Congressional Cup- Flying starts for Hutchinson and Ainslie
by Event Media on 25 Mar 2009

Downwind towards the pier and the snow capped mountains - 2009 Congressional Cup, Day 1 Rich Roberts
http://www.UnderTheSunPhotos.com
Two illustrious sailors---Terry Hutchinson and Ben Ainslie---are the first to say the Long Beach Yacht Club's 45th Congressional Cup is a lot closer than it looks on the scoreboard that shows them with 6-0 and 5-1 records after the first day of racing Tuesday.
But the Annapolis veteran, who won here in 1992 and called tactics for winners Ken Read in 2003 and Dean Barker in 2006, said he isn't pondering the choice between $30,000 or the keys to a new Acura awarded to anyone who goes undefeated all week.
'There are a lot of good sailors here,' said Hutchinson, who was recently honored as America's Rolex Yachtsman of the Year. 'You could easily go for oh and six tomorrow.'
And it wasn't a perfect day for Hutchinson's crew, which like all the others is lodged at LBYC members' homes.
'The day started out,' he said, 'with those five words no host likes to hear: 'Do you have a plunger?' '
It did get better. Hutchinson dealt Ainslie, the triple Olympic gold medalist and ISAF World Sailor of the Year, his only loss, by five boat lengths.
Ainslie said, 'The thing to do is roll with the punches and keep it going.'
Some had more punches to roll with than others. France's Sébastien Col, Mathieu Richard and Philippe Presti, currently ranked Nos. 1, 3 and 6 in the world, share sixth place with only two wins each. Richard won the traditional Crimson Blazer here two years ago.
The depth of the field is a factor. Hutchinson's tactician, Cameron Appleton of New Zealand, said their toughest race was against the U.S.'s Brian Angel, who stands 1-5. Ainslie said Sweden's Johnie Berntsson---3-3 but second here the last two years---gave them their worst moments, next to their loss to Hutchinson.
New Zealand's Adam Minoprio, a winner in the World Match Racing Tour opener at Marseille earlier this month, shares third placed with Italy's Francesco Bruni, a late entry, at 4-2.
With 18 rounds to run through Friday, leading into Saturday's championship sailoffs for the final four, principal race officer Mike Van Dyke made the most of steady southwest breezes building from 6 to 14 knots through the afternoon on the half-mile windward-leeward course inside the Long Beach breakwater.
Bruni, who wasn't invited until two weeks ago when a spot opened up, said at the evening's press conference, 'We're very happy with the sun, the wind . . . and the pizza [delivered to the teams] after sailing.'
Hutchinson was happy, too, after winning only two of his six starts and breaking even in two others.
'We clearly lost our last start to Angel,' he said. 'I expect we're going to have some hiccups on the way.'
But his best move saved the race against Angel, who led the final race going into the first windward mark.
Tactician Cameron Appleton of New Zealand said, 'That was our hardest race of the day. He was first off the line and controlled the race. But at the top mark he hoisted his chute a little too soon and we came in between him and the buoy. Then we luffed him head to wind and he had to drop [the spinnaker], and we bore off, raised our chute and sailed away.'
Berntsson pulled off another slick comeback to beat Col by four seconds. First, he cut Col's lead to less than a boat length with a quicker spinnaker hoist and jib drop at the last mark, and when Col tried to luff him upwind near the finish he was able to break the overlap and bear away to the line to win by half a boat length.
Racing continues Wednesday at noon, conditions permitting.
The pier east of downtown Long Beach has bleacher seating within rooting distance of the action, free parking at the beach end and shuttle service starting, all free of charge.
Live commentary for the races may be heard within a limited radio loop near the pier on 810 AM and on the event website www.concup.com, which also will air video highlights by t2p.TV each evening.
The Congressional Cup has maintained a high level of organization over the years with a volunteer force of some 300 club members and their families. Each crew is assigned boat hostesses and a housing team to deliver the outstanding local hospitality the Congressional Cup has offered now for 45 years.
The 2009 Congressional Cup is supported by Spinnaker sponsors F&M Bank, Catalina Adventure Tours, the Press Telegram and Oceanaut Watches Luxury Swiss Timepieces; Sail sponsors Union Bank, Newmeyer and Dillion LLP, Port of Long Beach, Gladstone's Long Beach and MCA Logistics; Hospitality sponsor Mount Gay Rum, and Honorary sponsor Catalina Yachts.
Results
ROUND 1
Adam Minoprio, New Zealand, def. Mathieu Richard, France, 25 seconds; Francesco Bruni, Italy, d. Sébastien Col, France, 0:45; Philippe Presti, France, d. Staffan Lindberg, Finland, 0:35; Ben Ainslie, Great Britain, d. Brian Angel, USA, 0:20; Terry Hutchinson, USA, d. Johnie Berntsson, Sweden, 0:23.
ROUND 2
Col d. Lindberg, 0:11; Presti d. Angel, 0:20; Ainslie d. Minoprio, 0:30; Hutchinson d. Richard, 0:34; Bruni d. Berntsson, no time.
ROUND 3
Minoprio d. Presti, 0:29; Hutchinson d. Ainslie, no time; Richard d. Bruni, 0:15; Berntsson d. Col, 0:04; Angel d. Lindberg, 0:11.
ROUND 4
Ainslie d. Bruni, 0:11; Berntsson d. Richard, 0:08; Col d. Angel, 0:30; Lindberg d. Minoprio, 0:06; Hutchinson d. Presti, 0:16.
ROUND 5
Richard d. Col, 0:06; Minoprio d. Angel, 0:21; Hutchinson d. Lindberg, 0:12; Bruni d. Presti, 0:04; Ainslie d. Berntsson, 0:53.
ROUND 6
Hutchinson d. Angel, 0:24; Bruni d. Lindberg, 1:05; Berntsson d. Presti, 1:20; Ainslie d. Richard, 0:20; Minoprio d. Col, 0:14.
STANDINGS (after 6 of 18 rounds): 1. Hutchinson, 6-0; 2. Ainslie, 5-1; 3. tie between Bruni and Minoprio, 4-2; 5. Berntsson, 3-3; 6. tie among Presti, Richard and Col, 2-4, 9. tie between Lindberg and Angel, 1-5.
Read Doug Krikorian's column on Ben Ainslie
in the Long Beach Press-Telegram
t2p video interview with Terry Hutchinson
MORE INFORMATION
Official Congressional Cup website
Congressional Cup Teams
(in order of ranking)
1. Sébastien Col, France
French MR Team/K-Challenge
Gilles Favennec, Christophe Andre, Christian Scherrer, Michele Ivalde, Pascal Ivalde
3. Mathieu Richard, France
French MR Team/French Spirit
Greg Evrard, Philippe Mourniac, Olivier Herledant, Thierry Briend, Yannick Simon,
6. Philippe Presti, France
French Match Racing Team
Stephane Christidis, Erwan Israel, Julien Falxa, Gilles André, Mikael Mergui
8. Adam Minoprio, New Zealand
BlackMatch Racing
Rod Davis, Steve Flam, Tom Powrie, David Swete, Nick Blackman,
9. Johnie Berntsson, Sweden
Berntsson Sailing
Daniel Wallberg, Johan Bäckman, Björn Lundgren, Bjorn Lundgren, Niklas Calzon
19. Staffan Lindberg, Finland
Alandria Sailing Team
Nils Bjerkås, Robert Skarp, Carl-Johan Uckelstam, Fredrik Aurell, Daniel Mattson
53. Ben Ainslie, Great Britain
Team Origin
George Skuddas, Matt Cornwell, Kelvin Harrap, Mike Mottel, Christian Kemp
62. Brian Angel, USA
King Harbor Match Racing
Payson Infelise, David Hochart, Mike Brown, Bud McKay, Tyler Prentice
76. Francesco Bruni, Italy
Joe Fly Sailing Team
Tom Burnham, Tudor Owen, Ben Durham, Matteo Aguadro, Pierluigi DeFelice
921. Terry Hutchinson, USA
Quantum Racing
Andrew Scott, Greg Gendell, Skip Baxter, Morgan Trubovich, Cameron Appleton
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