Swedish
Match Tour - Coutts Dunks Holmberg At Swedish
Match Cup: Baird
Leads Group B, But The Day’s Drama Occurred
At A Windward Mark Rounding
MARSTRAND,
Sweden — On a day when Russell Coutts couldn’t
keep from plowing into Peter Holmberg, American
Ed Baird rolled to a 6-0 record to ensure himself
a spot in Saturday’s quarterfinals of the
Swedish Match Cup.
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The
onboard observer lends a hand to Peter Holmberg
after he was thrown overboard in a collision
with Russell Coutts. Photo © Anders
Averdal
|
With
racing in Group B suspended late this afternoon
due to lack of wind, Baird, the reigning match-racing
world champion, rolled to a 6-0 record in a tough
group looking completely at ease in the light
winds.
“There
are some days where everything goes your way,”
said Baird, who won the tour stop in Long Beach,
Calif., last April. “Today, all the little
things fell in our lap.”
Despite
having one more flight to sail before Group B
completes its initial round robin, Baird can’t
be beat. Below him the standings are a jumbled
mess as the competitors fought each other and
light winds.
Coutts
(NZL) is second with 3.5 points on a 4-1 record
and Björn Hansen (SWE) is third at 3-2. Three
skippers are tied at 2-3, including Peter Gilmour
(AUS), Holmberg (USVI) and Luc Pillot (FRA). Lars
Nordbjerg (DEN) is seventh at 1-4, while Staffan
Lindberg (FIN) is eighth at 1-5.
The
highlight match of the day pitted Coutts against
Holmberg. Coutts wound up putting Holmberg in
the drink when he hit the past Swedish Match Tour
champion during an incident at the windward mark
of their Flight 2 match.
With
the wind blowing around 7 knots, Holmberg led
Coutts to the windward mark. Both were on port
tack and Coutts was slightly overlapped on Holmberg’s
windward quarter.
Holmberg
luffed, trying to stall Coutts. “The standard
move is to luff head-to-wind to slow the other
guy before you bear off and accelerate away,”
said Holmberg.
“I
guess he got anxious,” Holmberg continued.
“He tried bearing away to go below us and
misjudged the distance. He came in with serious
force, hit us in the port transom and spun me
over the side.”
“We
hit him pretty hard,” said Coutts’
crewmember Jes Gram-Hansen. “I’d give
Peter a 9 for that nosedive in the drink.”
As
he fell in the water Holmberg grabbed the spinnaker
sheet so he didn’t get separated from the
boat. He was in the water for only a few seconds,
and climbed back aboard with the help of the onboard
observer.
Coutts,
sailing with Gram-Hansen’s Danish match-race
crew, was penalized twice by the on-water umpires
(after the race he received a .5-point penalty).
He had to perform one of the turns immediately,
which allowed Holmberg to regain the lead on the
three-lap course.
Holmberg
held a big lead on the second beat, but the race
was far from over in the shifty and puffy light
winds.
Up
the third beat, Holmberg said that Coutts did
a better job picking the puffs and regained the
lead beginning the run to the finish, but he still
had a penalty turn to perform.
Coutts
sailed a hot angle to the left corner of the run,
then jibed to starboard and toward the finish
line. Holmberg was close, and the nearly 1,000
spectators lining Marstrand Harbor watched intently
to see if there was enough distance between the
two for Coutts to perform his turn and win.
“We
talked about it on the run,” Gram-Hansen
said. “We thought we were close enough to
having the distance needed for the turn.”
And
they did. The genoa went up, the chute came down
and Coutts carved a smooth turn around the pin
end. His bow crossed the line less about 3 seconds
ahead of Holmberg’s to claim the win.
“I
didn’t think he had enough distance,”
said Holmberg. “I thought he’d slow
up on the run and try to offset the penalty.”
Baird
made it through the day without any penalties,
and with little trouble. He did well in the pre-starts,
and won against some of the best skippers in the
business: Gilmour, Holmberg and Coutts, whom he
beat after trailing around the first lap.
“When
we needed a shift we got a shift, when we needed
a puff we got a puff,” said main trimmer
and tactician Andy Horton. “It’s easy
when it goes your way.”
At
8:00 p.m. tonight the race committee was sorting
out how to complete the seven remaining matches
in Group B. They must be completed before Stage
2 can be conducted.
Stage
2 pits the 2nd through 7th place finishers in
Groups A and B against each other in a knockout
series, with the first to 3 points winning.
OPEN
REGATTA STANDINGS
Group
B
1.
Ed Baird/USA, SKF Racing 6-0
Crew:
Andy Horton, Pete van Nieuwenhyzen, Peter Poulsen,
Jon Ziskind
2.
Russell Coutts/NZL 4-1, 3.5 points*
Crew:
Michael Arnhild, Jes Gram-Hansen, Christian Kamp,
Rasmus Kostner
(*
A .5-point penalty was assessed against Coutts
for hitting Peter Holmberg)
3.
Bjorn Hansen/SWE 3-2
Crew:
Mattias Bredin, Fredrik Ekman, Gustav Kampolm,
Anders Jönsson
4.
Peter Gilmour/AUS, Pizza-La Sailing Team 2-3
Crew:
Rod Dawson, Mike Mottl, Kazuhiko Sofuku, Yasuhiro
Yaji
=
Peter Holmberg/USVI, Team Alinghi 2-3
Crew:
Richard Bouzaid, Lorenzo Mazza, Will McCarthy,
Dean Phipps
=
Luc Pillot/FRA 2-3
Crew:
Gilles Andre, Fabrice Blondel, Erik Ferran, Frédéric
Guilmin
7.
Lars Nordbjerg/DEN 1-4
Crew:
Jeppe Blak, Niels Gramkov, Thomas Hartvig, Henning
Lambertsen
8.
Staffan Lindberg/FIN 1-5
Crew:
Johan Karlsson, Daniel Mattsson, Johan Mossberg,
Daniel Wallberg
For
more information on the Swedish Match Tour, its
skippers and events please visit www.SwedishMatchTour.com.