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by Jeanne Lawrence UPDATE ON THE FUTURE AMERICA’S CUP The year 2013 was a historic one for San Francisco: The city played host to the 34th America’s Cup (AC) regatta—one of the most exciting events in San Francisco’s history and one of the greatest comeback stories in sports history as well. |
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While wintering in San Francisco, in January I lunched with Tom Ehman, Vice Commodore of the Golden Gate Yacht Club, which represents defending champion Oracle Team USA. He said the San Francisco event was the “best ever” and asked, “How can you imagine doing it anyplace else?” Likewise, America’s Cup Organizing Committee Chair Mark Buell said, “[Oracle owner] Larry [Ellison] delivered on his vision: the fastest boat, the latest technology, and the best sailors. And San Francisco delivered on its promise: the best venues for spectators to watch the races and a spectacular setting. We’re all hoping the America’s Cup will race here again.” |
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Oracle CEO Russell Coutts and the city of San Francisco are clashing over the cost to taxpayers and the benefits of hosting the Cup. Supporters say San Francisco received international attention and press coverage you couldn’t buy at any price. |
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Other cities being considered include San Diego, which hosted the Cup in 1988, 1992, and 1995, and Hawaii, where billionaire Oracle owner Larry Ellison owns the island of Lanai. Rumors are swirling that Long Beach and Newport, R.I. are in the mix as well. As SFGate.com has written, “Stay tuned. It’s never dull around Cup negotiations.” For a taste of what it was like to be a spectator at various venues during the 2013 Cup, read my dispatch: THE 34TH AMERICA’S CUP RACES IN SAN FRANCISCO Winning the prestigious America’s Cup (AC) regatta, dating back to 1851, is considered the grandest honor in the yachting world. The 2013 event, initially scheduled for September 7 to 21, actually continued through September 25, making it one of the most extended and dramatic in the Cup’s 162-year history. |
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The regatta was riveting, with New Zealand just one point away from winning the Cup and taking it back home when the unbelievable happened. Oracle Team USA staged amonumental comeback, won eight straight races in a row, and captured the Cup in a thrilling, winner-take-all final race. THE RACE FOR THE CUP The America’s Cup consists of “match races” between two yachts—the defender, which holds the cup currently, and the challenger. Both teams sail with a crew of 11. One point is awarded for winning a race, and the first team to win a total of nine points becomes the champion and new defender of the Cup. Since defender Oracle Team USA had been penalized two points for pre-regatta violations, its first two wins wouldn’t accrue points, so the team needed to win eleven races total to be the final winner. |
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I was scheduled to fly in for what was anticipated to be the second and final week of the races, but by Friday, September 13, a victory seemed likely within two days. With a 6-0 lead, challenger Team New Zealand was only three points away from taking the Cup. Most everyone, including the Kiwis, thought it was all over. THE RACING TEAMS ORACLE TEAM USA Ironically, eight members of Oracle Team USA’s full sailing crew are actually from New Zealand and seven are from Australia. Only two are from the United States! Some would like to see the Cup go back to the old days, when the race was run like the Olympics and team members were from the country for which they sailed. Then the competition would be among countries rather than among people who can afford to buy the best sailors of the world. |
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EMIRATES TEAM NEW ZEALAND To the 4.4 million New Zealanders, the AC is like the Super Bowl. Indicating how important the regatta is to them, on the first day of racing, 62% of the nation’s televisions were tuned in to the races. |
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THE RACE COURSE As part of Larry Ellison’s plan to make the AC more accessible, this year the boats raced in the natural amphitheater of San Francisco Bay rather than miles offshore. |
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THE AC72: A TECHNOLOGICAL FEAT The America’s Cup has always been about pushing the boundaries of modern technology, and the tradition continued this year with the introduction of the groundbreaking AC72 racing catamaran. These ultrafast boats are transforming the regatta from a billionaire’s pastime to a public, Formula One-like spectacle, fulfilling Larry Ellison’s goal of drawing wider audiences. |
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DAY 5: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2013 – RACE 8 I arrived at SFO airport on Day Five of the races, dropped off luggage at my apartment, rushed to Fort Mason, a former army base, where the San Francisco America’s Cup Organizing Committee (ACOC) had invited donors, friends, officials, supporters, and VIPs to watch the races. |
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SATURDAY’S RACE 8 Each day, weather permitting, there were two races: one at 1:15 and the second at 2:15. I was glad to arrive just in time for Race 8 at Ft. Mason, where thousands were watching on the shoreline. |
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A few more feet and it could have been game over for the Kiwis,” NZ skipper Dean Barker later said. “We were as close as you possibly could get before the thing would have ended up on its side.” We stunned viewers thought for sure it would crash, but the wind shifted and it righted. Watching was nerve-wracking and I was frightened for the crewmembers hanging some three or four stories in the air above the water. |
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VIEWING VENUE AT MARINA GREEN The second race of the day was cancelled due to dangerous winds exceeding the limit of 22.6 knots, so after the race I checked out the scene with the public at the America’s Cup Village at Marina Green. |
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DAY 6: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2013 – RACES 9 & 10 On Sunday, I joined the America’s Cup Organizing Committee (ACOC) again, this time at their Chalet, a temporary viewing building located between the St. Francis Yacht Club and Golden Gate Yacht Club. |
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DAY 8: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2013 On Tuesday, September 17, I headed to America’s Cup Park to visit Oracle’s Hospitality Suite, where Golden Gate Yacht Club (GGYC) Vice Commodore Tom Ehman welcomed guests, spoke at the AC72 Dock Out Show, and held press conferences. GGYC Protocol Chief Tom Webster, whose day job is wealth management, escorted me to the Oracle VIP suites. “The 34th America’s Cup met all the criteria to be a great sporting event,” Tom pointed out. “A great venue, great competitors, a great history, and a great story line.” He predicts it will be one of the top sports stories of the past 100 years. |
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AMERICA’S CUP PARK The Cup was a catalyst for the city to make long-awaited improvements to the waterfront, including the construction of America’s Cup Park (Piers 27 and 29) and America’s Cup Pavilion, with a 9,000-seat amphitheater for nighttime concerts and watching the races on large video screens. |
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ORACLE HOSPITALITY SUITE |
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RACES 11 & 12 CANCELLED On September 17, the races were first postponed and then cancelled due to more dangerous wind conditions. “Waiting fatigue” was starting to set in among the spectators—we just wanted to see the results! I sympathized with everyone who had traveled to the site that day and failed to see anything, but they made the best of it. GOLDEN GATE YACHT CLUB I’d planned to watch races 11 and 12 from the Golden Gate Yacht Club, which is represented by Team Oracle USA. GGYC became the first American club to win the Cup since 1995 when the Oracle team, in Larry Ellison’s third attempt, defeated the Swiss Alinghi team in 2010 in Valencia, Spain. |
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ST. FRANCIS YACHT CLUB Later our entourage walked next door to the St. Francis Yacht Club, where members of both clubs mingled amicably. |
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DAY 9: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2013 – RACE 12 On Day 9, I watched the races in the smartly decorated Louis Vuitton Hospitality Suite at the America’s Cup Village. Team New Zealand was only one point away from winning the Cup, with Team USA trailing at a dismal single point. But Oracle rallied and came out ahead on Race 12. |
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New Zealand lost its second opportunity for a win later that day when, as the teams were already crossing the start line, officials announced that Race 13 would again be postponed due to dangerous conditions. |
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DAY 10: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2013 – RACE 13 Day 10, Race 13: The “wind gods” were certainly not working in Team NZ’s favor. After three days of postponement due to excessive winds, on Day 10 there wasn’t enough wind. |
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DAY 11: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2013 Today I stayed home and watched the America’s Cup on TV and my computer screen, just like millions of fans worldwide. (It was a good decision, as both races were cancelled due to unraceable wind conditions.) I was fascinated to see how television captured this new, thrilling racing style. |
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DAY 12: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2013 – RACES 14 & 15 This day was the autumnal equinox in the northern hemisphere. Under sunny skies and amid brisk winds, my daughter, Stephanie Lawrence, and I headed to the GGYC. |
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DAY 13: MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2013 – RACE 16 |
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DAY 14: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2013 – RACES 17 & 18 Tuesday, three days after the race that was projected to be the conclusive one, the competition was still alive. I decided to watch from the spectators’ bleachers, to experience the public’s view. Luckily it was another perfect and sunny day. |
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USA won the first race, narrowly avoiding disaster: When Oracle came out of the starting line, the team buried a hull in the water, which could have caused the craft to capsize. But the team recovered and took the lead, 200 meters ahead of New Zealand for most of the race, maintaining a 54-second advantage to take the win. |
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DAY 15: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 – RACE 19, FINAL DAY |
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THE FINISH LINE Oracle Team USA won! In the first winner-take-all race since 1983 and only the third in the history of the America’s Cup, the team sailed to victory in an unprecedented eight races in a row. |
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CELEBRATION CEREMONY AT AMERICA’S CUP VILLAGE After Oracle crossed the finish line, my friends and I quickly left the GGYC and drove downtown to the America’s Cup Village at the Embarcadero waterfront to watch the teams and the press conference. “We were facing the barrel of a gun at 8-1 and the guys didn’t even flinch,” exulted Oracle skipper James Spithill. “Thanks to San Francisco, this is one hell of a day.” |
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THE 35TH AMERICA’S CUP Five days after the AC ended, Queensland, Australia’s Hamilton Island Yacht Club (HIYC) was announced as the next Challenger of Record (COR). Once there is a new AC winner, other yachting clubs around the world petition to challenge the team at the next regatta. The COR is the first challenger accepted by the defending champion. The teams will work together to negotiate the next “mutual consent terms,” which establish the time, type of yachts, and match format for the next race. |
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Want to learn more about the America's Cup? Read my previous coverage of San Francisco's America's Cup Opening Weekend here and the Louis Vuitton Cup races here. |
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Photos by Jeanne Lawrence, Drew Altizer, Gilles Martin-Raget, Balazs Gardi, Guilain Grenier, Chris Cameron, Abner Kingman, Frances Kupersmith, and Ricardo Pinto. *Urbanite Jeanne Lawrence reports on lifestyle and travel from her homes in San Francisco, Shanghai, and New York, and wherever else she finds a good story. |
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