Please select your home edition
Edition
Selden 2020 - LEADERBOARD

The Resolute Cup at New York Yacht Club - Day 3

by New York Yacht Club 14 Sep 2018 19:34 PDT 10-15 September 2018
2018 Resolute Cup - Day 3 © Paul Todd / www.outsideimages.com

The sun had disappeared behind the Rhode Island mainland before the competitors in the 2018 Resolute Cup could finally pack away their spinnakers and head for the dock. Three days of light and shifty breeze has forced the race committee to work overtime to get in races at the Corinthian championship for U.S. yacht clubs. Today that meant starting the day's seventh and final race after 6 p.m.

With 12 races in the books, and each team having sailed nine, the rankings are starting to crystallize. However, the race for the Resolute Cup, and the berth in the 2019 Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup, is still wide open. Austin Yacht Club continued to show its class in the lake-like conditions, picking up four top-four finishes today to lead the regatta by 6 points over The San Francisco Yacht Club. Eastern Yacht Club, San Diego Yacht Club and the Storm Trysail Club round out the top five.

The Resolute Cup was first run in 2010 as the U.S. Qualifying Series for the Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup. The biennial regatta, which is sailed out of the New York Yacht Club Harbor Court, has since developed an identity of its own as yacht clubs from around the United States send their best amateur sailors to Newport, R.I., to compete for national bragging rights in addition to a potential trip to the Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup, sailing's premiere international Corinthian big-boat regatta. The 2018 Resolute Cup will be sailed in the New York Yacht Club's fleet of 23-foot Sonars. With provided sails, equalized rig tune and a regular boat rotation, it's a true one-design event. The regatta takes place Sept. 10 to 15 and is sponsored by AIG Private Client Group and Helly Hansen. The final day of the event will be broadcast live via Facebook.

Day 3 of the regatta was all about mental fortitude. The breeze never pushed past 10 knots of wind speed and the strong fall tides kept everyone on their toes as teams tried to string together pockets of wind and maximize any advantage that could be found in the variable tidal flow.

"It was a long day," says Hannah Lynn, of Eastern Yacht Club, in perhaps the understatement of the regatta considering the first race went off shortly after 10 a.m. and the last race finished at 7 p.m. "With the gaps between the races, it's hard to keep the focus, to stay in that racing mentality. It was a day to test your patience, and it was more of a test of the toughest mental team. We battled the conditions for a little while. It was hard to stay in it when the breeze got super light and shifty, but you have to shrug those races off and hope the breeze fills for the next one."

With three strong finishes today, Eastern stands 7 points off the pace set by Scott Young and the team from Austin Yacht Club. But that margin could evaporate in a flash tomorrow. The plan for the final day of the regatta is up to four full-fleet races and then a double-points medal round of up to three races for the top 14 teams.

"The medal races are going to be interesting as there's going to be a lot more weight placed on them now with us getting in [fewer than expected] opening races," says Lynn. "If we end up waiting around in the morning there's going to have to be some way to get back into it mentally before that racing starts. With a lot of sitting around, it's hard to get up and go without some kind of routine, something that you can come back to in your boat."

Lynn is sailing with her father, five-time Resolute Cup skipper Bill Lynn, and is thoroughly enjoying the experience.

"It's fun," she says. "I feel like out of all the coaching I had in junior sailing combined, I probably learned more sailing with my dad. I feel like we work really well together."

And the Lynn duo is far from the only family connection in the Resolute Cup fleet. The Storm Trysail Club team has three brothers, Erik, John and Ian Storck, on the crew. Melissa Purdy Feagin and her brother Tom Purdy are sailing for The San Francisco Yacht Club. Club Nautico de San Juan and Houston Yacht Club also have team members who share a surname.

Fort Worth Boat Club is being represented by Marc Nilsson and his son Max, along with skipper Fred Meno IV and Mike Schwinn. The Texas team struggled through the first two days of the regatta, but found something of a rhythm on Day 3, with three top-10 finishes, including a second in Race 10, which the crew was leading until being overtaken by their fellow Texans from Austin Yacht Club on the run to the finish.

"He got me into the sport," says Max, the youngest competitor in the regatta at 14. "We became members at the Fort Worth Boat Club around 2000 and my mom hooked him up with a sailing class there. The skipper asked him to race with him after the first day [of lessons]. I became a sailor in 2014 in the Optimist. But this is pretty fun."

Not surprisingly, Marc Nilsson was even more enthused with the experience.

"I love being able to sail with Max in this event," he says. "This is such a prestigious event, and he's going to remember this when I'm long gone. It's really special to have him here with me."

Tomorrow's Live Broadcast will start at 1030 EDT on Facebook. America's Cup commentators Tucker Thompson and Andy Green will provide play-by-play and analysis.

Day 3 Preliminary Standings: (top ten after 12 races, with one throw-out in brackets)

1. Austin (Texas) Yacht Club, [14]-bye-5-5-1-bye-13-1-3-1-bye-4, 33pts
2. The San Francisco Yacht Club (Belvedere, Calif.) 8-1-8-bye-5-2-5-bye-[10]-bye-1-9, 39pts
3. Eastern Yacht Club (Marblehead, Mass.) bye-7-4-4-bye-8-1-11-2-[12]-3-bye, 40pts
4. San Diego Yacht Club, 2-[11]-2-bye-7-1-6-bye-9-10-4-bye, 41pts
5. Storm Trysail Club (Larchmont, N.Y.) 9-3-1-bye-9-4-2-bye-bye-8-[11]-8, 44pts
6. New York Yacht Club, 11-bye-6-10-11-bye-3-5-1-6-[12]-bye, 53pts
7. Coral Reef Yacht Club (Coconut Grove, Fla.) 1-8-bye-[15]-4-14-bye-10-bye-3-5-10, 55pts
8. Chicago Yacht Club, bye-2-12-7-bye-10-20-2-7-7-8-bye, 55pts
9. Larchmont (N.Y.) Yacht Club, 3-13-bye-17-3-11-bye-13-6-4-bye-6, 59pts
10. Corinthian Yacht Club (Marblehead, Mass.) 17-4-3-bye-14-7-9-bye-8-11-bye-3, 59pts

Click here for complete results.

Related Articles

Tshcüss 2 eyes Transatlantic Race line honors
The competitors will cover a distance of approximately 3,000 miles Many people find comfort in the familiar. Not Christian Zugel, who spent his youth in landlocked southern Germany, but discovered, late in life, a passion for blue-water ocean racing. Posted on 8 May
Team Race World Championship returns
In a month's time when the New York Yacht Club Harbour Court The past decade for team racing has featured the emergence of a new, spectator-friendly format and the continued spread of the discipline around the globe. Posted on 2 May
Transatlantic Race 2025 Preview
A North Atlantic adventure like no other The Transatlantic Race 2025 from the East Coast of the United States to the shores of the United Kingdom stands as one of sailing's most time-honored and demanding challenges. Posted on 25 Apr
International Women's Champs deadline extended
New York Yacht Club has decided to extend invitation requests to May 15 More than two dozen teams from 11 countries have officially requested an invitation for the inaugural New York Yacht Club International Women's Championship. Posted on 10 Apr
171st NYYC Annual Regatta preview
America's oldest, and best, regatta is getting even better For more than four decades, Ken Read has been turning good boats into national and world champions. Posted on 12 Mar
Winners give back to local community programs
Kindness from Corinthian Spirit Award winners at the 2024 Resolute Cup Kindness on the racecourse, especially in the heat of battle, is a good indication of overall character. Posted on 13 Dec 2024
Selection system for 2025 Team Race Worlds
US Sailing announces the requirements for next year's event US Sailing, the National Governing Body for sailing in the United States, is pleased to announce the athlete selection system and requirements for the highly anticipated 2025 Team Race World Championship. Posted on 21 Nov 2024
NYYC announce International Women's Championship
Teams of nine or more sailors are invited to request an invitation, regardless of country The New York Yacht Club is pleased to announce the inaugural International Women's Championship, a female-only competition that will be sailed in the Club's fleet of 37-foot IC37 yachts. Posted on 31 Oct 2024
NYYC American Magic Women miss out
Demonstrating moments of promise in the Puig Women's America's Cup Despite flashes of quality, the American Magic Women's team fell short of qualifying for the final series at the Puig Women's America's Cup. Posted on 11 Oct 2024
Aiming to End General Recalls
With RTK GPS-Based Race Management System With the goal of removing one of sailing's most time-consuming and frustrating conundrums—the general recall—the NYYC partnered with leading sailing electronics producer Velocitek to create the first centimeter-accurate starting-line management system. Posted on 10 Oct 2024
Mackay Boats 728x90 BOTTOMMySail 2025North Sails Loft 57 Podcast