Please select your home edition
Edition
Doyle_SailWorld_728X90px_SY TOP

The MCYCA? – Discrimination on Australia Day

by Rob Kothe and the Sail-World Team on 22 Jan 2014
Sean Langman’s record breaking Orma60 trimaran Team Australia Andrea Francolini / Azzura Marine http://www.afrancolini.com/
Coming up to Australia Day, when we celebrate the free spirit of our country, we will have tall ships, ferries and lots of yachts on Sydney Harbour.

But wait a minute the yachts are all monohulls, why? Sean Langman, the owner of the fastest yacht in the Southern hemisphere is not invited to the party. You see his yacht Team Australia is a multihull... The fastest yachts in the world, over 500 metres, a nautical mile, 24 hours, Sydney to Hobart, Sydney to Auckland and around the world are multihulls.

No multihulls on Australia Day... because the Australia Day Yacht Race organisers, the CYCA is actually the Monohull CYCA, time for a rethink guys?

After the freezing blast of Copenhagen, Miami seems like a dream. Ahead of Rolex Miami OCR, we interviewed US Sailing Olympic CEO Josh Adam today and he is justifiably proud of the seriously good fleet that has entered the Sailing World Cup Miami.

500+ sailors across the Olympic and Paralympic classes. In the case of the N. 17 and the 49er FX the largest fleets ever.

Our own Matt Belcher and Will Ryan will sail in a 33 boat fleet in an effort to set a new record; 19 regattas in a row.

Tomorrow we will be will be talking to Race Organiser Gary Bodie, ahead of the start of Miami OCR 2014. We were in Melbourne for the Sailing World Cup and we will be following the Australian fleets with a great deal of interest, as we will from the boat park and on the water in Palma, Spain and on the Med in Hyeres.


And while the 35th America’s Cup is still a long ways off, with no date or class of yacht yet to be firmly established, teams are betting that AC35 will be contested in state-of-the-art catamarans and are therefore using 2014 accordingly.

Both the Hamilton Island Team, skippered by Seve Jarvin and now Emirates Team New Zealand (ETNZ) will race in the Extreme Sailing Series, with skipper Dean Barker taking the helm for five of the season’s eight regattas, leaving helming duties to 49er great Peter Burling for the remaining three events.

'We can’t wait around until Oracle releases the Protocol for the 35th America’s Cup,' said Barker. 'We need to keep developing and take every available opportunity to compete in cats.' Besides the obvious reason of acquiring more high-end multi-hull experience, ETNZ’s afterguard sees this circuit as an important way to keep the sailors sharp during these interim Cup years.


'Extreme 40 racing is unlike any other; the teams are very competitive, races are short, the action non-stop and split-second decisions are needed,' said Barker, who plans to rotate crewmembers through the various On-board jobs. 'Between the two of us [skippers] we will be able to field competitive crews through the year.'


Also Cup-related, Gary Jobson recently sat down with five-time Olympic medallist Sir Ben Ainslie, the winning tactician aboard Oracle Team USA in the 34th America’s Cup, to get his pulse on Oracle’s stunning comeback during AC34.

'We were obviously in a pretty difficult situation as a team,' said Ainslie about Oracle’s overall situation when the call was made for him to replace John Kostecki as the team’s tactician. 'My goal was to be Mr. Positive even though things were looking just about as bad as they could be, to try and get some enthusiasm going. Of course this America's Cup, I think, was always going to be a development race with the new class of boat with the AC72 multihulls and foiling and everything that goes with that. There was always a chance that we could develop faster than any other team and build some confidence from that. Ultimately that is what happened.'

Get the full interview, inside, and stay tuned to the website for the rest of Jobson’s interview with Sir Ben, later this week.

Armstrong 728x90 - Performance Mast Range - BOTTOMCyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERRS Sailing 2021 - FOOTER

Related Articles

Inaugural X-Yachts Spanish Gold Cup
Palma provides the X-Factor for a fantastic event I've attended a couple of X-Yachts Gold Cups in Denmark, one in Aarhus and one in Haderslev, which has been the obvious location for the Danish boatyard to host events, but the yachts, and their sailors, have naturally ventured further afield.
Posted on 17 Jun
Honoring the great Charlie Dalin
Honoring the great Charlie Dalin, Tasars, OK Dinghies, Musto Skiff, TP52, Bermuda Race I never had the chance to meet or interview the great Charlie Dalin, who passed away last Thursday at the age of 42, but his sailing career is the stuff of absolute legend.
Posted on 16 Jun
Michaella McCloskey on SailGP's F50 licenses
A Q&A with Michaella McCloskey about SailGP's F50 licenses and demerit system SailGP offers some of the world's highest-performance on-the-water racing. Factor in more teams and the short racecourses and tight starting lines that the league has long used, and the objective risks are hard to ignore.
Posted on 16 Jun
The Kings of the Lowriders
Well before SailGP, there was Grand Prix 18-Foot Skiff Sailing, so what links the two? Rob Brown OAM reached out to me but a few weeks ago. Dangerous thing that, for it got me to thinking. As I pondered this, and reviewed that, I reached out to another great pal in Bill Macartney, to assess what I had been pondering.
Posted on 16 Jun
At the mercy of the elements?
Forecast fear, broadcast windows, and even mountains Possibly more than any other sport, sailing demands the right conditions to take place, specifically with the wind. Both too much and too little cause their own issues, but there are more factors at play...
Posted on 10 Jun
A distinct injustice?
When is a RIB not RIB, nor dayboat, nor adventure craft? When it is an ADV from Highfield... You know, you would have to think so… Yes, they are dayboats. They're also adventure craft, which is why Highfield calls them the ADV7 and ADV9. Problem is, Highfield themselves call them RIBs, and as best as I can tell, they're actually not.
Posted on 9 Jun
Jesse Wiegel on the 2026 R2AK
A Q&A with Jesse Wiegel about the 2026 R2AK Some sailboat races test starting-line acumen, boathandling skills, and tactics and strategy, while others are aimed at testing each teams' aptitude for adventure. The Race to Alaska falls in the latter category.
Posted on 9 Jun
The New York Sail Grand Prix Start Collision
Video Analysis and Reaction On Sunday at the Mubadala New York Sail Grand Prix there was a collision involving three teams in the final seconds before the Race 3 start.
Posted on 2 Jun
SailGP, J/70s, Women's 2v2 Team Race
SailGP visits NYC, J/70 Corinthian Worlds, Women's 2v2 Team Race SailGP's foiling circus arrived in the Big Apple last weekend for the Mubadala New York Sail Grand Prix (May 30-31), which was the only SailGP stopover that's set to unfurl on American waters this season.
Posted on 2 Jun
The tech curve…
It just marches on. Slide rule and Hewlett Packard be damned, these vessels are a tour de force It just marches on. The latest launchings for solo/crewed, mono/multi masterpieces are a tour de force when it comes to material science, electronics, engineering, physics, especially hydro and aerodynamics. Slide rule and Hewlett Packard be damned.
Posted on 2 Jun