Swedish
Match Tour - Dickson Ousts Gilmour In Bermuda:
The Unseeded Skipper Takes Down Another Seed In
The Quarterfinal Round
HAMILTON,
Bermuda - Unseeded skipper Scott Dickson of the
Long Beach (Calif.) Yacht Club continued his winning
ways at the King Edward VII Gold Cup and knocked
out the event's defending champion, Australian
Peter Gilmour, in the quarterfinals of the event
on the Swedish Match Tour.
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The
Dickson Racing Team – Alan Lindsay,
Sonny Gibson, Scott Dickson and Dave Ridley
(from front) – works upwind at the
King Edward VII Gold Cup. Photo © Swedish
Match Tour / Bob Grieser
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Dickson,
sailing with crewmembers Sonny Gibson, Alan Lindsay,
Dave Ridley, scored a 3-2 victory over the Pizza-La
Sailing Team, including Gilmour, Mike Mottl, Kazuhiko
Sofuku and Yasuhiro Yaji at the Investors Guaranty
Presentation of the King Edward VII Gold Cup.
Last
year, Gilmour defeated Dickson's brother, Chris,
in the final, 3-2, but this year he succumbed
by the same score.
With
the score knotted at two-all, Gilmour was penalized
in the fifth race pre-start. A second penalty
on the first windward leg meant he had to perform
one of his two 270-degree penalty turns immediately.
Although Gilmour closed up to an overlapped position
with Dickson at the finish, he still carried the
pre-start penalty.
"We
had good positioning in the final race pre-start,"
Gilmour said. "But I made a mistake that
allowed him to catch up and get an overlap in
the last minute. I felt I had to create the foul
to get any sort of start. I really mucked it up."
"To
get a penalty on Gilmour is great," said
Dickson, "but he's got the smarts, speed
and muscle to sail away. We're delighted to beat
Peter, our round's got a bit further to go."
Mathieu
Richard of France almost pulled off an upset of
New Zealander Russell Coutts, a six-time winner
of the King Edward VII Gold Cup, but ultimately
fell to the three-time America's Cup champion.
Richard
opened a 2-0 advantage due to what Coutts called
"poor sailing on our part." Then Coutts
rallied for three straight to move into the semifinals.
"Of
course I'm a little upset," said 28-year-old
Richard. "We sailed very well and would've
been happy to beat the king. But I wasn't good
in the last two pre-starts."
Richard's
crew included Olivier Herledant, Philippe Mourniac
and Yannick Simon.
Coutts,
sailing with Danes Jes Gram-Hansen, Christian
Kamp and Rasmus Kostner, felt they sailed poorly
in the first two races before regrouping.
"We're
not sailing well," Coutts said. "Tactically
we're not making the right decisions. We're not
talking things through."
Coutts's
Team Colorcraft squares off against the Dickson
Racing Team in one half of tomorrow's semifinal
ladder. The other half pits Ed Baird's Team XL
Capital against James Spithill and the Luna Rossa
Challenge. Both Baird and Spithill, the No. 1
and 4 seeds, scored 3-0 wins over their opponents,
Klaartje Zuiderbaan and Staffan Lindberg, respectively.
Baird,
sailing with crewmembers Andy Horton, Piet van
Nieuwenhuyzen and Jon Ziskind, said the win was
hardly easy, despite the 3-0 score.
"When
you sail against someone new and unorthodox in
their maneuvers, you don't know what to expect,"
said Baird, the co-leader of the Swedish Match
Tour. "They started fine, their boathandling
was good and they had good speed. They'd get behind
but not farther, and that's the sign of a good
team. They sailed very maturely."
Zuiderbaan,
who won the Cicada Women's International Match
Racing Championship last Monday with crewmembers
Carrie Howe, Nanda Nengerman, Jetske Roodvoets
and Tryntje Zuiderbaan, entered the match having
won nine of her previous 10 races. With Lee Icyda
replacing Nengerman, who had to return home for
work, the streak was promptly erased.
"I
felt I didn't take the chances that were there,"
said Zuiderbaan, 32, of Holland. "We felt
quite even off the start line, but he was always
ahead when we met. His experience showed, but
I didn't think he was unbeatable."
The
Australian Spithill, who is helmsman of Italy's
Luna Rossa Challenge for the 32nd America's Cup,
made his match against Lindberg look easy. Sailing
with fellow Luna Rossa crewmembers Magnus Augustsson,
Charlie McKee and Joe Newton, Spithill started
to the right of Lindberg every time and won all
three races wire-to-wire.
"We
felt in control. We felt we had good speed and
boathandling," said Spithill, 26, and in
this third Cup campaign. "We liked the right
all day. It's a powerful position to have because
it's such a long way around to try and pass."
"It
was our intention to start where he started each
time," said Lindberg, the 33-year-old from
Finland. "We wanted the right because the
puffs were coming from the right. There were some
from the left, but they were shorter. And the
committee boat end was favored."
While
the winners move on to tomorrow's semifinals,
the losers of the quarterfinal matches squared
off this afternoon in consolation racing for fifth
through eighth. Gilmour beat Zuiderbaan and Lindberg
beat Richard in the first flight. Then Gilmour
beat Lindberg for fifth, and Richard beat Zuiderbaaan
for seventh.
For
more information on the Swedish Match Tour, its
skippers and events please visit www.SwedishMatchTour.com.