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Secondo giorno di regate a Marsiglia, dov'è in corso di svolgimento il Match Race France, primo evento del World Match Racing Tour 2010.

World Match Racing Tour – Marsiglia – Secondo giorno di regate a Marsiglia, dov’è in corso di svolgimento il Match Race France, primo evento del World Match Racing Tour 2010. Le condizioni meteo non proprio favorevoli hanno ritardato la disputa dei match previsti dal programma e gli skipper si sono ritrovati a darsi battaglia nel corso del pomeriggio, con il vento che, proveniente da nordovest, ha oscillato tra i 4 e gli 8 nodi di intensità.

A prendere la testa della classifica, confermando quanto di buono fatto vedere ieri, sono stati Ben Ainslie (5-1) e Torvar Mirsky (4-0). A fargli compagnia, seppur con qualche sconfitta in più, il sempre combattivo Paolo Cian (5-3), al rientro dpo na stagione in ombra.

Bene, almeno rispetto alle ultime uscite dell’anno passato, il timoniere di All4One Sebastien Col, solido nel contrapporre quattro vittorie a due sconfitte, e Philippe Presti, seconda forza dello squadrone francese.

In una giornata che ha evidenziato un buon livellamento delle forze in campo, Francesco Bruni (3-5) ha perso un pò di terreno ma è comunque in piena corsa per il passaggio del turno. Chi, invece, pare essersi eclissato completamente è Gian Luca Perris. Lo skipper monegasco, dopo le due vittorie di ieri, ha rimediato ben cinque sconfitte: un ritorno alla normalità, dato che Perris non era certo tra i favoriti della vigilia.

Match Race France, day one
Ben Ainslie, Team Origin, 5-1
Paolo Cian, Team Italia, 5-3
Torvar Mirsky, Mirsky Racing Team, 4-0
Sébastien Col, All4One, 4-2
Philippe Presti, French Match Racing Team, 4-3
Pierre-Antoine Morvan, 4-5
Adam Minoprio, BlackMatch, 3-2
Mathieu Richard, French Match Racing Team, 3-3
Francesco Bruni, Azzurra Racing, 3-5
Gian Luca Perris, 2-5
Peter Gilmour, Yanmar Racing, 2-6
Bertrand Pacé, Aleph Sailing Team, 1-5


WORLD MATCH RACING TOUR, DOES LOCAL KNOWLEDGE ECLIPSE EXPERIENCE?
[World Match Racing Tour Press Release] Day Two of the World Match Racing Tour in Marseille has produced a range of results that has highlighted not only match racing experience but also local knowledge as top running variables that can make or break a professional sailing series. After a slow start to the morning with racing postponed, the sailors were let out onto the race course as the wind clocked in from the North West at 4 to 8 knots for the remainder of the day. Racing again in the Bay of Marseille was moved very close in-shore with excellent spectator appeal to the ‘Rade Sud’.

Ben Ainslie Team Origin and Torvar Mirsky Mirsky Racing Team are still both on top of the World Match Racing Tour leader board after today with 11 flights now completed overall. Ainslie has more wins than any other helm so far this week with a current score of 5-1. At a glance it could be said that international match racers with a raft of consistent accolades are steam rolling Match Race France, but the less glamorous placing currently being experienced by the likes of Peter Gilmour Yanmar Racing and Francesco Bruni Team Azzurra tells a different story.

Bruni who won the Congressional Cup only 12 days ago related “It is tough out there, today has really reminded me about spending time training at particular sailing venues prior to events”, a luxury afforded by Olympic dinghy sailors who train months in advance at a set destination for their annual World Championships. “I think more time on the water with your coach really getting to grips with the region’s quirks is a definite advantage”. This is not an option for the World Match Racing Tour competitors who only have a small window of 2 hours to train on the race course area at each of the 10 venues before racing starts the subsequent day.

This leads us into the scenario of ‘local knowledge’ being a serious variable to win races at this venue. Local knowledge is a phenomenon respected the world over by the sailing fraternity. The indigenous racers revel in understanding that they have decades of tales fed in at an early age on which way to go up the all important first beat or if the rain clouds suddenly disperse and the islands appear, as happened today, then the trend is for the wind to always swing to a particular angle.

However, the Bay of Marseille has no clear answers, even French national sailors have been experiencing the woes of highly testing conditions. Pacé, a previous ISAF Match Racing World Champion who has returned to the World Match Racing Tour action, after a 5 year absence, is not shining in these Mediterranean style winds. Perris our newest match racing star from yesterday has also unfortunately awoken from his ‘dream’ with no victorious matches today.

There is no clear winner today between racing experience or local knowledge; it will remain a question as to which has the greater influence until the penultimate race on Sunday. Perhaps Marseille with its legendary world famous tale of ‘a man in an iron mask’ will remain shrouded in its charming cloak of mystery both on and off the water.

Match Race France, day one
Ben Ainslie, Team Origin, 5-1
Paolo Cian, Team Italia, 5-3
Torvar Mirsky, Mirsky Racing Team, 4-0
Sébastien Col, All4One, 4-2
Philippe Presti, French Match Racing Team, 4-3
Pierre-Antoine Morvan, 4-5
Adam Minoprio, BlackMatch, 3-2
Mathieu Richard, French Match Racing Team, 3-3
Francesco Bruni, Azzurra Racing, 3-5
Gian Luca Perris, 2-5
Peter Gilmour, Yanmar Racing, 2-6
Bertrand Pacé, Aleph Sailing Team, 1-5

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