Swedish
Match Tour Off To Germany
Match
Race Germany is the penultimate event to the 2003-’04
schedule, and offers a Mercedes Benz to any skipper
who can win 10 straight.
LANGENARGEN,
Germany — The Swedish Match Tour visits
Langenargen, Germany, on the shores of Lake Constance
in southern Germany, for the penultimate event
to the 2003-’04 schedule, Match Race Germany,
June 8-14.
The
7th annual event has some new features this year,
including a boat. The Bavaria 35 Match (from Bavaria
Yachts, Giebelstadt, Germany) replaces the Diamant
2000 used in past editions. The 35-footer displaces
11,900 pounds and has 695 square feet of sail
area.
With
a Euro 20,000 (approximately $23,700) prize purse,
Match Race Germany offers a special prize for
the skipper who masters the new design the quickest.
Any
crew that can win 10 races in a row wins a Mercedes
Benz SLK roadster, valued at approximately Euro
40,000 (approximately $47,000), from event sponsor
Wuerttembergische Versicherungsagentur Speth.
Many
familiar faces will be on hand gunning for the
sleek speedster, including four of the top five
at last week’s Tour event in Split, Croatia.
Heading
the line-up is Australian Peter Gilmour and the
Pizza-La Sailing Team of Mike Mottl, Kazuhiko
Sofuku and Yasuhiro Yaji.
They
clinched the Tour Championship last week at the
Swedish Match Tour event in Croatia, but Gilmour
is still upset about his second-place finish to
Frenchman Bertrand Pacé, who won the final
3-0. It was Pizza-La’s second consecutive
runner-up placing.
“I
pride myself on being able to convert wins once
we’re in the final,” Gilmour said.
“I think that we usually rise above the
pressure. But in Croatia we weren’t able
to do that, and Bertrand did.”
Pizza-La
may get another shot at the skipper of Team France
for America’s Cup 2007 in Germany, where
Pacé will also compete.
Pacé,
champion of the inaugural Swedish Match Tour in
2000, sailed brilliantly last week. He was cool,
calm and collected, and reminded everyone that
when he’s on his game he’s one of
the best match-race skippers. Pacé is tied
for fifth on the Tour leaderboard.
Denmark’s
Jes Gram-Hansen, third overall on last year’s
Tour, is making a late-season push up the Tour
leaderboard. A fourth-place finish last week moved
him up to eighth place, after beginning the year
placed 13th.
Gavin
Brady, the New Zealand helmsman of the BMW Oracle
Racing syndicate for America’s Cup 2007,
looks to improve on his fifth-place in Croatia.
Brady will have to do so without regular tactician
John Kostecki, who won’t be in attendance.
Brady,
who could move into second overall on the Tour
leaderboard with a top-five finish, will have
BMW Oracle Racing teammates Sean Clarkson, Dirk
De Ridder and Brad Webb crewing.
Also
competing is Poland’s Karol Jablonski, the
world No. 1-ranked match-racer and helmsman for
Italy’s Toscana Challenge, another America’s
Cup hopeful syndicate.
Jablonski
had a great run at the Tour event Porto Azzurro,
Italy, last month before finishing fourth, and
will have German Markus Wieser in his crew. Wieser
won Match Race Germany in 2001.
Mathieu
Richard of France makes his second consecutive
Tour appearance, after placing sixth in Croatia.
He gained entry by finishing runner-up to Wieser
at the Berlin Match Race, and when Wieser declined
his invitation to sail with Jablonski.
Other
competitors include Frenchman Luc Pillot, of France’s
le Défi syndicate for the America’s
Cup, and New Zealander Ray Davies, representing
Team New Zealand and including Kelvin Harrap in
his crew. Harrap is tied for ninth on the Tour
leaderboard.
Denmark’s
Lars Nordbjerg and Australian Michael Dunstan
of the OzBoyz Challenge, an America’s Cup
hopeful, also will be on hand.
Two
other spots will be filled based on the results
of the German Invitational Cup, a local feeder
event. Carsten Kemmling, the reigning German Match
Race champion and a journalist at Germany’s
Yacht magazine, is considered the favorite, and
will be challenged by five other promising match-race
crews from Germany and Switzerland.
All
venues on the Swedish Match Tour are unique in
their own right, and Lake Constance is no different.
Nestled
among the Alps and occupying an old glacier basin
at an elevation of 1,299 feet (396 meters), Lake
Constance serves as a natural border for Germany,
Austria and Switzerland.
Central
Europe’s second largest freshwater lake,
Lake Constance covers an area of 220 square miles
(569 square kilometers), measuring about 40 miles
(statute) long (64.3 kilometers) and up to 8.5
miles (statute) wide (13.6 kilometers), with an
average depth of 295 feet (90 meters) and a maximum
depth of 827 feet (252 meters).
For
more information on the Swedish Match Tour, its
skippers and events please visit www.SwedishMatchTour.com.