HAMILTON, Bermuda (Oct. 7, 2020) β World and event champions highlight a fleet adorned with accolades for the celebratory 70th Bermuda Gold Cup and 2020 Open Match Racing World Championship, hosted by the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club Oct. 26-30.
Swedenβs Johnie Berntsson, Taylor Canfield of the U.S., Australian Torvar Mirsky and Ian Williams of the U.K. have all won the King Edward VII Gold Cup, awarded to the winner of the Bermuda Gold Cup, while Canfield, Mirsky, Williams and New Zealander Phil Robertson of Sweden have all won the Open World Championship. The fleetβs credentials are further boosted by Swedenβs Anna Γstling, a two-time champion of the Womenβs Match Racing World Championship.
The six skippers are among the 16 entrants for the dual regatta, presented by Argo Group for the benefit of the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences (BIOS). While there is an abundance of experience in the fleet (11 of the returning skippers account for 63 cumulative appearances), the Bermuda Gold Cup is keeping to its mission of providing up-and-coming teams a chance to compete against the best. To that end four skippers are aged 22 to 26 years old while two very accomplished womenβs crews add intrigue to the regatta that will again be raced on Hamilton Harbour in the International One-Design (IOD) sloop.
Theyβre all chasing the oldest trophy awarded for competition involving one-design yachts, the King Edward VII Gold Cup, and for winning the Worlds, the sterling silver World Match Racing Tour trophy that was made by Garrard & Co., the royal jeweler that crafted the Americaβs Cup. The winner will also be awarded $30,000 of the $100,000 prize purse.
βThe lure of winning two esteemed championships in one fell swoop has led to a fantastic fleet that is both competitive and accomplished,β said Leatrice Oatley, chairperson of the Bermuda Gold Cup. βWeβre happy to welcome those whoβve been to Bermuda before and look forward to welcoming the new crews. Bermuda and the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club are ready to share the hospitality that is a hallmark of the regatta, just remember to bring a mask.β
The Bermuda Gold Cup is presented by Argo Group in benefit of BIOS, an independent US non-profit scientific research and educational organization based in Bermuda. For over 100 years BIOS-based researchers and visiting scientists have worked to explore the ocean and address important local and global environmental issues, including climate change, coral reef resilience, and environmental monitoring. As a Bermuda registered charity, BIOS is committed to providing local students with educational programs that build a foundation for an appreciation of Bermudaβs marine environment, as well as future careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) subjects.
Besides the champions headlining the fleet thereβs also the two World No. 1-ranked skippers. Frenchwoman Pauline Courtois, back for her second Bermuda Gold Cup, leads the Womenβs list and Swiss sailor Eric Monnin, returning for his 13th Bermuda Gold Cup, leads the Open rankings. Also, 26-year-old Kelsey Durham returns for the second consecutive year as the Bermuda National Match Race champion.
Youth gets a shout out with 22-year-old Jeppe Borch of Denmark, the World No. 11-ranked skipper, 23-year-old Matthew Whitfield of the U.K., World No. 21, and 25-year-old Jelmer van Beek of the Netherlands, World No. 10. All three are making their Bermuda Gold Cup debuts.
Chris Poole of the U.S., World No. 7, is the top-ranked American competing, Nicklas Dackhammar, World No. 14, returns for his fourth Bermuda Gold Cup representing Sweden, and Lance Fraser, World No. 38, returns to the island he grew up on representing Canada. Mati Sepp of Estonia, World No. 5, will be making his first appearance.
The four past winners of the Bermuda Gold CupβBerntsson, Canfield, Mirsky and Williams (the reigning champion)βaccount for seven championships in total since 2006. While the four past winners of the Open World ChampionshipβCanfield, Mirsky, Robertson (the reigning champion) and Williamsβaccount for 10 championships, including each edition since 2011. A win for Williams would be a record-setting seventh Open Match Racing World Championship title.
βThe Bermuda Gold Cup is definitely one of my favorite events,β said Canfield, who grew up on St. Thomas, USVI. βIt gives me the sense of growing up in the islands, sort of tropical with a punchy breeze. I love the shifty racing on Hamilton Harbour, it caters to my style of sailing. Iβm looking forward to going back. There are a lot of friends and people down there that I consider family from doing the event for so long. Iβm most excited about sailing a match racing event.β
Mirsky, as well, is excited to get back to match racing. Like many of the top sailors in the fleet heβs been racing multihulls on the World Match Racing Tour the past few years. Last yearβs Open Match Racing World Championship was sailed in multihulls. He says getting back into a displacement monohull such as the IOD allows for more finite tactics than a multihull.
βFor match racing tactics there are more boat-on-boat decisions with displacement monohulls. Itβs easier for people watching to understand our decisions or to see whoβs ahead,β said Mirsky. βWith catamarans, I donβt think weβre making as many decisions as we can. In catamarans, weβre short on resources like man power to handle the boat and get the maximum speed. You compromise your tactics to go fast and youβre missing out on performance because youβre shorthanded. In the monohull youβre working on one percent gains, tiny details and a lot more boat-on-boat stuff. It amplifies the risk-reward game weβre always playing. Monohull tactics exemplify match racing a bit more.β
One newcomer who should have familiarity with the gusty and shifty racecourse on Hamilton Harbour is Whitfield, the 23-year-old from the U.K. The World No. 21-ranked skipper competed in the 2011 RenaissanceRe Junior Gold Cup, and being invited to the Bermuda Gold Cup is a dream come true.
βI was 14 years old when I raced the Junior Gold Cup, so I got to see the Gold Cup in person,β Whitfield said. βEveryone knows the Bermuda Gold Cup is among the biggest events in the world of sailing, and I still canβt quite believe that weβre going to compete. Having done the Junior Gold Cup I know what the racecourse is about: gusty, shifty and all strength.β
The King Edward VII Trophy, awarded to the winner of the Bermuda Gold Cup, is the oldest trophy in the world for competition involving one-design yachts. First presented in 1907 by King Edward VII at the Tri-Centenary Regatta at Jamestown, Va., honoring the 300th anniversary of the first permanent colony in America, the trophy is the only Kingβs Cup ever to be offered for competition in the United States which could be won outright.
The Bermuda Gold Cup is proudly presented by the Bermuda Tourism Authority.
Visit the Bermuda Gold Cup and World Match Racing Tour websites for more information.
70th BERMUDA GOLD CUP/2020 OPEN MATCH RACING WORLDS ENTRANT LIST
- Johnie Berntsson (49, Stenungsund, Sweden) β World No. 12 Open Match Race Rankings, 11th Bermuda Gold Cup (champion 2008, β14), 2nd place in 2019
- Jeppe Borch (22, Copenhagen, Denmark) β World No. 11 Open Match Race Rankings, first Bermuda Gold Cup, 3rd place 2019 Youth Match Racing World Championship
- Taylor Canfield (31, Miami, USA) β World No. 46 Open Match Race Rankings, seventh Bermuda Gold Cupβtwo-time winner (2012, β18), 2013 Open Match Racing World Champion
- Pauline Courtois (31, Brest, France) β World No. 1 Womenβs Match Race Rankings, second Bermuda Gold Cup
- Nicklas Dackhammar (30, Gothenburg, Sweden) β World No. 14 Open Match Race Rankings, fourth Bermuda Gold Cup
- Kelsey Durham (26, Smiths, Bermuda) β Two-time Bermuda National Match Race Champion, second Bermuda Gold Cup
- Lance Fraser (27, Toronto, Canada) β World No. 38 Open Match Race Rankings, sixth Gold Cup
- Torvar Mirsky (34, Sydney, Australia) β World No. 27 Open Match Race Rankings, fifth Bermuda Gold Cup, 2017 Open Match Racing World Champion
- Eric Monnin (45, Immensee, Switzerland) β World No. 1 Open Match Race Rankings, 13th Bermuda Gold Cup
- Anna Γstling (36, Lerum, Sweden) β World No. 2 Womenβs Match Race Rankings, first Bermuda Gold Cup, two-time Womenβs Match Racing World champion (2014, β16)
- Chris Poole (31, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, USA) β World No. 7 Open Match Race Rankings, sixth Bermuda Gold Cup
- Phil Robertson (33, Gothenburg, Sweden) β World No. 101 Open Match Race Rankings, sixth Bermuda Gold Cup, two-time Open Match Racing Worlds champion (2016, β19)
- Mati Sepp (51, Tallinn, Estonia) β World No. 5 Open Match Race Rankings, first Bermuda Gold Cup
- Jelmer van Beek (25, The Hague, Netherlands) β World No. 10 Open Match Race Rankings, first Bermuda Gold Cup
- Matthew Whitfield (23, Plymouth, England) β World No. 21 Open Match Race Rankings, first Bermuda Gold Cup
- Ian Williams (43, Lymington, England) β World No. 6 Open Match Race Rankings, 12th Bermuda Gold Cup, two-time champion (2006, β19), six-time Open Match Racing Worlds champion (2007, β08, β11, β12, β14, β15)
(List subject to change. Rankings based on Apr. 8, 2020 World Sailing Rankings β Match Racing)
Text: Sean McNeill
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Nicole Butterworth, Royal Bermuda Yacht Club Sailing Office, sailingoffice@rbyc.bm
Sean McNeill, Bermuda Gold Cup Press Officer, bermudagoldcup@gmail.com
James Pleasance, World Match Racing Tour, info@wmrt.com