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Alinghi beat Team New Zealand
on Friday afternoon in perfect sea breeze conditions
to take a 3-2 lead.
Match 5 – Alinghi beat Emirates Team New Zealand
(0'19'')
In the pre-start, Emirates Team New Zealand’s Dean
Barker watched Ed Baird roll into a dial-up, but
instead of matching, he bore away beneath Alinghi’s
stern, forcing SUI 100 up above the starting line.
Barker then harried Baird across the top of the
Race Committee boat and the Swiss were forced to
seek refuge in the spectator fleet on the right
side of the start box.
From there the Kiwis controlled the lead into the
start, holding the Swiss high up near the Race Committee
boat. Alinghi tacked just before the start gun,
downspeed as they passed the committee boat on port,
while New Zealand launched off the line. Barker
tacked to track Alinghi over to the right, and for
a while it looked like the Swiss boat would sail
away underneath the Kiwis as the advantage line
came back to zero.
However, Barker and his crew found another gear
and matched Baird out to the right-hand layline.
Once safely in the corner, the Kiwis tacked and
led Alinghi back to the windward mark, leading around
by 12 seconds.
Just a few minutes into the run disaster struck
the Kiwi boat. A little rip developed in the spinnaker
and the foredeck crew were readying a replacement
when the first spinnaker blew apart. A miscommunication
on the boat saw the new kite hoisted before it had
been properly attached, so it blew out like a flag
from the mast head. By the time the team had a third
spinnaker in place, Alinghi had sailed out to leeward
of the stricken Kiwi boat and gybed its way into
the lead.
Eventually the Kiwis settled down again, but at
the leeward gate the Swiss were leading by 26 seconds.
With Alinghi taking the right mark, New Zealand
took the left, looking for some separation. Amazingly
the Kiwis got close to Alinghi on the second beat,
pulling back to three boatlengths as a tacking duel
ensued. However Terry Hutchinson opted to match
Brad Butterworth’s tacks and follow Alinghi into
the final mark, now 24 seconds behind.
Down the final run the Kiwis chose a symmetrical
spinnaker, perhaps because they had exhausted their
supply of asymmetrics from the breakdown earlier,
but they still looked as fast as Alinghi and closed
a bit of distance. However, Ed Baird and crew held
their nerve to secure the win and go one race up
on the scoreboard.
Race Six is scheduled to start on Saturday afternoon
at 15:00.
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