Please select your home edition
Edition
RYA Membership

SailGP: Spain top leaderboard in New York in a murky day on the Hudson River - Day 1

by Richard Gladwell/Sail-World.com 7 Jun 2025 23:23 BST
Spain SailGP Team leads USA SailGP Team front of the SailGP Grandstand and the SailGP Race Stadium on Race Day 1 of the Mubadala New York Sail Grand Prix © Simon Bruty/SailGP

Spain top the leaderboard after the first day of racing in the Mubadala New York Grand Prix, after a consistent day's sailing on the murkey and rainswept Hudson River.

Led by Diego Botin 2024 Olympic Gold medalist in the 49er class, the Spanish team, who are also the Season 4 champions were the most consistent of the 12 teams racing, with a 1,4,3 scorecard, from the three races sailed in the first day of Qualifying.

The Spanish were the most consistent of the 12 teams sailing with the 24metre wings and on the light weather L-foils for the first time since the T-Foils were first seen in Auckland, in the second regatta of the season. In Practice sessions earlier in the week the teams raced with a mix of "L" (as originally used on the then AC50s in the 2017 America's Cup) and T-Foils with the older foils getting the nod in these conditions.

In a further concession to the light winds, crews sailed three-up for the first race to reduce weight, and four-up for the other two rces.

Winds were 8kts making for marginal foiling conditions at times in this boat configuration. An otherwise tame race was lifted by the light air foils with the big 29 metre wings, being left ashore, with some still not complete after the month long pit-stop following the Australian rig collapse in San Francisco triggering the cancellation of the Rio de Janeiro leg of the 14 event series.

Once on their foils, the F50s began generating their own apparent wind - making continuance in that airborne state much easier, but of course it was very arresting if a team crashed back into the fast flowing Hudson.

The ability to switch different foil types into the same foil cartridge is a significant achievement for the shore and design teams, in a fleet of this size and standard.

Denmark is second overall on the overnight leaderboard, and are tied on points with third placed France on 20pts - a big 5pt margin behind Spain and just 1pt ahead of the New Zealanders.

New Zealand's BlackFoils lie in a fortunate 4th overall, after winning the last race, and placing second in the opener. They crashed out of the second race in 11th place, after a appalling start, from which they never recovered, and were a leg of the course behind the Australians, who had an emphatic win. However the Flying Roos mirrored the Kiwis performance in the next race, finishing 10th, after placing fifth in the first race and winning the second. They lie on the midway point on the overnight leaderboard in 6th place overall.

In Race 1: Spain got a jump of a boatlength at a perfectly judged start, heading into the not insignificant current, which saw the marks running bow-waves, and held her advantage until the finish. On the second, upwind leg the F50s sailed in a mix of displacement and foiling states. New Zealand moved up one place to sit in second - which they held for the rest of the leg, with Denmark third. The German team also got off to a fast start, and were second at Mark 1, but were passed by the Kiwis and Denmark soon after rounding the mark, and tryying to sail upwind into what looked to be a current worthy of the Solent, of about 5kts.

Race 2: Spain were dunger-last away from the start, which was led away by full-foiling Australia, who led at Mark 1 with Spain back in 12th position in a race if which they would go on to finish 4th. The Kiwis suffered another bout of their usual starting malaise, being 10th around Mark 1, and unable to recover. The Ausralians were penalised for not giving Brazil sufficent room at Mark 1 and were penalised, however regained the lost ground on the second leg. Brazil regained the lead, by mark 2, but were passed by the faster sailing Australians. Those two sailed off into the New York murk for Mark 3, and a shortened leg. Canada did well to make it out of the poleton to finish 3rd , with Spain emerging from the turbulent air of the ruck to finish 4th after being back at 9th at Mark 6.

Race 3: Race 3 began just as a new murky rainsquall moved across the fleet, reducing visibility to a handful of metres and obscuring the landmarks ashore, and the windshifts and puffs on the water. New Zealand scored an end to end win in a race that was sailed in with the Kiwis only foiling for 80% of the time.

Canada, Great Britain and Australia were stuck in a pack of their own at the back of the fleet. At the end of Leg 3, the fleet crawled up the remainder of the leg, off the foils and pushing against the swift current. At the other end of the course the Kiwis were foiling and with some masterful sailing and foil control, lapped half of the fleet. Their dream run came to an end mid fleet, when they dropped back into displacment mode.

Burling and friends continued on to win with Denmark second and Spain recovering well from 8th to be 3rd at the finish. To add to the ignomy of being so far behind, the race was terminated after 10 minutes lapsed from the finish of the lead boat - wit Italy and Australia not making the finish deadline.

On points the top six boats have a clear edge going into the final two races to decide the three Finalists. Outside the two boats in equal 5th on 17pts, there is a 5pt gap to the seventh boat. The winner of the Mubadala Grand Prix - New York, will be determined by which team wins the winner take all Final Race, on Sunday afternoon.


Related Articles

SailGP Rio: Four straight wins for Australia
The Bonds Flying Roos won four straight races on the second day of racing at SailGP Rio. The Bonds Flying Roos won four straight races on the second day of racing at SailGP Rio. That included the three qualifying races sailed, plus the final - a feat unprecedented in the six seasons of SailGP League racing. Full replay here. Posted on 12 Apr
SailGP Rio: Tight at the top - Day 1
USA continues their excellent form of Season 6 - in second overall after four races. The Bonds Flying Roos lead the fleet with 28 points after the opening four fleet races of the Enel Rio Sail Grand Prix. A red-hot U.S. SailGP Team is close behind in second (27 points), while Artemis SailGP Team round out the podium group. Posted on 11 Apr
Quantum Pacific Enters SailGP
With Acquisition of Championship-Winning Spain Team SailGP, the most exciting racing on water, today announced the sale of the Los Gallos SailGP Team (Spain) to the Quantum Pacific Group ("Quantum Pacific"), marking a landmark moment for both the championship and Spanish sport. Posted on 9 Apr
SailGP: New boat in build for Black Foils
The team will receive an entirely new boat from SailGP Technologies New Zealand's Black Foils will not be on the start line at this week's Enel Rio Sail Grand Prix but are pursuing a return to racing as soon as possible. Date for resuming sailing to be confirmed after Rio. Posted on 8 Apr
Enel Rio SailGP: Will ask plenty of Questions
Racing on the Stadium course in the Rio 2016 Olympics, saw reputations made and destroyed. SailGP lands in Rio for its long-awaited South American debut, where iconic scenery meets wildly unpredictable racing. Posted on 5 Apr
Marlow Ropes Joins SailGP as Official Supplier
Joining the championship through the end of the 2027 Season SailGP, the most exciting racing on water, today announced a new global partnership with leading British manufacturer Marlow Ropes, who joins the championship as the Official Rope Supplier through the end of the 2027 Season. Posted on 2 Apr
KPMG Sydney Sail Grand Prix Overall
Canfield leads U.S. SailGP Team to Historic Win The U.S. SailGP Team has won the KPMG Sydney Sail Grand Prix, sailing to victory ahead of Emirates GBR in second and Los Gallos in third. It marks the team's first event win since Cádiz in Season 4, and Canfield's first ever in SailGP. Posted on 1 Mar
SailGP: Their Finest Hour - Why USA won in Sydney
All-USA team answers critics with a well executed strategy in fickle Sydney breeze. The USA SailGP team, skippered by matchracing champion, Taylor Canfield answered their long-standing critics with an emphatic win in the Final of KPMG SailGP Sydney. However it wasn't the Finest Hour for the TV/Video coverage of the finish. Posted on 1 Mar
KPMG Sydney Sail Grand Prix Day 1
Spain seize sunset lead Spain were the form team on day one in Sydney, sailing into the sunset with two wins in four fleet races. Those unafraid to make bold, decisive moves were rewarded around the split Shark Island racetrack. Posted on 28 Feb
SailGP: Consistent Spain leads after Day 1
2024 Olympic Gold medalist, Diego Botin found more gold at the end of several rainbows in Sydney. Los Gallos, Spain's SailGP team, sailed a consistent opening day to lead the points table, after the first day of racing in a squirrely breeze on Sydney Harbour. Posted on 28 Feb