| Postponed
Ashore Again - No Racing on Wednesday
The
XXXIst America's Cup Match is fast becoming an endurance
event with Tuesday marking the fifth postponement
in five attempts to start Race Four. There hasn't
been racing now for a full week.
The
Swiss Alinghi Team currently leads the Defender,
Team New Zealand, 3 - 0 in the best of nine series.
On
Tuesday, Principal Race Officer Harold Bennett was
confronted with a weather forecast that included
a Gale Warning on the Hauraki Gulf and he was forced
to cancel racing again.
Alinghi
did go sailing in the morning, taking both boats
out for a short sail, while Team New Zealand went
sailing on 34-foot MRX keelboats in the harbour
in front of the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron.
At
the scheduled start time of 13:15, there was 25
- 28 knots, with gusts over 40 knots on the Hauraki
Gulf, with a two-metre swell.
Bennett
revisited the weather forecast late on Tuesday afternoon,
with the hope of re-scheduling Race Four to Wednesday,
a scheduled 'off' day. But the weather models are
predicting very strong winds overnight and into
Wednesday morning, moderating to 25 to 35 knots
in the afternoon. That's not a promising scenario,
and Bennett decided to hold to the current schedule,
with Race Four to be attempted again on Thursday.
Although
frustration is setting in among America's Cup sailors
and race fans alike, we're a long way from setting
any records.
The
longest match in America's Cup history was an 18-day
endurance contest in 1899 between Sir Thomas Lipton's
first Shamrock and the American Columbia, co-owned
by J. Pierpont Morgan and with Charlie Barr at the
wheel.
It
took 11 tries between October 3 and October 20 to
get the three-race series completed, with Columbia
winning in a sweep, 3-0. In fact, just completing
Race One took seven tries over 13 days.
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