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Alinghi won its fourth consecutive
race and the 32nd America’s Cup on Tuesday afternoon
on the waters off Valencia.
Match 7 – Alinghi beat Emirates Team New Zealand
(0'01'')
It was a perfect day for racing on the waters off
Valencia, with the bright, warm, Valencian sun generating
a strong 14 to 17 knot sea breeze until the final
moments of the race.
Yet again it was a tense and aggressive pre-start
between the teams, with Dean Barker refusing the
traditional dial-up in favour of getting below Alinghi’s
stern and chasing Ed Baird around the start box.
B
arker always looked in control, but at start time
both boats were at full speed off the line, Alinghi
to the right of NZL 92. Baird managed to live there
for some minutes, until he was forced to tack away
over to the right. The Kiwis claimed the lead for
a brief moment up the beat, but towards the top
of the course Alinghi managed to hold their opponent
past the port layline.
A luffing match ensued before Baird accelerated
and took SUI 100 around the windward mark 7 seconds
ahead. Down the run, the Kiwi gybes and spinnaker
handling looked more assured, and with the Alinghi
spinnaker flailing momentarily, Barker surged past
Baird into the lead.
At the bottom gate, the Kiwis opted for the simpler
spinnaker drop, taking the left-hand mark, Alinghi
making a difficult gybe-drop look easy and rounding
the right-hand mark 14 seconds behind.
The Kiwis tacked over to loose-cover Alinghi as
both boats tracked out to the right-hand side. Brad
Butterworth called for a tack over at the Kiwis
and a tacking duel ensued. Alinghi appeared to be
winning the battle, and eventually the Kiwis disengaged,
still a boatlength ahead but to the left of their
rivals.
When Barker reached the port layline, he tacked
and immediately bore away into a dial-down against
Baird. The Kiwis tried to get below the line of
SUI 100, but it was close. The Swiss flew a Y flag
in protest, and the Umpires flew a yellow penalty
flag in response.
Now a penalty down, the Kiwis rounded the final
mark 12 seconds behind. On the final run to the
finish, the breeze was dropping, but the Kiwis could
make no impact. Alinghi was on the final approach
to the finish when their spinnaker pole flew off
the mast, the spinnaker flailing.
At the same time the breeze dropped and shifted
massively. Alinghi - dead in the water - was overtaken.
Then the Kiwis almost reached the line and took
their penalty with a double-tack. Struggling to
accelerate, they bore away to cross but Alinghi
made it across the finish by just 1 second.
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