Extreme Sailing Series™ San Diego - Day 1
by Extreme Sailing Series 19 Oct 2018 06:15 BST
18-21 October 2018
San Diego Bay and its banks were buzzing with activity today as the Extreme Sailing Series™ came to town for the penultimate stop on its 2018 global tour.
The Californian crowds swarmed to Harbor Island as the world-class international fleet of seven GC32s, including a US team, hit the water with force, flying on their foils before the impressive San Diego skyline.
Although glorious sunshine drenched the city from early on, the wind played hard to get in the morning. A slow building breeze caused Race Director John Craig to postpone racing until 15:00 local time, keeping the crowds on the edge of their ringside seats as they awaited the fast and furious on-the-water fight.
"The breeze was forecast to be a little better later in the afternoon," he explained. "We may have started late, but we only lost about half an hour of sailing since I extended the racing beyond the planned 17:00 finish. We got six great races in today, I'm very pleased about that."
The delay only increased excitement and added to the incredible atmosphere in the US city, as spectators looked forward to the commencement of the highly anticipated Stadium Racing championship.
The first day of the Californian competition did not disappoint, with the teams launching themselves off the start line with vigour. True to form, current Series frontrunners Alinghi took four wins out of six, cementing themselves as the ones to beat in San Diego.
Not content in the shadow of the Swiss, Phil Robertson's Oman Air seized every opportunity to snatch precious Series points from their opponents. The Omani squad, who have consistently ranked third overall throughout the year, saw day one in San Diego as their time to shine; the team took five podiums out of six, closing the day in second place.
"The wind definitely kept us on our toes today," he laughed. "We had an increasing breeze that then suddenly died – it made for a lot of gear changes on board! We're still trying to find our feet a bit. It was a good day, but we'd love our scores to be even better."
A few podium finishes were scattered across Red Bull Sailing Team's scores too, following a crew shake up for the San Diego Act. With double Olympic gold medallists Roman Hagara and Hans Peter Steinacher back onboard, and bolstered by Kiwi Tokyo 2020 hopeful Micah Wilkinson, the team took a fair few chunks out of their competitors' points, securing podium finishes in half of the day's races.
"We're effectively a new team for this Act," said Steinacher, who is trimming the mainsheet on the GC32 for the first time this year. "Micah is doing a great job on the foils, and Roman and I are back for some action too. We were taking it easy today and having a lot of fun on board – that's the main thing for us."
Providing an air of familiarity being so close to home, Extreme Sailing Series San Diego, presented by SAP, is one of the Acts that Team México have been preparing for since they first stepped foot on the circuit. With the lights of Tijuana, on the other side of the border, visible from the bay, the boys on board the Mexican boat zoomed around the course with purpose, enjoying every moment.
There was similar motivation for local team Element Spark Compass – a team backed by two of the latest Series partners. After a glamour day's sailing on home waters, spent learning about their GC32 and foiling around San Diego Bay to cheers of the crowds, the crew stepped onto the dock smiling at the end of racing.
"It's so great to have a US event on the Extreme Sailing Series," said a pleased Taylor Canfield, US match racing champion and skipper for the team. "It's our first event of the season so we're still figuring things out. We have no doubt that we can be strong contenders here in San Diego."
The GC32 racing at Extreme Sailing Series San Diego, presented by SAP, is scheduled to continue tomorrow from 14:00 local time. An extensive Race Village offering complements the racing, with kiteboarding, Go Sea Quest simulators and ICON Aircraft displays bolstering tomorrow's action on the water.
For more information, please visit the event website.
Results after Day 1: (six races)
1st Alinghi (SUI) Arnaud Psarofaghis, Nicolas Charbonnier, Timothé Lapauw, Bryan Mettraux, Yves Detrey: 68pts
2nd Oman Air (OMA) Phil Robertson, Pete Greenhalgh, James Wierzbowski, Stewart Dodson, Nasser Al Mashari: 60pts
3rd SAP Extreme Sailing Team (DEN) Rasmus Køstner, Adam Minoprio, Julius Hallström, Pierluigi de Felice, Richard Mason: 56pts
4th INEOS Rebels UK (GBR) Will Alloway, Leigh McMillan, Oli Greber, Adam Kay, Mark Spearman: 55pts
5th Red Bull Sailing Team (AUT) Roman Hagara, Hans Peter Steinacher, Dan Morris, Rhys Mara, Micah Wilkinson: 55pts
6th Element Spark Compass (USA) Taylor Canfield, Sam Hallowell, John Wallace, Matt Noble, Mateo Vargas: 44pts
7th Team México (MEX) Erik Brockmann, Tom Buggy, Alex Higby, Tom Phipps, Danel Belausteguigoitia: 40pts
Steady start sees Oman Air crew on target for success in Extreme Sailing Series San Diego (from Oman Sail)
Team Oman Air took a step towards their Extreme Sailing Series season goal with a strong performance on the opening day of their latest encounter on America's west coast.
In variable and sometimes unpredictable wind conditions in San Diego, California, on Thursday, the crew of the high-speed GC32 foiling catamaran finished the first of four days in second place, ahead of some of their key rivals in the overall standings.
With only one race result off a podium place, the Oman Air crew of skipper Phil Robertson, Pete Greenhalgh, Stewart Dodson, James Wierzbowski and Nasser Al Mashari showed real consistency to secure the start they needed.
With only San Diego and then the final event in Mexico to go, the team are third in the season overall and working to close the gap on leaders Alinghi and the second placed SAP Extreme Sailing Team.
"It was a tricky day – a couple of times we were leading races and the situation changed so we had to adapt quickly," said Greenhalgh, Oman Air's mainsail trimmer.
"We were sailing well though and happy with what we were doing, and we were getting some good starts and getting the boat going.
"As ever there are areas where we can be better, but it's good to be second at this stage. We have just got to keep on making good decisions and hopefully that will help us come out on top."
Racing in the narrow confines of North San Diego Bay near the man-made Harbor Island adjacent to downtown San Diego, the day saw close-quarter sailing where positions could quickly change in the seven-strong fleet.
However, the Swiss team on Alinghi demonstrated the form which has put them on top of the season leaderboard, taking four wins in the six races sailed to lead the San Diego Act on 68 points. SAP Extreme Sailing Team started with a race victory but then faded, to finish the opening day in third place four points behind Oman Air who have 60.
Oman Air bowman Al Mashari said: "We know what we have to do to get a good result in the season, but we are not thinking about that while we are racing here. We are going out and just trying to do our very best, and we will see what comes to us at the end of the Act here in San Diego."
Racing in San Diego continues until Sunday 21 October.