Top Sailors To Compete For $100K In Gold Cup
Lucy MacGregor and Torvar Mirsky — the reigning Women’s and Open Match Race World Champions — headline a championship field slated for the Argo Group Gold Cup.
Hosted by the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club, the 68th running of the Argo Group Gold Cup is scheduled May 8-12. Twelve teams will be vying for the $100,000 prize purse, of which $30,000 is earmarked for the champion.
First awarded in 1907, the King Edward VII Gold Cup is one of the most coveted trophies in match racing and carries a panache that regularly attracts the world’s best sailors.
When the breeze is fresh-to-frightening on Hamilton Harbour, crews can only hope to control the 33-foot IOD sloop [Photo courtesy of Charles Anderson/RBYC]
This year’s field is no exception. Johnie Berntsson of Sweden is a two-time past champion [2008, ’14] and two-time runner-up [2011, ’12].
Taylor Canfield of the U.S. won the Gold Cup in 2012, finished 3rd in 2013 and ’14, and placed 4th in 2015. He comes into the regatta with a hot hand having won the Congressional Cup two weeks ago in Long Beach, Calif.
Mirsky, who’ll be competing at the Gold Cup for the fourth time, won the coveted trophy in 2011 and the match racing worlds last year in China. MacGregor is a two-time winner of the Women’s Worlds [2010, ’17], represented Great Britain at the 2012 Olympics, and will be racing the Gold Cup for the second time after her debut in 2010.
“The Gold Cup is always going to be special because it’s so steeped in history,” said the 31-year-old MacGregor.“Everyone holds it quite highly. It’s such a unique event with the boats and the style of racing that it makes you come back for more. To be an expert on the IOD in that venue is a tricky thing to achieve.”
“I’m stoked to be going back,” said the 31-year-old Mirsky. “Because it’s such a traditional event, with so many famous sailors having won it, it’s easy for other sailors who rank competitive sailing to understand the importance of winning the Gold Cup. I’ve been lucky enough to raise the trophy above my head once before and I’m looking forward to another chance at it.”
The list of past champions is a virtual Hall of Fame roll call. America’s Cup legend Sir Russell Coutts of New Zealand won the trophy a record seven times between 1990 and 2004.
Bermuda’s own A.F. “Bert” Darrell won the trophy six times between 1939 and 1959. Australian Peter Gilmour is a three-time winner. England’s Sir Ben Ainslie and New Zealand’s Chris Dickson join Berntsson as two-time winners. John Kolius and Peter Isler of the U.S. are past champions, as are Peter Holmberg of the USVI, Jimmy Spithill of Australia and Francesco Bruni of Italy.
They’ve all mastered the shifty and puffy conditions of Hamilton Harbour as well as the IOD, the 33-foot full-keel sloop that is tricky unto itself. When Hamilton Harbour is serving up a wet and wild fare the IOD’s tiller extension becomes more of a leash as crews can only hope to hold on and guide it in the right direction.
“The IOD is not like any other boat that we sail. It’s so unique and what makes the Gold Cup special,” said the 29-year-old Canfield.
Racing for the King Edward VII Gold Cup began in earnest in Bermuda in 1937 after trophy holder C. Sherman Hoyt donated the trophy to the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club.
The Gold Cup is one of the first match race regattas that featured a stadium-style format when the racing was moved from Great Sound to colorful Hamilton Harbour in 1985. That put the racing smack dab in front of thousands of spectators, who line the pastel-colored shores of the harbour to catch sight of the racing.
After the 2015 Gold Cup the event took a two-year hiatus due in part to the America’s Cup being held in Bermuda last summer. But during the Cup plans were underway to reignite the Gold Cup and the generous support of Argo Group has made it possible. At Argo Group’s request the regatta was moved to May from its traditional October timing.
The Argo Group Gold Cup is sponsored by the Argo Group, an international underwriter of specialty insurance and reinsurance products in areas of the property and casualty market. Additional sponsors include the Bermuda Tourism Authority, Bacardi, Guy Carpenter, RenaissanceRe and Aon Benfield.
Argo Group Gold Cup entry list [Subject to change]
- Joachim Aschenbrenner [DEN, World No. 38, 2nd Gold Cup appearance]
- Johnie Berntsson [SWE, World No. 154, Gold Cup champion 2008, ’14, 9th Gold Cup appearance]
- Ettore Botticini [ITA, World No. 7, 1st Gold Cup appearance]
- Taylor Canfield [USA, World No. 6, Gold Cup champion 2012, 6th Gold Cup appearance]
- Nicklas Dackhammar [SWE, World No. 17, 2nd Gold Cup appearance]
- Sam Gilmour [AUS, World No. 20, 1st Gold Cup appearance]
- Charlie Lalumiere [USA, World No. 238, 1st Gold Cup appearance]
- Lucy MacGregor [GBR, Women’s World No. 18, 2nd Gold Cup appearance]
- Torvar Mirsky [AUS, World No. 27, Gold Cup champion 2011, 4th Gold Cup appearance]
- Chris Poole [USA, World No. 54, 4th Gold Cup appearance]
- Marek Stanczyk [POL, World No. 22, 2nd Gold Cup appearance]
- [a 12th entrant is to be confirmed]
The King Edward VII Gold Cup is the oldest match racing trophy in the world for one-design keelboats. The Gold Cup was given in 1907 by King Edward VII at the Tri-Centenary Regatta at Jamestown, Virginia, in commemoration of the 300th anniversary of the first permanent settlement in America.
The trophy was won by America’s Cup Hall of Fame member C. Sherman Hoyt, who donated it to the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club three decades later. Beginning in 1988 the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club introduced sponsorship, prize money, on-the-water judging, and racing in Hamilton Harbour, making the Gold Cup more exciting for spectators and participants.