Please select your home edition
Edition
2024 fill-in (top)

Three remaining slots determined for World Match Racing Tour

by Barby MacGowan on 29 May 2016
M32s close to shore in Newport. Stephen Cloutier
2016 World Match Racing Tour - After three days and 64 races in Newport today, the three remaining berths of 20 were decided for next week’s World Match Racing Tour (WMRT) Newport.

The eight-team qualifier series started Thursday and concluded today with the Semi-Finals, Finals and Petit Finals held within yards of the shoreline on the east side of Fort Adams in eight - fifteen knots of breeze. The fast-paced action gave spectators a good idea of the excitement still to come as Sail Newport hosts the fourth and only American stop in this world series of sailing that features top match racing teams from the U.S. and nine additional countries in high-speed stadium racing from May 30-June 4.

Taking the top two berths by making the Finals were 36 Below, skippered by Chris Steele (Auckland, New Zealand) and 13 Fifty Racing, skippered by Michael Menninger (Newport Beach, Calif.). 36 Below lost only one of its 18 matches in the qualifier series and won the Finals two - zero over 13 Fifty Racing. The Petit Finals were the most exciting, with Team Gilmour, skippered by David Gilmour (Perth, Australia) having to outmaneuver Team Mirsky, skippered by Torvar Mirsky (Pittwater, NSW, Australia) to clinch the third berth with a two - zero final score.

“It will be an advantage for us, having done the qualifiers and spent more time in the boats so close to the event,” said Steele. “All the teams coming for Monday’s start will be fresh off the plane, while we’re already in sync with time zone, and, we’ve had a look at what the race course is going to be like. It’s awesome where we were racing today, and that’s where it’s going to be on Monday. It’s really cool to have the spectators so close and come Monday there will be a heck of a lot more people watching. The platform is good, and it will be even better with eight boats and 20 teams out on water next week.”

A weather system coming up the east coast is expected to bring high winds on Monday, which could make the Memorial Day kick-off to the World Match Racing Tour Newport all the more fast-paced. According to World Match Racing Tour Card Holder Taylor Canfield (Chicago, Ill./St. Thomas, USVI) who is the top-seeded skipper here, the boats are good to “fly their hulls” in up to 25 knots. “It should be fun!,” he said when told the forecast, for now, calls for 10-15 knots with gusts of 30.

Canfield lent a hand when a group of local Pell Elementary School fourth graders visited Sail Newport yesterday for a marine education field trip. “They were super into it,” said Canfield, who showed them how an M32 catamaran (the boats used for the World Match Racing Tour) works and how they are sailed. The kids also were able to climb onboard the M32 and experience the trampoline on the state-of-the-art race boat. “They asked so many good questions, I didn’t know how to answer half of them,” laughed Canfield.

Two Rhode Island teams – skippered by Malcolm Gefter (Newport,) and Michael Dominguez (Barrington) – were knocked out before the Semi-Finals, but according to Principal Race Officer Mattias Dahlstrom they “weren’t an easy catch and put up a fight against every team they met.”



Hosted by Sail Newport, the World Match Racing Tour Newport is sponsored by WJAR TV Channel 10, Cox Business and Heineken. It runs from Memorial Day, May 30th, until June 4th at Fort Adams State Park and features high-speed stadium-style racing between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. each day except for Saturday when the finals are expected to end at 4 p.m. Racing is on the Newport Harbor side of Fort Adams.

The event will be live streamed online from Thursday 2 June through Saturday 4 June. The event also features the race boats on display at the public dock, live play-by-play commentary broadcast throughout the shore-side venue as well as music, food, family lawn games, a hospitality tent, and an M32 on shore. The event is open to the public, with no admission fee and free parking.

As Rhode Island's Public Sailing Center, Sail Newport aims to provide the experience of sailing to the public and will offer free Try Sailing! opportunities to visitors from Memorial Day through Friday of the World Match Racing Tour (May 30-June 3). (Sessions are from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. on all days but Saturday, June 4, when they are scheduled from 9:30 a.m. to noon. No experience is necessary as certified skippers and life jackets (for all ages) will be provided by Sail Newport.

For more information, visit website.

RS Sailing 2021 - FOOTERVetus-Maxwell 2021 v2 FOOTERVaikobi 2024 FOOTER

Related Articles

Lisa Blair to set off on new World Record attempt
To establish an Auckland to Auckland, New Zealand, sailing record Australian record-breaking solo sailor Lisa Blair will embark on a new World Record sailing attempt tomorrow, April 7th at 8am (NZST) to establish an Auckland to Auckland, New Zealand, sailing record over more than 2,200 nm
Posted today at 7:20 am
Wet & wild end to huge Sail Port Stephens regatta
11 huge days of sailing, spanning three weeks and involving 215 boats Sail Port Stephens 2024 has wrapped up after 11 huge days of sailing, spanning three weeks and involving 215 boats. It culminated yesterday with the inshore Bay Series comprising J70s, sports boats and off-the-beach classes.
Posted today at 6:34 am
Apex Group Bermuda Sail Grand Prix overall
Diego Botin's Spain gets one step closer to Season 4 Grand Final Diego Botin's Los Gallos got the better of two of the leagues heavyweights - Australia and New Zealand - in a tense three-boat final at the Apex Group Bermuda Sail Grand Prix to win its second SailGP event of Season 4.
Posted on 5 May
SailGP: How the Final played out in Bermuda
Despite their end to end win, in the Final of SailGP Bermuda, Spain was hard pushed by the Kiwis Despite their end to end win, in the Final of SailGP Bermuda, Spain was hard pushed by the New Zealand team, with the dominant team of Seasons 1-4, Australia always ready to pounce. Plus full replay of Day 2.
Posted on 5 May
Galateia and V go to the wire at 20th PalmaVela
Three of the five maxis won races under IRC corrected time The maxis competing over the last 4 days in inshore and coastal racing at the Real Club Nautico de Palma's PalmaVela may have been a diverse five, ranging from the 143ft/43.6m J Class Svea to the Wally 80 Rose, but their competition was the closest
Posted on 5 May
SailGP: Spain wins Final in Bermuda
Smart tactical decisions by Spain held off a mid-race comeback by the Kiwi crew Diego Botin's young Spanish team executed flawless tactical decision-making to head off New Zealand and Australia season, in the three-boat winner takes all Final sailed on Bermuda's Great Sound.
Posted on 5 May
20th PalmaVela Overall
Galateia win again at PalmaVela… but only just David Leuschen and Chris Flowers' Wallycento Galateia won the Maxi class at PalmaVela for the third time in a row today in light winds on Palma Bay. Whilst last year's triumph was something of a whitewash, this time they were made to work all the way.
Posted on 5 May
The Transat CIC Day 8
Richomme still on course for Transatlantic double While the IMOCA race leader Yoann Richomme (PAPREC ARKÉA) was still making more than 20 kts this afternoon, a nerve racking slow down is still expected for the final miles to the finish of the Transat CIC solo race from Lorient to New York.
Posted on 5 May
The oldest footage of 505 racing
A look back into our video archive We delve into the past, and round-up all videos which show sailing at in the 5o5 class of dinghy.
Posted on 5 May
International 18s in the 1950s
A period of New Zealand-led design & innovation Following the first major change in the 18 footers from the big boats of the early 1900s to the 7ft beam boats of the mid-1930s, there had been no major change or innovations until the late 1940s
Posted on 5 May