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Richard Comes Up Golden In Bermuda PDF Print E-mail

Frenchman wins first Gold Cup with defeat of Hansen; Baird takes 3rd over Walker

HAMILTON, Bermuda (Oct. 14, 2007) — Mathieu Richard of France became the third consecutive first-time winner of the King Edward VII Gold Cup today when he defeated Sweden’s Björn Hansen, 2-0.

Richard and his Saba Sailing Team crew of Greg Evrard (mainsail and tactics), Olivier Herledant (headsails) and Yannick Simon (bow and traveler) rolled through the regatta with a 12-2 record and won $35,000 of the $100,000 prize purse.

“I don’t know what to say,” said Richard, 31, of Nantes, France. “We went 3-0 in the quarterfinals and semifinals and 2-0 today. I guess it was our week. Everything worked well onboard. To win such a prestigious event is great for us.”

Hansen and his Team Apport.net crew of Martin Stromberg, Johan Tempelman and Will Thompson finished the regatta 15-5 and won $20,000. They entered the final having won 13 of 14 races, but couldn’t overcome the steamrolling Frenchmen.

“We were very happy to make the final, especially after we had to send a crewmember home,” said Hansen. “(Richard) might’ve had a bit of luck today, but we’ve been lucky throughout the week, so it probably evens out.”

Hansen’s primary tactician, Thomas Hallberg, left the island at the beginning of the week due to ill health. Thompson, of Bermuda, joined the crew the day before the regatta started.

In the Petite Final, Ed Baird of the U.S. defeated Bermuda’s Blythe Walker 2-0 to finish third and place Walker fourth. Baird and his Alinghi crew of Rodney Ardern, Lorenzo Mazza and Piet Van Nieuwenhuyzen won $15,000. Walker and crew Adam Barboza, Carola Cooper and Somers Kempe won $8,000.

Baird also won the Wedgwood Heritage Trophy, awarded to the sailor who embodies the spirit of the sport and is a willing ambassador.

Richard led the first race from start to finish. He started at the committee boat end of the line on port, tacked to starboard, found a puff, and was gone. Typical of Richard’s precision-like effort all week, he led by half a leg at the first leeward mark and was never threatened. But he needed luck in the second race to capture the championship.

With the wind shifting hard to the right as a rain squall passed, Hansen took the early lead off the start line and extended to about 45 seconds halfway through the three lap race. But Richard kept plugging away and found his opportunity on the third upwind leg.

With the wind shifting back and forth and varying in strength between 3 and 10 knots, Richard got to the right of Hansen halfway up the leg.

“He tacked to port and we tacked to cover him, but I knew it was getting close,” said Hansen. “He tacked back to starboard and got a puff. We got headed and tacked back to starboard but there was no wind.”

Richard closed up to overlapped to windward on starboard. When both boats tacked to port to round the mark Richard was to leeward and luffed three times trying to gain separation. He finally got it the third time, bore off to round the windward mark and got a puff as his spinnaker was set.

Richard quickly opened a two boatlength lead, which he held to the finish. As they crossed the line assured of victory, the crew jumped up and down, hugged and high-fived each other. They’d been in a final of a World Tour event five times before, only to finish second. They’d finally broken through.

“We had a crew meeting before this event,” said Simon, the 32-year-old bowman. “We said we have to do more, we have to take risks. We hadn’t sailed well the past three months. We’d been getting good results, but not victories. Everyone sails the same at this level, so we knew we had to take risks to win.”

The win gave Richard 25 points in the chase for the match racing world championship and he trails leader Ian Williams of Great Britain by 7 points. Two events are left to decide the championship, the Brazil Sailing Cup Nov. 13-18 and the Monsoon Cup Nov. 28-Dec. 2.

The Gold Cup is Stage 13 of the World Match Racing Tour. It is the oldest match racing trophy in the world for competition involving one-design yachts. It was first presented at the Tri-Centenary Regatta at Jamestown, Va., in 1907 by King Edward VII in commemoration of the 300th anniversary of the first permanent settlement in America.

Locally based global insurance companies Renaissance Re and Max Capital Group Ltd. are the Presenting Sponsors of the Gold Cup. The Bermuda Department of Tourism is the Host Sponsor. Primary sponsors include Ace Ltd., Bermuda Premium Spirits, Bermuda Telephone Co., Correia Construction and Oleander Cycles. Supporting sponsors are Office Solutions, Izod, Wedgwood, ECL, The Bermuda IOD Class Association, The Fairmont Hamilton Princess and T2P Productions.

King Edward VII Gold Cup Final Standings
(Skipper, Country, Team, Record, Prize Money)
1. Mathieu Richard (FRA) Saba Sailing Team, 12-2, $35,000
(Crew: Greg Evrard, Olivier Herledant, Yannick Simon)
2. Bjorn Hansen (SWE) Team Apport.net, 15-5, $20,000
(Crew: Martin Stromberg, Johan Tempelman, Will Thompson)
3. Ed Baird (USA) Alinghi, 10-4, $15,000
(Crew: Rodney Ardern, Lorenzo Mazza, Piet Van Nieuwenhuyzen)
4. Blythe Walker (BER) Team Max, 8-8, $8,000
(Crew: Adam Barboza, Carola Cooper, Somers Kempe)
5. Paolo Cian (ITA) Team Shosholoza, 7-4, $7,000
(Crew: Pierluigi de Felice, Pierluigi Fornelli, Salvatore Pavoni)
6. Johnie Berntsson (SWE), 6-6, $6,000
(Crew: Johan Backman, Johan Barne, Björn Lundgren)
7. Brian Angel (USA) King Harbor Match Race Team, 7-6, $5,000
(Crew: Michael Brown, David Hochard, Payson Infelize)
8. Glenn Astwood (BER), 5-6, $4,000
(Crew: Eddie Bardgett Stephen King, Blair Simmons)

Final Round
Mathieu Richard (FRA) Saba Sailing Team, 1-1—2
Björn Hansen (SWE) Team Apport.net, 0-0—0

Petite Final
Ed Baird (USA) Alinghi, 1-1—2
Blythe Walker (BER) Team Max, 0-0—0

For information about the Bermuda Gold Cup
Sean McNeill
Director of Public Relations
Mobile: +1 441 777 7245
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For information about the World Tour
Yvonne Reid
Tel: +44 1590 679613
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For information about Bermuda Gold Cup and Royal Bermuda Yacht Club
Donna Heslop
Sailing Secretary
Tel: +441 294 6716
Fax: +441 295 6361
E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Web sites: Royal Bermuda Yacht Club, King Edward VII Gold Cup, Bermuda Department of Tourism

 
 

Special Fairmont Princess Race Weekend Pricing

$199++EP per night for a Deluxe Room or $329++EP per night for a Signature Room from 3 to 11 October. Rates are subject to a service charge, daily resort levy and 7.25% government tax

Callers can ask for the Argo Group Gold Cup rate or room block ID GOLD0910
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