Please select your home edition
Edition
Allen Dynamic 40 Leaderboard

The greatest event that almost never was

by Mark Jardine 15 Nov 2023 12:00 PST
SSL Gold Cup 1/32 Finals Day 4 - Fleet 2 Race 3 © Martina Orsini / SSL Gold Cup

It's been a very hard week for personal reasons, but I am very glad I made it to Gran Canaria to cover the SSL Gold Cup.

For those that don't know about the event, it's the World Championship of Sailing Nations, where countries compete in identical SSL 47 yachts, and it could well be the most important event in the history of sailing.

The first round finished on Monday and was hugely successful. To get this event off to a good start was no mean feat, and it almost never happened. The scope of the SSL Gold Cup is huge and the logistics daunting. It lasts nearly a full month, requires over ten thousand hotel room nights, has a small army of people behind the scenes, and is reaching every corner of the world.

So why is the event so important? Sailing is dominated by a few countries, but as a sport we need to become bigger globally, and understood by a far wider audience. What World Sailing call 'emerging nations' have the potential to be the largest sailing viewership, and if they start watching sailing, they'll soon aspire to take part, and then compete.

The SSL Gold Cup very much styles itself as the 'Football World Cup in Sailing'. National teams wear national jerseys, each team has a nickname and an identity. This enables fans to really get behind their sailors, and the atmosphere within the teams is simply incredible.

We're only a few days into the event, but already I'm totally immersed in it and sold on the concept. While I'm naturally hoping the British team will win, in the first round Tahiti have become a favourite, my 'second team' if you will. They are the most chilled bunch ashore, but lightning quick on the water, winning all four of their races. Their team nickname is 'The Black Pearls', and I'm happy to go seek them out for an interview in the event village.

What will I do if they progress to the round where Great Britain enters the competition and they go head to head? May the best team win, as they say...

Talking of nationalities, the SSL Gold Cup teams are really made up of sailors from that nation. The America's Cup nationality rules have been watered down and tightened up on various occasions, but we've got Australian and British Olympic gold medalist helms for American Magic, just for an example. In SailGP the teams carry a national flag, but again the sailors are from various countries.

The other thing that is really working well is the livestream. We may be living in the foiling world, but the displacement SSL 47 yachts are spectacular to watch. With foilers it has become hard to see what the crew are actually doing, as they're cocooned in pods, wearing helmets and visors, and generally hidden from view. In the SSL Gold Cup we're getting to see the emotions, the actions, the elation and the disappointment close up from the on-board cameras. This event is all about the sailors, not the technology.

This doesn't mean the yachts aren't spectacular. As you can see in the photos, they're wrapped in gold, which makes for quite incredible photography. It helps that we've got the likes of Martina Orsini taking the photos, but seeing the hiking crew reflected in the gold wrap really works.

Talking with national media around the world in the past week, it is quite clear that they're buying in to the SSL Gold Cup. The event is getting front page photos and serious column inches, in traditional print media, online, and on the television networks in countries such as Malaysia and Lithuania.

In Malaysia the Royal Family is taking a keen interest, with His Highness Tengku Amir Shah coming to Gran Canaria for the first round. With Malaysia progressing in the competition it was obvious that he was reviewing his travel plans to see if he could stay on...

Getting this kind of high profile interest of course increased the profile of the event in the country, and plans are already being formed to hold an SSL event in the region in 2025.

So why did it almost not happen? The event was scheduled to be this time last year, but things weren't ready in time on a number of fronts. It would have been easy to give up at that point, but perseverance won and it's happening, albeit a year later.

After a quick trip to The Netherlands for the METSTRADE marine business show I'll be back in Gran Canaria to cover next stage of the SSL Gold Cup. I highly recommend watching the livestream, reading the reports, and taking a look at the stunning photos. It won't take long before you're hooked.

This is why I think the event could well be the most important in sailing. The vision is bold, it's exciting, it's groundbreaking and it could change the scale of the sport globally, which has to be a good thing for us all.

Mark Jardine
Sail-World.com and YachtsandYachting.com Managing Editor

Related Articles

Australia's back!
Like, did we ever leave? Not really… Like, did we ever leave? Not really… Ever since Sir Frank Packer KBE kicked it off, we've been there, or thereabouts. For instance, Grant Simmer OAM has been involved with every one of them since winning it in 1983. Posted on 17 May
Team Australia America's Cup launch videos
Videos with key members of the team, Grant Simmer OAM, Glenn Ashby, and Tash Bryant Team Australia's challenge for the 38th America's Cup was launched yesterday at the Royal Prince Edward Yacht Club. Posted on 14 May
The Same, But Different
A packed schedule coming up with a diverse range of events I am so enjoying reading all the event news now the season has begun in earnest in the UK. The sun has been plentiful throughout April and May, encouraging everyone to get back out on the water. Posted on 12 May
An update on Cascadia Sailing with Jen Glass
Jen Glass on Cascadia Sailing's preparations for the NYYC's Women's International Championships Cascadia Sailing is an American-Canadian team that's training for this year's NYYC Women's International Championships. They are one of 20 teams that was invited to compete at this world-class keelboat event. Posted on 12 May
Peter Gibbons-Neff on his Classe Mini project
A Q&A with Peter Gibbons-Neff about his new Classe Mini campaign In 2023, American singlehanded sailor and U.S. Marine Corps Reserve officer Peter Gibbons-Neff raced his 21-foot Classe Mini across the Atlantic Ocean in the storied Mini Transat race. Now, he's back, with the goal of winning. Posted on 6 May
TP52s, IMOCA 60s, Congression Cup
52 SUPER SERIES and IMOCA 60 season openers, 61st Congressional Cup When the conversation turns to Grand Prix keelboat racing, it's never long before the 52 SUPER SERIES enters the mix. The 2026 season is will feature five events, starting with this week's Puerto Portals 52 Super Series Sailing Week. Posted on 5 May
Close Encounters…
Of the Jimbo kind. To know Jim Close is to have an experience. To know Jim Close, aka Jimbo, or Mumbles, is to have an experience (Boom. Boom. Basil Brush). It's not a reflection. It's a casting of vision. Yes. What a trip. Part acid. Part journey through space. Part adventure in existentialism. Posted on 4 May
Rotters and Colanders
Initiatives which blow preconceptions about sailing out of the water In these times it's all too easy to fall back on old adages about sailing, saying the costs are too high, it's elitist and things are in decline, but there are some incredible bright spots which blow preconceptions about sailing out of the water. Posted on 28 Apr
French Olympic Week and Charleston Race Week
Racing action at French Olympic Week and Charleston Race Week For many Americans, 2028 might feel like a far distant horizon right now, however for Olympic sailing hopefuls, the 2028 Summer Olympics, which will be held in and around the city of Los Angeles, are rapidly hoving into view. Posted on 21 Apr
Succession Planning
Just exactly what does 'The Hinckley Way' mean and stand for, and how do you measure it? Nouns like Claims. Assertions. Superlatives. Hyperbole. Adjectives such as Peerless. Bespoke. Gold Standard. Certainly seen them a bit. Heard them plenty of times, as well. Nearly always find an example or two in a press release. And then there's Hinckley Posted on 20 Apr
North Sails Loft 57 PodcastPredictWind - Wave Routing 728x90 BOTTOMArmstrong 728x90 - Performance Mast Range - BOTTOM