet racing and match racing are very similar.  The basics of sailing still apply; you have to be on the favorite end of the start line, at full speed, get the first wind shift and have good crew work.  If you can have all that, you have a good chance to win, whether it is match racing or fleet racing.  We need to carry on what we did today, tomorrow.  There is just one other boat to worry about and maybe it’s easier.”

Finally, Brady commented on Emirates Team New Zealand, his opponents in tomorrow’s semifinals:

“It’s great to race Emirates Team New Zealand.  It’s very special for me because I’ve grown up sailing against Dean Barker and many of the people onboard that boat.  They are friends on land but archrivals on the water.  We won one race and lost two against them in the round robins.  I feel it is now 2-1 to Dean and now I’ll get a chance to revenge that.  The big difference for us tomorrow is that there is no holding back.  We can just go for it while in Auckland and La Maddalena we had to be a little bit more careful.  You will certainly see a very aggressive style of match racing tomorrow.  We are going to come out tomorrow and be sticking it in there, whenever we can.  We will be very aggressive.”

Il Moro di Venezia won the very first fleet race of this class of boats in 1991.  Now, another Italian boat wins the very last fleet race of the same class.  Morgan Larson (USA), tactician on Mascalzone Latino Audi Team, told us:

“I’m trying to think whether I was alive in 1991.  Raul Gardini was a great hero for the sport and for me, growing up in San Francisco, seeing Paul Cayard with Raul Gardini was a great thing as a child.  I think he got a big impression on a lot of people, especially a lot of the Italian sailors.  It’s very nice for Vincenzo [Onorato] to, sort of, turn the lights off.”

--From Mascalzone Latino Audi Team

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Links of Interest:

Louis Vuitton Trophy: Official Web Site
 


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