Showing posts with label commentator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commentator. Show all posts

10 July 2007

Fourth and Final America's Cup Commentary by Ricky of California

Dear ZEN’ers,
we have for you, somewhat after the fact, the second of a series of posts from a friend (if I may), a man I’ve corresponded with through our passion for Truth, and the Floyd Landis case of unproven Tour de France doping, which you can trace through these posts (one, two, three, more).


Ricky hails from the USA, and loves sailing as much as we both love cycling.
Ricky has permitted me to archive some posts, which he began providing to answer questions from some of us land-lubbers!

They are impressively well-written, I’ve slightly reformatted and edited them for precision. I believe this first post covers the third regatta.

Take it away, Ricky from California!:

Another AC is in the books, although no one could have predicted what a wild race the last one would be. If you didn't watch it you missed a race that will go down in history as the wildest, most unpredictable and craziest race in cup history. The impact of race 7 of the 2007 AC cannot be overstated. Here's a brief summary:

NZed is in a do or die position: if they win today they still have a chance, if Alinghi wins, the party begins.

The entire crew of NZed is nervous, twitchy and jumpy. Even his mirrored shades can't hide the nervousness on Terry's face as they boats enter the starting box.

Brad, not to be outdone, sports his own pair of mirrors and stares across the water as the two boats converge. Neither wants to incur a penalty in the starting box so the pre-start maneuvers are careful.

The gun goes and NZ leads them out of the box by inches. Both boats drag race out toward the right side of the chessboard, where Alinghi attacks. NZ, ahead by a few meters, lee-bows the Swiss and the tacking duel ensues. Every time the boats converge Alinghi is a few inches closer.

Terry eventually breaks off the duel and hightails it toward the port layline and Alinghi is forced to tack under them. Until now Ed and Brad have been pretty civil toward the Kiwis, but now the gloves come off and Ed suddenly luffs his boat head-to-wind, forcing the Kiwis to turn hard to avoid hitting the Swiss boat, and killing their forward momentum.

Ed bears off and the result is another five or six meters gain for Alinghi. The Kiwis bear off and begin to accelerate toward the mark and Ed throws another sucker punch at them, forcing them to swerve once again to avoid contact. This time the Kiwis have a hard time getting back up to speed and Alinghi rounds the weather mark half a boatlength in front.

Then Brad suffers another stupendous brain-fade as he allows the Kiwis to get on top of their wind and roll past them. Ernesto (Bertarelli, the billionaire owner of Alinghi) manages to maintain his cool, but clearly, things are tense on the Swiss boat.

In the overall scheme of things it is rare that one boat passes another in AC racing. Usually the boat that get the first jump on the other wins, and while they are beautiful to watch, AC match races are usually fairly un-thrilling to anyone but die-hard sailboat racing fans.

That was not the case today. The TV announcers were hoarse and all but spent as NZed rounded the leeward mark well in front of the Swiss.

As the boats settled into another drag race out to the right side, Alinghi slowly chipped away at NZ's lead until, unbelievably, they had caught the Kiwis once again just this side of the weather mark.

Deano, still shaken from the bare fisted thrashing he got the last time they were here, tried to avoid the same scenario and land a punch of his own, bearing off hard as he tacked toward the mark, but Ed, not to be intimidated, held his course and forced the Kiwis to swerve yet again to avoid a collision.

This time the Ernesto and the boys cried 'foul' and the umpires ruled in their favor, handing the Kiwis a penalty. A penalty means that the offending boat must do a turn, we call it a ‘360’ in sailing parlance (for AC racing it's a modified 360), before they finish the race. The Swiss relaxed and began congratulating themselves on wining the 32nd America’s Cup. For all intents and purposes, there's no way the Kiwis could catch up and pass them, then gain enough time to perform their 360 and finish ahead of them.

So the Swiss sail along as if it's Sunday and they're about to get out the beer n sandwiches.

Brad, being Brad, lets the Kiwis jibe away and sail off toward what he thinks is oblivion while he ponders the mega-offers he's already gotten from Ernesto and his old pal, Russell Coutts. The boys are so busy thinking about the post race festivities, they don't notice the change in the weather.

All of a sudden the chute's collapsed and “WHAT THE FUUU...THE BLOODY KIWIS ARE STILL RACING!!!”

In a matter of seconds, it seems, the wind has shifted a good 150 degrees, and the peripatetic Terry Hutchinson not only saw it coming, but maneuvered his boat to take full advantage of it, hoisting the jib and rolling down toward the finish, gaining precious seconds on the frantic Swiss who, in their haste, muff the spinnaker douse and stumble around trying to get a jib up.

Meanwhile on the Kiwi boat, spirits are lifting. Three minutes ago, the weight of losing the race, the regatta and the Cup was weighing on everyone from Terry and Deano, to the sewerman, who toils in solitude down inside the boat, organizing sails and lines in the black confines of the hot, narrow, noisy carbon fiber cave he calls home while the boat is racing. He hears the excited shouts of the crew above and sneaks a peek out the forward hatch.

Holy mother of yacht racing, he thinks, the Swiss can't get their jib up in time. "My god", he shouts in amazement, "we're f'ing passing the bloody bastards!!"

The Swiss finally find the gas pedal and Alinghi starts to move forward again. But in the new wind, just a light breeze, they accelerate ever so slowly while ZN, romping in better winds to their right is rambling down to the finish line.

Christ, what a race!!

Terry and Barker have to time their penalty turn perfectly if they want to win, but god, if they do, it'll be the greatest comeback in sailing history. Nervously they watch and listen as the navigator counts down the distance to the finish line. Patience, patience.

Terry squints through his mirrors and says tightly to the crew, "Boys, we can do this." And he outlines his plan.

They all listen intently, sweating, focused on what may be the very last maneuver of their Americas Cup careers. "Now!" shouts Terry, and Deano spins the wheel. Men jump to their posts, sails flap as the boat turns head to wind and slows almost to a halt.

Alinghi, in the distance is rolling now, sweat also on the brows of her own nervous crew. Can they just finish this now, or will they have to sail another tension filled race tomorrow??

Slowly, the Kiwi boat bears off and Barker points the bow toward the finish line. They're still ahead but time is running out, can they accelerate enough to cross the line ahead of Alinghi? The seconds tick by as twenty five tons of carbon and kevlar begins to move in the light wind. They're coming on fast, but Alinghi's faster, the meters turn to inches and suddenly Alinghi's bow moves forward of the Kiwi boat just before they reach the line.

The Swiss win, but by the narrowest of margins, their bow crossing the line not more than two feet ahead of NZ.

The billionaire smiles, elated at his victory, but it's bittersweet because he knows that this crew, that worked so hard for the last four years to win this regatta, will be gutted tomorrow. The best of his crew has already been claimed by the man who stood in the shadows of this regatta, but who also cast his shadow on it. Russell will have his team back, and Ernesto will have to find a different way, somehow, to fend off the world's best in the next AC.


(This is PART FOUR, of FOUR America's Cup posts, featuring commentary by Ricky of California: click here for Part ONE, Part TWO, Part THREE)


Thanks Ricky - Premier Guest Commentator at ZENcentral!

ç*”*”*”*ç*””* ZENmud *””*ç*”*”*””*ç

THIRD America's Cup commentary by Ricky of California

Dear ZEN’ers,
we have for you, somewhat after the fact, the second of a series of posts from a friend (if I may), a man I’ve corresponded with through our passion for Truth, and the Floyd Landis case of unproven Tour de France doping, which you can trace through these posts (one, two, three, more).


Ricky hails from the USA, and loves sailing as much as we both love cycling.
Ricky has permitted me to archive some posts, which he began providing to answer questions from some of us land-lubbers!

They are impressively well-written, I’ve slightly reformatted and edited them for precision. I believe this first post covers the third regatta.

Take it away, Ricky from California!:


No racing today. The wind gods picked up their ball and went home. So … I'll give you a BRIEF analysis of race five, in which the Kiwis tore a page out of Brad Butterworth's AC book.

Yesterday Ed Baird actually took it to the Kiwis at the start and had them pinned on the left side of the starting line but Deano managed to wriggle off the hook (speaking of wriggling off the hook, remind me to tell you about the big one that got away yesterday), and jibed in front of Alinghi and got away for a good start.

Here is where Terry stumbled. As the boats drag raced out to the starboard layline, the Kiwis had the full measure of the Swiss, but Terry forgot rule number one, and let the Swiss get some lateral separation and Brad pounced, snatching the lead after a tacking duel in a right shift just this side of the weather mark. This AC regatta will go down in history as the most competitve ever, with the winner of each race doing it by sailing smarter than the competition.

Remember what Dennis Conner says about yacht racing:
"He who makes the fewest mistakes wins."

So Alinghi rounds the top mark in front and keeps a tight cover on the Kiwis, sailing a good defensive race until Brad lets go again and allows the Kiwis, who were well behind, to jibe away and pick up a left shift and sail right up to Alinghi's transom. But wait, what the bloody...?

Terry jibes away!! Why?

Match racing aficionados across the world scream at their flat screens, "Nooo Terry, don't do it!! No, please don't....Ahh, he's gone and done it"

Hutchinson jibed away and left the Swiss to sail down the course and jibe in a puff and scamper on down to the finish line a hundred meters or so ahead of NZ.

Terry suffered a tactical breakdown with that jibe. Those of you who don't follow the game all that closely may ask why it was such a bad move to jibe away at that critical moment. The answer is that they were sailing down to the port layline, basically the edge of the world in match racing.

The Swiss couldn't go on much longer, they were going to have to jibe to lay the finish. All Terry had to do was stay right on their transom and jibe exactly when they did and they would have blanketed the Swiss boat's wind and accelerated ahead to a hero's welcome as the fanatical Kiwi fans blasted their horns and shouted themselves hoarse over the Kiwis spectacular come from behind win.

Of course that's not what happened. Why did Terry jibe?

Well, one can only speculate, but the only LOGICAL reason is that he noticed some big wind over on the left side of the course and wanted to sail over there and take advantage of it. Of course it was just a figment of his imagination. There was nothing over there and Terry tossed a fighting chance for a figment. Foo!

Terry suffered from the same mistake that generals, captains and leaders throughout history skewer themselves on. He let wishful thinking obscure reality.

He wanted to believe that there was more over there than there actually was instead of facing the fact that he was going to have to maneuver perfectly over the Swiss and fight to the death right there at the port layline. Still it was an exciting race in spite of the disappointing denouement.


(This is PART THREE, of FOUR America's Cup posts, featuring commentary by Ricky of California: click here for Part ONE, Part TWO, Part FOUR)

Thanks Ricky - Premier Guest Commentator at ZENcentral!

ç*”*”*”*ç*””* ZENmud *””*ç*”*”*””*ç


Second America's Cup commentary by Ricky of California

Dear ZEN’ers,
we have for you, somewhat after the fact, the second of a series of posts from a friend (if I may), a man I’ve corresponded with through our passion for Truth, and the Floyd Landis case of unproven Tour de France doping, which you can trace through these posts (one, two, three, more).


Ricky hails from the USA, and loves sailing as much as we both love cycling.
Ricky has permitted me to archive some posts, which he began providing to answer questions from some of us land-lubbers!

They are impressively well-written, I’ve slightly reformatted and edited them for precision. I believe this first post covers the third regatta.

Take it away, Ricky from California!:


Today's race could have been a classic AC slugfest, but equipment failure took the slug out of the fest. Deano did a great job of forcing Alinghi over the start line before the gun went. As you know, both boats must be on the correct side of the line before the gun. Baird was fortunate to be able to sail way off to the right and into the spectator fleet.

Why would he do this? Because the Kiwis forced him over the line and as weather boat he was obligated to keep clear of the leeward boat which was doing everything to stay just to leeward of them. The spectator boats offered salvation to Ed as he went forward of a big old cruiser and NZ went behind, This gave him enough room to jibe and get clear of NZ. On the drag race back to the start line, Ed trailed the Kiwis and managed a decent start half a boat-length behind NZ on starboard, headed out to the correct side of the race track.

In a case of role reversal, the Swiss drag raced out to the starboard layline just to leeward and behind NZ. T

his is a minor violation of Ricky's fifth rule of match racing:
When behind, do something.

For you students of match racing, remember, if you're the trailing boat, the closer you get to the layline, the fewer options you have. If you just give up and trail the windward boat out to the edge of the world you run out of options and you've just handed the weather boat the leg. If you are smart and aggressive, you tack well before the layline and move the game back to the middle of the chessboard. By doing that, you give your opponent opportunities to make mistakes and you open up possibilities for passing that are only a dream if you've sailed out past the layline.

So, Brad and the boys are content to trail the Kiwis out to the layline.

What did we learn from this? Well, the most important lesson is that in 14-15 knots of wind, NZ is every bit of the boat Alinghi is, contrary to popular belief. Before today the smart money was betting that in 15 kts and above, the Swiss owned this event. I liked seeing Deano living large right there on Alinghi's weather hip. That'll give the Swiss something to think about tonight.

So NZ rounds ahead of Alinghi by a boat-length or two. Knowing Terry as we do, we're sure he's going to point NZ deep and stay between Brad and the mark.

Uh oh, the bowman is on the horn and he says we've got a bit of hole in the luff of the whomper.

Terry:"How bad is it, can we sail the leg with it?"
"I dunno, boss, she looks pretty bad to me." says Jeremy into his waterlogged mic.
"Okay, get the A2 on deck and hooked up. We'll hoist it as soon as you ....whoooaa…shit, The kite just blew!!! Get the other kite up NOW!"
Jeremy, "Wait, wait, I don't have the sheets and guys hooked on....Oh noo!"

The second kite goes up without sheets and guys, which means it might as well be the Swiss flag.

Ernesto (Bertarelli, the Swiss billionaire owner of Alinghi) is busy taking a bearing with the rangefinder, but he forgets the numbers on the display as the sight of NZ's shredded kite fills the viewfinder. By then every one on Alinghi is watching as, unbelievably, there are two kites flying on NZ, one in tatters and the other out like, well, like the Swiss flag. Ironically, Switzerland's flag is red with a white cross on it. I'm sure, however, that the boys on both boats weren't thinking in metaphors at that particular moment.

Anyway, here's NZ, wallowing down the course with two kites up (neither drawing), and the big Swiss boat rolling by like the TGV. Brad, not doing too well in this regatta, breathes a sigh of relief. He wants to wave to Terry as the go by but he knows Ernesto doesn't like his boys fraternizing with the enemy.

The Kiwis struggle to get another kite up, but they're running out of the damn things. You can only carry so many of them, you know. So they rummage around in the bottom of the boat and find one more asymmetrical that looks like it'll hang together and they hoist it and trundle on down to the leeward mark.

The rest of the race is pretty unremarkable. The Kiwis keep chipping away at Alinghi's lead, but nothing is going to keep the Swiss boat from winning this one unless they break a sail or Brad has another brain fade.

So what have we learned from today's racing? Well, the first and most important thing is that the Kiwi boat is more than just a light air sliver. the boat seems to be a match and more for Alinghi in everything except for the 10-14 knot wind range. In that range, the Swiss boat may be a bit faster, but we're expecting winds more like what we witnessed today for the rest of the regatta, so the Kiwis have to feel fairly comfortable with the horse they brought to this event. On the other hand, Ricky sees some vulnerability in the Swiss side.

Mainly, they appear to have come to the regatta thinking they had boatspeed on the Kiwis, and the Kiwis may have been playing a bit of a head game, letting the world think they were bringing a knife to a gunfight.

For us spectators it means that for the first time in about 20 years the AC regatta is proving to be extremely interesting. I could go on about the nuances in the design of each boat, which is by itself very interesting if you're into such things.

Anyway, the commentators are all atwitter over the 'momentum' of Alinghi, but if the Kiwis can keep their boat together, they stand a good chance of recouping the cup.


(This is PART TWO, of FOUR America's Cup posts, featuring commentary by Ricky of California: click here for Part ONE, Part THREE, Part FOUR)

Thanks Ricky - Premier Guest Commentator at ZENcentral!

ç*”*”*”*ç*””* ZENmud *””*ç*”*”*””*ç


Several America's Cup Summaries: Ricky from CA

Dear ZEN’ers,
we have for you, somewhat after the fact, a series of posts from a friend (if I may), a man I’ve corresponded with through our passion for Truth, and the Floyd Landis case of unproven Tour de France doping, which you can trace through these posts (one, two, three, more).


Ricky hails from the USA, and loves sailing as much as we both love cycling.
Ricky has permitted me to archive some posts, which he began providing to answer questions from some of us land-lubbers!

They are impressively well-written, I’ve slightly reformatted and edited them for precision. I believe this first post covers the third regatta.

Take it away, Ricky from California!:


Another painful afternoon for Alinghi. The Kiwis did a fine job of fighting for the boat end of the line and the Swiss were happy with the fact that they got across the line on starboard tack at full speed. Then the first brain fade.

Brad failed to tack and cover. The whole world knew the right side of the track was favored, yet Brad and the boys wandered off to the left so that when they finally did get around to tacking they were nearly 200 meters back. Ordinarily the winner would be a foregone conclusion.

But the Kiwi boinked the douse and wound the kite into the genoa lead block and couldn't get the jib in, then muffed the cut tack, squandering virtually their entire lead. At the next cross Alinghi is handed the lead when ETNZ performs a weird and slow tack. This was Terry's brain fade. When the guy on port is bearing off to duck, he's handing you chunks of time. The right move would have been to force the duck then tack, effectively pinning Alinghi out at the Stbd layline.

Okay, back to the comedy of errors: Alinghi has about a 3 boat lead coming away from the weather mark...close, but defensible. The Kiwis jibe a couple of times and the Swiss cover. On the next jibe Brad forgets about rules 1, 2 and 3 in match racing. I'll present them here for the non-sailors among us:

1. Stay between the opponent and the mark.
2. Stay between the opponent and the mark.
3. Stay between the opponent and the mark.

While Brad is busy forgetting about those simple but vital rules, the Kiwis scamper down the course, picking up the lead again. Fortunately they're almost to the finish line and there isn't much time left for another mistake so the Kiwis manage to sail across the line first. The Swiss, however, feel that there is time for one more mistake so they jibe just before the finish line, costing themselves another boatlength, but giving the crew a bit more jibing practice.

I'll wager the Kiwis could hardly believe the way the race went. The Swiss proved beyond a doubt that while they have a fast boat, they've grown soft and vulnerable. Brad is not the razor sharp tactician he once was.

This race had better be a serious wake-up call for team Alinghi, or we'll be watching another AC regatta on the sunny waters of the Hauraki Gulf again.

Russell's got to be LHAO, while Ernesto (Bertarelli, the Swiss billionaire owner of Alinghi) ponders what might have been.

(This is PART ONE, of FOUR America's Cup posts, featuring commentary by Ricky of California: click here for Part TWO, Part THREE, Part FOUR)


Thanks Ricky - Premier Guest Commentator at ZENcentral!

ç*”*”*”*ç*””* ZENmud *””*ç*”*”*””*ç