Team
Musto Wins Second Swedish Match Tour Event: Skipper
Ed Baird And His Crew Win The Inaugural Portugal
Match Cup
CASCAIS,
Portugal — The sixth Swedish Match Tour
has just begun, and if the remaining eight events
bear any resemblance to the Portugal Match Cup
it’s going to be an exciting season.
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Team
Musto works upwind in final of the Portugal
Match Cup: Jon Ziskind, Dean Phipps, Guy
Salter, Andy Horton and Ed Baird (left to
right). Photo © Guido Cantini / Sea&See
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Ed
Baird and Russell Coutts put on a thrilling final
series, one featuring numerous lead changes, seven
penalties and enough match-race strategy to make
a chess grand master envious.
The
two were the best performing skippers all week.
Coutts entered the final undefeated in 11 races.
Baird had lost only two in 13 starts. But in the
end Baird defeated Coutts, 3-0.
Baird
(St. Petersburg, Fla.) and his Team Musto crew
– Andy Horton (Newport, R.I.), Dean Phipps
(Valencia, Spain), Guy Salter (Cowes, England)
and Jon Ziskind (Newport, R.I.) – won 40,000
Euros ($48,000) of the 150,000 Euro
($180,000) prize purse.
“Russell,
you’re the standard we try to reach,”
Baird said upon accepting the winner’s trophy
and prize money. “It’s wonderful to
have you in the final and finally beat you.”
Baird
won his second Swedish Match Tour event of the
year (he won the Congressional Cup last April)
one week after winning his third match-racing
world championship. Earlier in July Baird and
Team Musto finished fifth at the Swedish Match
Cup.
With
the victory, Baird scores 25 points towards the
Swedish Match Tour championship and takes pole
position in the race for the BMW 545i Touring
that will be awarded to the champion next July
in Sweden.
Coutts
and his Danish crew – Michael Arnhild, Jes
Gram-Hansen, Christian Kamp and Rasmus Kostner
– didn’t fare too badly. The final
was much closer than the lopsided score indicated,
and they won 25,000 Euros ($30,000) for placing
second. Uncharacteristic mistakes on their part
doomed the outcome.
“We
didn’t sail well today,” said Coutts,
the most winning skipper in America’s Cup
history. “Ed and his guys deserved to win.
They sailed very well and we weren’t very
impressive.”
Despite
being an inaugural event, every sailor (no exaggeration)
praised the organizers of the Portugal Match Cup,
Justino de Sa Machado of the Sun Sailing Team
and the Naval Club of Cascais, for an outstanding
regatta.
“Even
on the first occasion, it’s one of the best
events on the Swedish Match Tour,” said
fourth-placed Jesper Radich (DEN). “They
listened to what the sailors had to say. These
guys have done it all and seen it all, so they
know what’s right. It was nice to see.”
And,
despite no time to shake out the new Swedish Match
40, the specially designed match-racer proved
popular with the crews.
“It’s
a very good boat for match-racing,” said
Coutts.
The
third and deciding race of the final was a mirror
of the first two in its excitement and suspense.
Coutts
lost two leads. But so did Baird.
Twice
there were hunting situations upwind where Baird,
on starboard, dialed down at Coutts trying to
force him into an error.
There
were four penalties issued by the on-water umpires,
but neither competitor did any penalty turns as
each alternating penalty canceled the previous.
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Ed
Baird (background) leads Philippe Presti
upwind during their deciding quarterfinal
match at Match Race Portugal. Photo ©
Guido Cantini / Sea&See
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“When
ahead we just tried to sail our own race,”
said Horton, Baird’s tactician and main
trimmer.
The
wind conditions for the final were as difficult
as the first four days, even if it was from a
different direction and with less pressure.
The
wind for the final was from the north/northwest,
left of the first four days, and blowing between
6 and 8 knots. And with the racecourse again placed
in the Bay of Cascais, off of Cascais Marina,
there were wild shifts and large windless patches
to contend with.
“It
was scary because there was never an obvious situation
with the wind,” Baird said. “There
were lots of indicators of what the wind might
do, but they weren’t reliable.
“We
just tried to get off the line cleanly and toward
the next puff,” Baird said. “The team
was wonderful today. They never got down.”
Baird,
Horton and Ziskind have been together for all
three regattas they’ve raced this month,
with varying supporting casts. Although they finished
fifth at the Swedish Match Cup, that was due more
to one bad day than a poor regatta. They finished
with a 10-2 record.
At
the Worlds last week in Russia, they won a light-air
regatta sailed on a lake with huge windshifts.
“I
think the past regattas helped us carry a level
of comfort into this event,” Baird said.
“We’ve been through some tough races
in the last few weeks. We knew to stay patient
and keep fighting.”
“Ed’s
been sailing fast all year,” said Ziskind,
the headsail trimmer. “He’s just putting
the bow down and letting the boat rumble along.
Plus, the three of us have been together for two
years now. It’s finally coming together
for us.”
Baird
and Team Musto made it to the final after beating
Radich and his Team Denmark crew (Jann Neergaard,
Chresten Plinius, Pete Poulsen, Rasmus
Winston) 3-1 in the semifinals.
“We
had to beat all the Vikings today,” said
Horton, referring to the nine Danes of the 10
sailors they raced on the final day.
Coutts
and his Danish crew defeated Peter Holmberg (USVI)
and the Team Alinghi crew (Rodney Ardern, Murray
Jones, Lorenzo Mazza and Pete Van
Nieuwenhuyzen) 3-0 to make the final.
In
the Petit Final, featuring two skippers who have
been out of match-racing for awhile, Holmberg
defeated Radich 2-0.
“It
was good to end with a couple of wins,”
said Holmberg, who only began match-racing again
this month after a year and a half layoff. “I
think we sailed our best after losing to Russell.”
Radich
hasn’t match-raced in the last three months,
but was also happy with his performance. “Actually,
I’m very pleased,” he said. “We
beat some of the top guys like Peter Gilmour.”
PORTUGAL
MATCH CUP
Final Standings (July 31, 2004)
Prize purse: 150,000 Euro ($180,442.50)
<U>Skipper (Country) Team, Record, Prize
money*</U>
1. Ed Baird (USA) Team Musto, 14-2, €40,000
($48,117.98)
Crew Andy Horton, Dean Phipps, Guy Salter, Jon
Ziskind
2.
Russell Coutts (NZL), 11-3, €25,000 ($30,073.74)
Crew Michael Arnhild, Jes Gram-Hansen, Christian
Kamp, Rasmus Kostner
3.
Peter Holmberg (USVI) Team Alinghi, 8-7, €20,000
($24,058.99) Crew Rodney Ardern, Murray Jones,
Lorenzo Mazza, Piete Van Nieuwenhuyzen
4.
Jesper Radich (DEN) Team Denmark, 7-7, €15,000
($18,044.24) Crew Jann Neergaard, Chresten Plinius,
Pete Poulsen, Rasmus Winston
5.
Peter Gilmour (AUS) Pizza-La Sailing Team, 7-5,
€10,000 ($12,029.50) Crew Rod Dawson, Mike
Mottl, Kazuhiko Sofuku, Yasuhiro Yaji
6.
Philippe Presti (FRA) le Défi Français,
9-7, €9000 ($10,826.55) Crew Jean-Marie Dauris,
Fred Guilmin, Maurier Husson, Christian Scherrer
7.
Staffan Lindberg (FIN), 7-8, €8000 ($9,623.60)
Crew Johan Karlsson, Martin Krite, Daniel Mattsson,
Daniel Wallberg
8.
Bertrand Pacé (FRA) BMW Oracle Racing,
4-6, €7000 ($8,420.65) Crew Benoit Briand,
Thierry Fouchier, Fabrice Levet, Romain Troublé
9.
Chris Law (GBR) The Outlaws, 4-6, €6000 ($7,217.70)
Crew Oscar Angervall, Daniel Bjorndal, Anders
Dahlsjo, Henrik Walderyd
10.
Michael Dunstan (AUS) OzBoyz Challenge, 2-8, €5000
($6,014.75) Crew Jeremy Elliot, Wade Morgan, Ben
Morrison-Jack, Nick Partridge
11.
Geoff Meek (RSA) Shosholoza Challenge, 2-8, €3000
($3,608.85) Crew Ian Ainslie, Marc Lagesse, David
Rae, Mark Sadler
12.
Francisco Neto (POR) Team Henri Lloyd, 1-9, €2,000
($2,405.90) Crew Tiago Marcelino, Joaquim Moreira,
Bruno Santos, Miguel Veludo (*USD amounts based
on 7/31/04 exchange rate of 1Eur = 1.20295USD)
For
more information on the Swedish Match Tour, its
skippers and events please visit www.SwedishMatchTour.com.