HAMILTON, Bermuda (Oct. 19, 2020) β Another glass ceiling for women in sailing will be shattered next week at the 70th Bermuda Gold Cup and 2020 Open Match Racing World Championship when two accomplished female skippers β Frenchwoman Pauline Courtois and Anna Γstling of Sweden β will race in the Open Worlds for the first time ever.
Womenβs crews have been regular entrants at the Bermuda Gold Cup since the regatta was reformatted to a ladder-style tournament in the mid-1980s. Successful racers such as Betsy Allison, Sally Barkow and JJ Fetter of the U.S., Bermudian Paula Lewin and Klaartje Zuiderbaan of the Netherlands are among those who have tried to tackle the International One-Design (IOD) sloop on Hamilton Harbour.
In the past two years Lucy Macgregorβs Team Mac from Great Britain posted back-to-back fourth-place finishes, the best showings ever by an all-womenβs crew at the famed regatta.
The Open Worlds, however, have long been the domain of men. Never has a woman skipper raced in the Open Worlds, let alone two. Next week, that record changes.
The 70th Bermuda Gold Cup and 2020 Open Match Racing World Championship are scheduled Oct. 26-30 with a field of 16 teams set to contest the dual regatta. Courtois, 31, is back for a second go with a trove of knowledge after last yearβs run to the Repechage Round. Γstling, 36, a two-time winner of the Womenβs World Match Racing Championship (2014, β16), is making her first appearance at the World Match Racing Tour event in Bermuda.
βIn 2015 we did our first World Match Racing Tour Open event in Marstrand after winning the qualification that spring,β Γstling (left) says. βIt was a big challenge and we loved everything except the result. After that we decided to aim for doing the WMRT in 2016, but that year the tour changed to M32 catamarans, and even though we jumped into the M32 right away it was too physical to race the guys. Now that the Tour is going back to events with different boats, we said we really wanted to take on this task and dream again.β
Γstling began match racing in 2006 and represented Sweden at the 2012 Olympic Regatta. She would like to see a womenβs tour develop in step with the World Match Racing Tour and create a path that can lead to the Americaβs Cup.
βThe last seven years I have been sailing a lot but I also need to work since womenβs match racing isnβt made for full-time sailors yet,β Γstling says. βWeβre working hard to push the best events to add a womenβs class, to support the events with prize money and to partner with sponsors. Our dream is to be part of moving womenβs sailing into a professional sport with the Americaβs Cup as the target. Maybe not for us but for the younger girls.β
Γstling will lead an all-womenβs crew, but victory would be bittersweet. She planned to race with her regular crew of Annika Carlunger, Anna Holmdahl and sisters Annie and Linnea Wennergren. But Carlunger and Holmdahl have to stay in Sweden due to family reasons so Γstling recruited Julia Lines of Bermuda and Janel Zarkowsky of the U.S. as replacements.
βIn a normal year we would have given everything to prepare and train a lot in the IODβs before going. But now, due to many factors, my team just got finalized last week,β Γstling says. βBut my goal is always to sail with 100-percent focus and give my all. I know itβs the same for the rest of the girls, too. Itβs amazing to have Julia onboard, sheβll help greatly in our understanding of the racecourse. Every little piece of the race is important, so we will do our best and see where that takes us.β
Courtois, who placed second and third at the 2018 and 2019 Womenβs Match Racing World Championship, respectively, returns with a mixed crew, similar to what she had last year. Her mainsail trimmer and tactician, CΓ©dric Chateau, is back as is headsail trimmer Thierry Douillard. Her bow person, Sophie Faguet, and pit person, Maelenn Lemaitre, will be racing in Bermuda for the first time.
βItβs a real opportunity to compete in the Open Worlds. We are very happy and honored to be invited,β says Courtois. βIt would be a great example and a great promotion for womenβs sailing to allow women skippers to compete every year in the Open Worlds, not only as all-womenβs crews but maybe as a mixed crew. I think that mixed crew is one of the ways to promote and develop womenβs sailing.β
Looking back on last year Courtois said that she feels they sailed well for the first time racing an IOD, maybe just not good enough.
βThe IOD is very different from the boats we train on, bigger and heavier,β says Courtois. βEven though itβs really different, I think we sailed quite well. Just not well enough to qualify for the quarterfinals. The IODβs a very good boat for match racing and there are often close matches, so I think the most important thing on this boat is to keep good boatspeed all the time and to try to be faster than the other boat during the pre-start.β
Racing begins next Monday, Oct. 26, with the first set of flights scheduled for 0930.
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, an event of the World Match Racing Tour, is presented by Argo Group in benefit of the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences (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.
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)
Main photo: Frenchwoman Pauline Courtois (center), seen in action last year, is one of two women skippers in the 70th Bermuda Gold Cup and 2020 Open Match Racing World Championship
(Photo: Charles Anderson).
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