Please select your home edition
Edition
X-Yachts X4.0

America's Cup - The countdown starts for the start of serious racing

by Sail-World.com NZL on 26 May 2016
Oracle Team USA sailing off the team's base at Royal Naval Dockyard, Bermuda. Sam Greenfield/Oracle Team USA http://www.oracleteamusa.com
In just one year, on May 26, 2017, the first races of the Louis Vuitton America’s Cup Qualifiers are scheduled to take place on Bermuda’s Great Sound.

All six America’s Cup teams will race in the Louis Vuitton America’s Cup Qualifiers, in new America’s Cup Class foiling catamarans, purpose-built for the racing in 2017.

If the defending champion, Oracle Team USA, wins the opening series, it will earn a one-point lead in the America’s Cup Match series.

If the winning team is a Challenger, and they end up in the Match, they will have a one point advantage on the scoreboard.

Only the top four challengers advance from the Louis Vuitton America’s Cup Qualifiers meaning one Challenger will be eliminated from further competition. The rest will advance to semi-finals and finals, with the eventual winner facing Oracle Team USA in the America’s Cup Match presented by Louis Vuitton.

Time is going to become a very vital commodity for the America’s Cup teams as deadlines are fast approaching to lock in design concepts and to start building race boats for 2017.

Under the Protocol governing the 35th America's Cup, the first AC50 cannot be launched before January 1, 2017, or 150 days before the start of the Qualifiers. AC50's are also prohibited from racing against each other except in the Qualifier Venue of Bermuda. The Bermuda Qualifier venue is still subject to confirmation by the Arbitration Panel at a hearing to be held in July 2016.

For the first time in America's Cup history this cycle there has been open collaboration between some Challengers and the Defender in respect of design, technology transfer and boats. The exception being Emirates Team New Zealand which has stood alone from the rest of the group and has adopted the isolated role traditionally reserved for the Defender. With the departure of former Challenger of Record, Luna Rossa (ITA), the Kiwis lost a long-time ally.

Now, the Kiwi team are the common enemy of the other Challengers and Defenders - and the old truism of 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend' has certainly come into play in an unusual way in the 35th America's Cup.

The Construction in Country rules in the Protocol have been modified so that only a 2.7-metre section of the canoe body of the catamaran has to be constructed in the country of the Challenging and Defending Club. The remainder of the construction can be completed anywhere in the world.


Only one member of the crew is required to be a national of the Challenging/Defending club and in America's Cup terms that means just holding a passport of their club's country.

Each Challenger is permitted to build on AC50. Oracle Team USA is permitted to build two, and will sail in the Qualifier Series. But if they chose to build a second AC50, they can't launch her until the start of the Semi-Finals. The Defender is prohibited from sailing in the Playoffs (Semis and Finals) for the Louis Vuitton Cup. If they have a second AC50, the Defender can't sail it in the America's Cup Match unless their first boat suffered catastrophic damage.

They are allowed two wingsails per boat, meaning the Challengers are allowed two wingsails each and the Defenders are allowed two or four if they build a second AC50. The hull shape is a strict one-design, the profile of the wingsail is also one-design. The only free-design areas of the AC50 are in foils and foiling systems, control systems, power generation and parasitic drag reduction or streamlining of the platform and rig.

So far four of the America's Cup teams, LandRover BAR (UK), Softbank Team Japan (JPN), Artemis Racing (SWE) and Oracle Team USA have established bases and are sailing development versions of the AC45 in Bermuda, with all except Japan sailing two of the development AC45's, or Surrogates as they are defined in the Protocol.

LandRover BAR, Groupama Team France, and Emirates Team New Zealand all have bases in their home country.


It is not clear at this stage if the 'home base' teams will launch AC50's in their home country and then fly to Bermuda and re-set up the boat, losing valuable training time. Or if the boats are constructed in their home country and then flown to Bermuda for final assembly and launch on or just after the January 1, 2017, date.

The trade-off with home construction and fly/ship to Bermuda option is that the construction start date will have to be brought forward to facilitate shipping, thus shortening design deadlines and options.

Over the past 20 years or so of America's Cup history, the top performers in the America's Cup have been the first launched boats, underlining the fact that tuning and development time pays the biggest dividend in the competition for the most prestigious trophy in sailing, and sport generally.

C-Tech 2020 Battens 2 728x90 BOTTOMRS Sailing 2021 - FOOTERSail Port Stephens 2024

Related Articles

The must-do Rolex Middle Sea Race
The start of 45th edition is six months away Starting from Grand Harbour, Valletta, the Mediterranean's premier 600-mile classic promises much and always over delivers for participants and spectators alike.
Posted today at 5:12 pm
RS Tera Worlds 2024 already breaking records
Selling out more than 3 months in advance of the event In a record-breaking first for the International RS Tera Class, the RS Tera World Championship 2024 registration has reached maximum capacity - selling out more than 3 months in advance of the event.
Posted today at 2:06 pm
Lunven and Soudée on the dockside in Lorient
Preparing for a classic north Atlantic passage in the Transat CIC Once again La Base marina in Lorient, Brittany – the main home of the IMOCA fleet – is a hive of activity as 33 boats and their skippers prepare for the daunting challenge of the North Atlantic alone.
Posted today at 1:38 pm
Antigua Sailing Week 2024 Preview
All set to deliver sensational racing and amazing parties in a beautiful setting Antigua Sailing Week is back for the 55th edition with 13 racing classes filled to the brim with sailors from all over the world. Teams from over 20 different nations are set for the Caribbean's famous regatta.
Posted today at 10:15 am
The Transat CIC: Who are the favourites?
Charlie Dalin (MACIF Santé Prévoyance) makes his comeback The start gun of the 15th edition of The Transat CIC will sound on Sunday sending a fleet of 48 skippers - 33 IMOCAs, 13 Class 40s and two vintage yachts - off on the complex, cold and mainly upwind passage across the Atlantic.
Posted today at 7:44 am
59th Congressional Cup at Long Beach Day 1
Strong start for Jeppe Borch on opening day Denmark's Jeppe Borch leads the 12-team international line-up after Day One with an impressive six wins and one loss, signalling a promising start in his pursuit of the coveted Crimson Blazer.
Posted today at 4:33 am
Last Chance Regatta at Hyères, France Day 4
Bainbridge grabs last chance Paris 2024 ticket for Team GB Connor Bainbridge finally claimed a place in the men's kite at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games for Great Britain, approximately eight months later than he expected, after a dominant display at the Last Chance Regatta in Hyères.
Posted on 24 Apr
Clipper 2023-24 Race 10 Finish
Ha Long Bay, Viet Nam wins 5,500nm race across North Pacific Ha Long Bay, Viet Nam has claimed its fourth win on the Clipper 2023-24 Race, taking first place in the longest, and one of the toughest races on the circuit, Race 10: Ultimate Test of Perseverance - the 5,580nm North Pacific crossing.
Posted on 24 Apr
52 Super Series Palma Vela Sailing Week preview
The champions are looking to achieve lift off with new Platoon Aviation The reigning 52 SUPER SERIES champions, Harm Müller-Spreer's German flagged crew, start their title defence on Sunday on Majorca's Bay of Palma.
Posted on 24 Apr
Triana & White Shadow finish Ocean Globe Race
Trinity Landing pontoon in Cowes was a busy spot Tuesday afternoon Trinity Landing pontoon in Cowes was a busy spot Tuesday afternoon with Triana FR (66) SWAN 53 and White Shadow ESP (17) SWAN 57 finishing the McIntyre Ocean Globe Race after 48 days of racing.
Posted on 24 Apr