Please select your home edition
Edition
HKJ YY Leaderboard
Product Feature
Calypso Battery Powered Mini Wind Sensor
Calypso Battery Powered Mini Wind Sensor

America's Cup: American Magic's defining moment - Prada Cup - Day 3

by Richard Gladwell 3 Oct 2021 13:36 BST 4 October 2021
American Magic - Round Robin 2- Race - 3 Prada Cup - Course A- January 17, 2021 © Richard Gladwell - Sail-World.com/nz

In this new video, American Magic's skipper Terry Hutchinson and others share their memories of the campaign-defining mark rounding and subsequent events, at the end of the penultimate leg of Race 3 of Round Robin 2 of the Prada Cup.

"As we did the left turn a 23.5kt gust dropped down onto us, and over she went," Hutchinson recalled.

"My most memory was when I heard Dean say "I've lost the rudder".

"I was clipped into the boat and when I went to eject, the clip didn't come undone - which straight away got my hackles up, so then I went for the knife. The cockpit filled up straight away. It very quickly went from being OK to a high fever - from my perspective. Straight away I was under water and pinned under the mainsail. My head was under water and I was trapped. Cooper grabbed his knife, cut the lifeline and got me out.

"From there all four of us popped out from under the mainsail. We did the headcount, everyone was safe. Ver quickly it became that Patriot had suffered some major damage. When we got her upright it was clear there was a hole. It very quickly went to a rescue operation of the boat.

"At the time it felt like we had one air pocket in the boat, and that was keeping her afloat. We all thought the boat was going to sink."

On the video commentators and the crew of Luna Rossa give their views of the incident.

American Magic's second AC75 Patriot, gave a hint of what was to come on her first sail, when she performed a spectacular sky-jump after some teething issues, and a sudden increase in windspeed.

Her capsize on the third day of the Prada Cup was one of the unforgettable moments of the entire regatta. Certainly it set a new readership record for a single story on Sail-World.

The scene was set earlier in the day, when it was announced that the racing would be taken to the northern end of Course A, off Auckland's East Coast Bays and adjoining the 2000 and 2003 America's Cup course area.

The forecast was for an unstable weather situation, with thunderstorms and rain squalls expected to move across the race area in the late afternoon.

INEOS Team UK, the British Challenger had turned the Prada Cup inside out with four wins from three days of racing, and had aced the Italian Challenger, Luna Rossa in the first race of the day. That race had been called off after a rain squall moved through the course bringing a substantial windshift. The two AC75's remained with mainsails hoisted and tethered to their tenders as the 30kt squall moved through. In the resail, Luna Rossa led initially, but with her new found speed, INEOS Team UK led by the second lap, and went on to win by 18secs - which at AC75 speeds in those conditions is a comfortable margin.

Patriot had scored a DNF the previous day, finishing more than five minutes behind Luna Rossa, after both boats had enjoyed spells of displacement sailing in the fickle breeze.

So the pressure was on the team from New York Yacht Club to put a win on the leaderboard, mainly for reasons of team morale and bragging rights - as it seemed both the Italian and US teams would contest the Semi-Final with INEOS Team UK seeming a shoe-in for the first spot in the Challenger Final.

The US team started well, and held a good lead in the race, sailed in murky dark conditions with the breeze blowing in the early teens. Coming up to Mark 5 in the photoboat, a win looked inevitable for Patriot and we turned an headed for the finish hoping to get there before Patriot - which would have been sailing very fast down the final leg - which looked like being one long tack with a short to the finish.

Another rain squall moved in, when one of the photographers, Chris Cameron, following agreed practice, cried out that there was some action astern. The wind had increased suddenly and the dark line squalls radiated across the flat water.

As I turned around and reached for a camera, there was the unforgettable sight of an AC75 completely airborne and being blown sideways in the rain squall, like some giant kite.

After what seemed like an eternity Patriot touched down, landing on her side, and looked like she was not yet past the point of no return. But the fight had gone out of the AC75 and she turned and yielded to the breeze.

We'd seen Emirates Team NZ go in a few days before in a practice race, and it took their support crew a couple of minutes to right Te Rehutai.

But this was different - two minutes dragged into much more - it seemed like 20. It seemed like the a replay of the Emirates Team NZ's nosedive in Bermuda - in similar conditions, when it took a long time for the cautious support crew to right the foiling catamaran which was shredding bits of wingsail and fairing like confetti.

Patriot was righted, and pulled head to win and immediately it was apparent something was not quite right, and then the bow began to sink slowly but discernably.

Then it went under water, and it seemed as though a hatch must have blown and water was getting down below.

As the team tenders arrived bringing more pumps, the water level rose up the jib luff, coming to a halt halfway up the America's Cup stylised logo near the jib tack.

Many expected Patriot to sink, in a replay of One Australia's spectacular plunge into the Pacific Ocean during the 1995 Louis Vuitton Cup. It was just a matter of how quickly end came.

Ominously an inflatable mark was hoisted to the top of Patriot's mast to hold the yacht right, if she did sink in the relatively shallow water (about 40ft deep).

With a multiplicity of inflatable marks attached to the bow, the rate of sink declined and stopped. The AC75 hull had a residual buoyancy said to be about 1000kg short of its overall weight. It appeared that an airpocket trapped in the aft end of the hull, was either holding, or leaking only slowly.

A small swell rolled in from the east, the direction to which Patriot's elevated stern was pointing, causing the AC75 to roll gently, dipping the starboard side-deck under the water, and ensuring the sixteen pumps deployed would never have a chance of making headway.

In the end it was a very basic piece of seamanship, dating back several centuries, to Captain Cook's time or earlier, known as a fothering, where a sail or collision blanket is wrapped around the hull stopping some of the ingress of water.

With Team New Zealand's tender on the starboard side of Patriot and American Magic's tender on the other, the crews worked hard to dampen the AC75's lazy rolling in the swell, to stop the sidedecks from being submerged - and at least slow the ingress of water to the point where the sixteen pumps could make some impression on removing water from the flooded hull.

Gradually the hull rose clear of the water and began a four hour very slow journey back to the American Magic base.


Related Articles

America's Cup: Vision for the Naples unveiled
Emirates Team NZ and Sport e Salute unveiled the vision for the America's Cup in Naples in 2027. Emirates Team NZ and Sport e Salute, the publicly-owned Italian company responsible for promoting sports and a healthy lifestyle across the nation, unveiled the vision for the Louis Vuitton 38th America's Cup in Naples in 2027. Posted on 20 Sep
Womens America's Cup opportunities expand
the pathway for female athletes has never been stronger than in the Louis Vuitton 38th America's Cup 2024 and the inaugural Puig Women's America's Cup was announced following the publication of the Protocol for the Louis Vuitton 37th America's Cup in Barcelona. It was a moment not only for women's sport and equality but showed that the America's Cup was Posted on 19 Sep
America's Cup: ETNZ's design boss on new AC75 Rule
Kiwi design chief, Dan Bernasconi on recycled AC75 hulls, electric power and other rule changes. Kiwi design chief, Dan Bernasconi on the use of recycled AC75 hulls, the switch to full electric power, and other changes. He claims there is plenty of performance gain left in the AC75 for the designer teams. Posted on 12 Sep
America's Cup: Class Rule and Tech Regs out
The America's Cup Class Rule and Technical Regulations for the Naples Match have been published With the clock ticking down to the start of the Louis Vuitton 38th America's Cup in Naples in 2027, the AC75 Class Rules and Technical Regulations have been issued to all teams and published with a focus on cost containment. Posted on 11 Sep
From The Other Side - The State of the Sport
The editors of Sail-World New Zealand and Inside Great Lakes Sailing discuss the state of sailing. The Editors of Inside Great Lakes Sailing and Sail-World New Zealand got together last week to shoot the breeze in an unscripted video discussion, without any pre-arranged "talking points" about various aspects of the sport. Posted on 5 Sep
Youth America's Cup set to continue in Naples
The Youth America's Cup is a sign-post to the future direction of the America's Cup itself. Since its inaugural event in 2013, the Youth America's Cup, designed as a competition for sailors under the age of 25, has always been the most remarkable sign-post to the future direction of the America's Cup itself. Posted on 4 Sep
America's Cup: A seismic shift for sailing
For the first time in its 174-year history, female sailors will be mandated onboard AC75s This week's announcement from the America's Cup felt momentous. For the first time in its 174-year history, female sailors will be mandated onboard AC75s at the pinnacle of our sport. Posted on 15 Aug
America's Cup: A "ground breaking" partnership
An innovative Protocol for the 2027 America's Cup has been agreed between RNZYS and RYS An innovative 11th hour Protocol for the 2027 America's Cup has been agreed between the Challenger of Record and the Defender. It creates a commercial framework for the current and future Cups, eases nationality rules, and has a quota for female sailors. Posted on 12 Aug
America's Cup impasse close to resolution.
The impasse over the Protocol is expected to be resolved next week - meeting in Auckland. The impasse over the Protocol for the 38th America's Cup is expected to be resolved, one way or the other, next week, with a meeting of the parties in Auckland. Posted on 9 Aug
America's Cup: Naples first taste of the Cup
The America's Cup came to Naples in 2012 and 2013 for two of the most memorable regattas. The America's Cup World Series, a multi-city series in the lead up to the 2013 America's Cup regatta in San Francisco, came to Naples in 2012 and 2013 for two of the most memorable regattas. Posted on 7 Aug