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Argo Group Gold Cup, the battle of Britain Argo Group Gold Cup, the battle of Britain
Two British crews hold the highest scores after day one of racing in Bermuda at the Argo Group Gold Cup, the penultimate event on... Argo Group Gold Cup, the battle of Britain


Video courtesy Alpari World Match Racing Tour.

Hamilton – Two British crews hold the highest scores after day one of racing in Bermuda at the Argo Group Gold Cup, the penultimate event on the Alpari World Match Racing Tour, in what race pundits believe could turn into a clash of the Anglo-Saxon match racing titans.

In one corner is the GAC Pindar team of four time Tour winner and 2013 Tour leader, Ian Williams. In the other is the high profile crew of the world’s most successful Olympic sailor, Sir Ben Ainslie, fresh from his turn-around America’s Cup win with Oracle Team USA in San Francisco.

Both crews ended the day unbeaten on four wins. “It was great fun,” said Ainslie, who is competing to help raise funds for the Andrew Simpson Sailing Foundation, named after his lifelong friend Andrew ‘Bart’ Simpson who died in a sailing accident earlier this year.

We were a little bit rusty on the whole boat on boat situations and the starts,” Ainslie continued. “We got a lot better through the day with the starts. But we made a few mistakes. Obviously we did a lot of this three or four years ago, so you remember quite quickly, but the guys we’re up against are really practicing hard on their time on distance and boat positioning and that is what is critical in the pre-starts. So we have a little bit of catching up to do. Otherwise we liked the conditions – a bit shifty. And it was good with the guys – Iain did a great job on the tactics as always.

While Ainslie beat Bjorn Hansen, Phil Robertson, Nicolai Sehested and local sailor Joshua Greenslade, Williams won against Chris Steele, Pierre Antoine Morvan, Will Tiller and his old foe Mathieu Richard.

Williams’ most action-packed race was against Morvan. After Williams’ GAC Pindar crew picked up a penalty in the pre-start, they led around the course, but by not enough to carry out their turn. Their only recourse was to slow up and, as the two boats approached the finish line, Williams luffed, holding the French team up to windward. The French crew thought they could roll over the top of Williams’ boat and attempted to bear away, but failed to make it. For this they received a red flag penalty, requiring them to carry out their turn immediately.

It became a penalty off,” described Williams. “But we were in a slightly better place to do ours than they were.

Ainslie and Williams were racing in Group 2, the 20-strong fleet having been divided up into two groups of 10 for Qualifying. While their group enjoyed a pleasant afternoon weather-wise, the same could not be said for Group 1, this morning. As the second flight of this came to a close, an intense squall brought with it a deluge.

We couldn’t see more than 10m and all my crew were hiding downstairs of course!” said Team Alpari FX helmsman, Adam Minoprio. “Luckily we had finished our race, but that is just Bermuda. We don’t expect the rain, but we expect wind shifts and tricky conditions.

At the end of day one, Minoprio, currently joint second overall on the Tour’s 2013 leaderboard, leads Group 1 on 3-0. However in the brisk conditions with winds gusting above 20 knots at times there were several gear failures on the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club’s fleet of classic 33ft long International One Design yachts.

Particularly unfortunate was Keith Swinton’s Black Swan Racing that was leading Italian Simone Ferrarese’s team in Flight 3, only for the splice in their mainsail halyard to give way on the second beat. Swinton’s crew swapped to a different boat for the next flight only for the halyard to go on that boat too.

Despite this set-back, Swinton had a good first race. In this he had managed to place three penalties and a subsequent black flag on his opponent, Lance Fraser, beginning with the 20 year old Bermudan sailor failing to keep clear at the first weather mark rounding.

Defending Argo Group Gold Cup champion, US Virgin Islander Taylor Canfield didn’t get off to the best start. Currently on 2-2, his USone team lost to Francesco Bruni’s Luna Rossa crew and Johnnie Berntsson’s Stena Sailing Team.

Stepping ashore, Canfield identified the problem: “We had a lot more conversation on the boat going into that last race, which was good. In the middle two we were more ‘small picture’, whereas in hindsight we should have been more ‘head out of the boat’ and looking at which side of the course we wanted.

Johnie Berntsson, the 2008 Argo Group Gold Cup winner won both his races today, against Stanczyk and Canfield. In the first he started with a penalty but extended far enough away during the race to carry out his penalty turn successfully. In his Canfield match, he led around the entire course.

Qualifying resumes tomorrow but significantly will kick off with ‘the Battle of Britain’ when Ainslie and Williams go up against each other.

Argo Group Gold Cup, rankings
Group 1, after 4 flights
1. Adam Minoprio (NZL) Team Alpari FX – 3-0
2. Francesco Bruni (ITA) Luna Rossa – 2-0
3. Johnie Berntsson (SWE) Stena Sailing Team – 2-0
4. Simone Ferrarese (ITA) Ferrarese Sailing Team – 2-1
5. Taylor Canfield (ISV) USone – 2-2

Group 2 Results after 5 Flights
1. Ian Williams (GBR) GAC Pindar 4-0
2. Sir Ben Ainslie (GBR) Ben Ainslie Sailing Team 4-0
3. Bjorn Hansen (SWE) eWork Sailing Team 3-1
4. Chris Steel (NZL) 36 Below Racing 2-2
5. Phil Robertson (NZL) WAKA Racing 2-2

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