Please select your home edition
Edition
X-Yachts Leaderboard 2024 3

Gladwell's Line- The fantastic A-Cats

by Richard Gladwell, Sail-world.com/nz on 15 Feb 2014
Peter Burling (NZL) leads on Leg 1 of Race 5, A-class catamaran World Championships, Day 3, Takapuna February 13, 2014 Richard Gladwell www.photosport.co.nz
The 2014 A-Class worlds are providing the most stunning racing ever seen in New Zealand.

It has attracted a very classy field with many America’s Cup sailors, many A-Class World Champions, top designers – all sailing in the most spectacular international class world championship. There are at least five Olympic Medalists competing plus one AC72 helmsman and other who sailed in the last America's Cup.

You can see sailors of the caliber of Glenn Ashby, Peter Burling, Blair Tuke, Nathan Outteridge and many more – all sailing right on the edge of control, and frequently stepping over that red line, with the most spectacular crashes.

[Sorry, this content could not be displayed]
The sight is unforgettable of a singlehanded catamaran literally flying on hydrofoils at speeds of 20kts, while top sailors in the world try to go fast but stay in control.

In the video featured on Sail-World.com there is a sequence of one of the competitors taking off, completely clear of the water flying through the air for a boat length or two, and then landing on all fours in feline fashion – and just sailing on. Like a downhill jump in the Winter Olympics.

The racing itself is amazing, with major lead changes, as one competitor finds a sweet spot downwind, and makes a huge gain through the fleet to become the new leader, only to have the tables turned on the next leg.

If you thought the last America’s Cup was exciting, this is in another league again.

It something that has never been seen in the sport before, and long may it continue – with 80 boats – it is a very big fleet, and the action is non-stop.

[Sorry, this content could not be displayed]
Each race day we have been catching up with the Kaenon Team – and so far have featured video interviews with Glenn Ashby, Blair Tuke, Peter Burling and Ray Davies who are among the lead group on the points table.

These interviews are great, because of the different backgrounds and perspectives of the four sailors.

Ashby and Davies have probably as much experience as anyone in the world at sailing foiling cats, having sailed the same number of times in the AC72 class and then in the A-Class Nationals and Worlds. Davies described the AC72’s as a stable foiling experience compared the A-Cats.

Tuke and Burling come at it from a different perspective, with their Olympic class experience and success. But they have climbed the foiling mountain, and are both sailing exceptionally.


Mix into that the strong Emirates Team NZ influence with eight of the competitors all working together out of the ETNZ base on a sailing science project, and team building exercise, which lifts their sailing skills. The team members have good support on the water from their team boat and team members. This is the real story of the week on Team New Zealand.

As Ray Davies commented in one of the interviews, that it was great to be able to get back into small boats, and have to sail intuitively again, rather than just look at numbers. The top sailors draw several comparisons between these A-Class and the AC72’s.

Having seen both the America’s Cup up close on the water for two weeks and the A-Class for just three days, the latter is in many ways the better event. These boats are sailed on the edge like nothing that we have seen before, and the sailors’ skills are put to an extreme test.


The lack of coverage of the regatta by most of the local media is quite astonishing given the classy field, the racing spectacle and standard of the competition.

It is difficult to understand why whether or not Emirates Team NZ chose not to race on September 16, 2013, should be so attention grabbing, when there is a far bigger and more relevant America’s Cup story happening on the water at Takapuna.

But that is the difference between those who understand the sport, and those who only look for scandal and clichéd frameworks within which they present 'News'. The local media have really put their credibility on the line this week and have been shown to come up severely wanting. They have sold their readership very short with their very inadequate coverage of this event, and their focus on other now irrelevant matters.


Sure there are two days to go in the regatta – but this is stunning stuff, and even if they do play catch-up this weekend, their readers have missed a sailing experience that words cannot really describe.

This regatta has been exceptionally well run – full credit to the competitors for the ways they have sailed and the spirit in which they have sailed, and for the officials for the way the event has been run on the water and off.

The boat park scenes after the race are just what is needed in the sport, with a great friendly atmosphere as competitors and supporters all mix and sit around talking about the race and their experiences. While there are always winners on the leader board, in this event everyone is a winner for just getting around the course – and meeting the personal challenge of competing in extreme boats, and just getting around the course.

Words can never do justice to this event.

Stay tuned to Sail-World.com for all the latest racing news, but this weekend there is only really one story in town – the A-Cats.








Stay up with the latest sailing news, as it happens, on our website www.sail-world.com

North Sails Loft 57 PodcastA+T QBD7C-Tech 2020 Battens 2 728x90 BOTTOM

Related Articles

Globe40 sailor gives a personal report from Leg 4
Rupert Holmes experiences a closely fought trans-Pacific leg from Sydney to Valparaiso Rupert Holmes reports on the closely fought trans-Pacific leg from Sydney to Valparaiso and looks ahead to rounding Cape Horn on leg 5.
Posted on 25 Feb
Optiorange 2026 in Valencia Preview
412 sailors from 30 countries have gathered for the event The Optiorange 2026 begins a new adventure. In its eighth edition, the Real Club Náutico de Valencia has managed to bring together 412 sailors from 30 countries.
Posted on 25 Feb
Black Jack 100 claims Caribbean 600 Line Honours
After a prolonged duel with Leopard 3 RP100 Black Jack 100, of Dutch owner Remon Vos and skippered by Frenchmen Tristan Le Brun, has secured Monohull Line Honours in the 2026 RORC Caribbean 600, completing the 600-nm classic in an impressive elapsed time of 1 Day 20 Hrs 31 Mins and 36 Secs.
Posted on 25 Feb
Heading for the 2026 Season in Class40
Several skippers are entering a key phase in their projects For Thomas Lurton, the 2026 season is focused on the Route du Rhum. "The whole program is built around this deadline," explains the skipper, who is determined to gradually build up his strength over the course of the major races on the Class40 calendar.
Posted on 25 Feb
2026 Finn World Masters in Brisbane Day 3
Casey still leads after tricky third day After two more races on Wednesday, Brendan Casey, from Australia, still leads the Porsche Centre Brisbane 2026 Finn World Masters at the Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron, in Brisbane, Australia.
Posted on 25 Feb
Howth YC Dinghy Frostbites Spring Series update
Yet another windy weekend for races 11 and 12 Yet another windy weekend greeted sailors in the HYC Dinghy Frostbite series, but their resilience shone through as two races were completed in a challenging set of conditions.
Posted on 25 Feb
2026 RORC Caribbean 600 Monohull Line Honours
Black Jack 100 takes Line Honours in an elapsed time of 01 Day 20 Hrs 31 Mins and 36 Secs. Remon Vos' RP100 Black Jack 100, skippered by Tristan Le Brun, has taken Monohull Line Honours in the 2026 RORC Caribbean 600 in an elapsed time of 01 Day 20 Hrs 31 Mins and 36 Secs.
Posted on 25 Feb
CRO Melges 24 Cup Season kicks off in Biograd
Two events were completed late last year in Split and Trogir Two events were completed late last year in Split (JK Špinut) and Trogir (JK Trogir), while the spring schedule features four more regattas: Biograd, Zadar, Opatija, and a return to Biograd at the end of April for the Open Croatian Championship.
Posted on 25 Feb
Pom Green: Born into Boatbuilding
The Switch revolution, and the ethos behind Element 6 Evolution Pom Green has a family heritage in boatbuilding, growing up in the heyday of Green Marine, and has gone on to establish Element Six Evolution. While he has learned from legendary designers such as Doug Peterson, he has gone on to define his own legacy.
Posted on 25 Feb
DN World and European Championships 2026
Event was relocated from Poland to Sweden and back again due to ice conditions The DN World and European Championships this year became a remarkable story of endurance, professionalism, and organisational resilience. A total of 120 pilots from 15 countries gathered to compete for the most prestigious titles in ice sailing.
Posted on 25 Feb