READ WINS RAUCOUS
2003 CONGRESSIONAL CUP FINAL
 |
| American
skipper Ken Read leads New Zealander Gavin
Brady to the top mark during the finals of
the Congressional Cup in Long beach, California.
11. April 2003. Read won the finals 2-1 over
Gavin Brady of New Zealand to claim the coveted
Crimson blazer. Photo © Sergio Dionisio
- Swedish
Match Tour |
Long
Beach, CA, USA (April 12, 2003) – American
Ken Read overcame a slow start earlier in the
week, and the regatta’s hottest skipper,
to win the famed “Crimson Blazer”
at the 2003 Congressional Cup, the Swedish Match
Tour’s first event following the America’s
Cup, in an exciting, penalty-filled and momentum-fueled
final on Long Beach’s Outer Harbor.
Read,
returning to competition following a brief hiatus
after leading Team Dennis Conner’s challenge
for America’s Cup 2003, frequently refers
to the racing on the Swedish Match Tour as “hand-to-hand
combat” and he proved himself to be the
heavyweight champion today, outpunching and outlasting
his opponent, New Zealand’s Gavin Brady
of Team Beau Geste, who was part of the Prada
Challenge’s afterguard. Brady entered the
championship round as the favorite, having won
18 of his 20 matches this week.
“It
was some exciting racing out there,” said
Read in a bit of an understatement. “Three
tight, close matches and we sailed well in two
of them. The six of us have sailed together for
a year and a half and we know each other really
well and that definitely played a big part.”
The
win brought some peace of mind to Read and his
crew, comprised of members of the Stars &
Stripes challenge.
“Its
fun to win a Swedish Match Tour event, especially
after our experience at the America’s Cup
challenger series. We never lost confidence in
ourselves even though there were a lot of doubters
in our ability after the challenger series,”
said Read. “Hopefully this sends a message
that the Stars & Stripes team are a good bunch
of sailors. They don’t get any better than
these guys.”
 |
| American
skipper Ken Read crashes though the surf during
the finals of the Congressional Cup in Long
beach, California. 11. April 2003. Read won
the finals 2-1 over Gavin Brady of New Zealand
to claim the coveted Crimson blazer. Photo
© Sergio Dionisio - Swedish
Match Tour |
Read
began the 39th Congressional Cup with a 1-4 record
on the first day but continuously improved during
the week, compiling victories and moving up the
leaderboard, advancing to the semifinals as the
last qualifier.
In
his semifinal he dispatched of his opponent, Australia
James Spithill, former helmsman for the OneWorld
Challenge, 2-0, to gain momentum heading into
his clash with Brady, who likewise shed his opponent,
Italy’s Paolo Cian, former helmsmans for
the Mascalzone Latino Challenge, now sailing for
the Riviera di Rimini Sailing Team.
In
the first match of the first-to-two wins final
Brady entered on starboard side, above the race
committee, and immediately dialed up Read in the
middle of the start line. A game of cat-and-mouse
amidst the spectator craft ensued, with the competitors
settling for a split tack start, Read off to the
right and Brady heading left.
At
the first cross, Read threw a dummy tack at Brady,
drawing Brady off the layline, and moving onto
starboard and taking the lead. As the boats approached
the windward mark, Read forced Brady into a penalty
when Brady responded too late to a port-starboard
situation. Brady then chased Read down the windward
leg, the two engaging in a gybing duel down the
entire beat.
At
the leeward mark rounding Read instigated another
port-starboard incident, hanging another penalty
on Brady and forcing the Kiwi skipper to execute
one of his penalty turns immediately, resulting
in a five boat length deficit from which Brady
would not recover.
Race
commentator Tucker Thompson, a skipper and crew
member with intimate knowledge of racing on the
Swedish Match Tour, observed at the time, “When
you’re on your back foot in match racing
you need to sail aggressively and when you sail
aggressively, the odds are against you.”
The
second match of the finals saw another split tack
start with Brady heading to the right and Read
going left. Read won the first cross, proving
the choice of his tactician Terry Hutchinson,
a former Congressional Cup winner (1992), correct.
 |
| American
skipper Ken Read and his team pose in front
of the Congressional Cup in Long beach, California.
11. April 2003. Read won the finals 2-1 over
Gavin Brady of New Zealand to claim the coveted
Crimson blazer. Photo © Sergio Dionisio
- Swedish
Match Tour |
After
the windward mark rounding Brady went low to try
and block the wind into Read’s spinnaker
with the two engaging in another gybing duel as
they closed on the leeward mark.
Near
the bottom mark, Brady and Read again mixed it
up with two port starboard penalties being called
on Read and then, when Read forced Brady into
the mark, a third penalty was called against Read,
resulting in a black flag and the match being
awarded to Brady.
It
wasn’t over there however, as Brady’s
Catalina 37 became entangled in the mark and for
several minutes questions lingered as to whether
Brady would have to sail the rest of match in
order to be awarded the point. All the while,
Brady’s bowman, Brad Webb, worked feverishly
to free them from the mark but finally the race
committee called the match, cut the mark and the
competitors prepared themselves for a third and
final, win-take-all match.
In
the third match, Read led Brady into the lower
right hand corner of the spectator fleet, within
feet of the Belmont Pier, burning time off the
clock. As they approached the line, Read saw that
Brady was a bit early, causing the Kiwi to execute
a downwind tack. At that point Read pounced and
immediately tacked over his opponent.
About
half way up the beat Brady tacked to set up the
second cross, however instead of crossing Read
took advantage of a three-boat length lead to
tack on the face of his opponent.
The
strategy worked as Read rounded the windward mark
10 seconds head of Brady. Brady again took the
lower course, waiting for Read to gybe. Unfortunately
for Brady, he went a little too low and was forced
to gybe twice to get back to the layline. Approaching
the leeward mark Brady copped a penalty for a
port-starboard incident and in spite of a tacking
duel on the leeward leg and his best efforts to
block Read’s air on the final beat, Brady
ran out of racetrack.
The
Congressional Cup title was the first Swedish
Match Tour victory for Read and, unfortunately
for his valiant opponent, the sixth time Brady
has finished as a runner-up.
During
the battle between the two leaders of the Swedish
Match Tour in the final flight of the round robin,
earlier in the day, Denmark’s Jes Gra-Hansen
and Jesper Radich, first and second, respectively,
Gram-Hansen was able to reaffirm his ranking.
In
the pre-start, Gram-Hansen turned away several
aggressive maneuvers by his countryman to avoid
any trouble and sail clear to the start with good
boat speed. The clean start was too much for Radich
to overcome and Gram-Hansen, while disappointed
in not qualifying for the semifinals, gained a
measure of satisfaction in shutting Radich out
of any Swedish Match Tour points, while adding
to his own total.
“It
was important for us to go out today and extend
our lead over Jesper,” said Gram-Hansen.
“Looking forward on the Swedish Match Tour,
we feel good with how we’re sailing especially
going to the big boats (IMX 40s) that they use
at the Elba Cup.”
With
his petit finals victory over Cian, James Spithill
broke out of tie for third place on the Swedish
Match Tour rankings with Chris Law and “The
Outlaws” and now sits alone in third, eight
points behind Radich. Read’s victory moves
him into a tie for fourth with Law.
The
Swedish Match Tour’s next event is the Toscana
Elbea Cup – Trofeo Locman off the island
of Elba, Italy. For all the latest news from the
Swedish Match Tour visit www.swedishmatchtour.com.
CONGRESSIONAL
CUP FINAL STANDINGS
Skipper
Prize Money
1.
Ken Read, USA/Saucony Racing Team $6,000
2.
Gavin Brady, NZ/Team Beau Geste $4,500
3.
James Spithill, AUS/Team Spithill $3,000
4.
Paolo Cian, ITA/Riviera di Rimini Sailing Team
$2,500
5.Magnus
Holmberg, SWE/Team Holmberg $2,000
6.Jes
Gram-Hansen, DEN/Team Victory Lane $1,800
7.Scott
Dickson, USA/Dickson Racing Team $1,600
8.Chris
Law, GBR/ “The Outlaws” $1,400
9.Jesper
Radich, DEN/Team Radich $1,200
10.
Luc Pillot, FRA/Team Luc Pillot $1,000
SWEDISH
MATCH TOUR 2002/2003 RANKINGS
Skipper
Points
1.Jes Gram-Hansen, DEN/Team Victory Lane 72
2.Jesper
Radich, DEN/Team Radich 53
3.
James Spithill, OneWorld Challenge 45
4.
Chris Law, GBR/”The Outlaws” 35
Ken
Read, USA/Saucony Racing 35
6. Ed Baird, USA/Team Musto 30
6.
Gavin Brady, NZ/Team Beau Geste 28
7.
Karol Jablonski, POL/Team MK Café 24
Paolo
Cian, ITA/Riviera di Rimini Sailing Team 24
Congressional
Cup Finals
Flight
1
Read
def. Brady
Flight
2
Brady
def. Read – DSQ
Flight
3
Read
def. Brady
Petit-finals
Flight
1
Spithill
def. Cian
Flight
2
Spithill
def. Cian
Semifinals
Flight
1
Read
def. Spithill
Brady
def. Cian
Flight
2
Read
def. Spithill
Brady
def. Cian
Round
Robin Racing
Flight
18
Dickson
def. Pillot
Spithill
def. Law
Holmberg
def. Read
Brady
def. Cian
Gram-Hansen
def. Radich
About
the Swedish Match Tour
·
The Swedish Match Tour is comprised of nine of
the world's leading professional sailing events
and is proving to be the ultimate battleground
of sailing.
·
In addition to more than US$500,000 in individual
event prize money, the Swedish Match Tour awards
US$200,000 to the top eight sailors on the Swedish
Match Tour, with the first-place skipper netting
US$60,000.
·
In addition to a US$60,000 first prize, the winner
of the Swedish Match Tour receives the official
Swedish Match Tour Championship Trophy, 15"
(30 cm) high with 22 carat gold gilding, produced
by Swedish Match Tour sponsor Wedgwood. Additionally,
Wedgwood supplies runner-up prizes for second
and third places as well as commemorative plaques
to each event organizer.
·
The Swedish Match Tour produces 155 hours of television
coverage reaching more than 426 million households
worldwide annually.
·
Swedish Match Tour partners include Swedish Match,
Octagon and the Match Race Association.
·
Swedish Match Tour sponsors include Colorcraft,
Champagne Mumm, Musto and Wedgwood.