Sail GP Sydney 2020: Ainslie & INEOS UK Dominate

Great Britain SailGP Team helmed by Ben Ainslie in action during races on Race Day 2. Sydney SailGP, Event 1 Season 2 in Sydney Harbour, Sydney, Australia. 29 February 2020. Photo: Drew Malcolm for SailGP. Handout image supplied by SailGP

Great decision by Ainslie & Team INEOS UK to join the Sail GP 2020 for some actual racing in parallel with their Americas Campaign. Ainslie and his team already showed a winning level at Bermuda, only a not to par platform relegated their chances. At Sydney this weekend, sailing the SailGP OD F50, the equipment handicap was gone and Ainslie’s talent could be deployed without restrictions to win the first event of the 2020 Series dominating at will.

Give the guy and his team a proper platform this time around for the Americas Cup Challenge and there is a great chance the ‘Animal’ can take the Cup back to the UK.

Below official report sent by Sail GP media. Series web www.sailgp.com. Live Replays links in our previous posts.


Ben Ainslie and Great Britain steal the day in SailGP Season 2 debut 

British team win all three races on Sydney Harbour while first collision of campaign forces France to retire early

SYDNEY – February 28, 2020 – In his first day of competing in the world’s fastest sail racing, Ben Ainslie’s much-anticipated debut was masterful as the Great Britain SailGP Team presented by INEOS swept all three races on Sydney Harbour in the kick off to SailGP Season 2. The British team wasted no time establishing itself as the championship front-runner – holding a comfortable lead heading into Saturday’s finale.

Sydney Harbour lived up to its reputation as one of the world’s finest sailing venues, delivering near perfect conditions that saw the record-breaking F50s regularly fly at speeds near 40 knots.

Ainslie said: “It was an amazing day of racing. You can’t really ask for better conditions than that, 15-20 knots southerly on Sydney Harbour. I think our team did a great job and the guys on the boat were fantastic. Great opening for us but now it’s time to refocus for tomorrow.”

Pegged as the favorites entering the season, the Australians struggled to get off to good starts throughout the day, scoring mixed results, with a second, third and fifth-place finish. Despite this, the home team finds itself in position to secure a berth in the final match race, sitting tied for second with Japan.

Slingsby said: “It was a tough day at the office. We just made too many mistakes. I think we’re as quick as anyone but the Great Britain team isn’t making mistakes like we’re making. It looks more like we’re the rookies. We just have to come back stronger tomorrow.”

While much of the attention going into the event was around the brewing rivalry between Ainslie and Slingsby, the most tense moment of the day involved debutant Spain and France.

Phil Robertson and the Spanish team were heading toward a race boundary and lost rights to France and eventually clipped the French F50. After a strong start in the race, Billy Besson’s team was forced to retire from the final two races.

The SailGP race jury determined the Spain team inflicted serious damage to the French boat, docking the newcomers nine total points – five points from the first race and an additional two points for each of the final two races that France was forced to miss.

While its place in the standings was hurt by the collision and subsequent point deduction, Robertson and the Spanish team had an otherwise strong debut performance, finishing second in the final two races and showing the new crew will be competitive this season.

Fellow newcomer Denmark SailGP Team presented by ROCKWOOL was also assessed a two-point penalty for making contact with the Japanese boat in the first race.

After day one of racing, Ainslie and the British team find themselves at the top of the leaderboard with 30 points, followed by Japan and Australia tied with 23, the United States with 19, Spain with 15, followed by Denmark at 13 and France with five.

The teams will regroup to review footage and the data powered by the Oracle to see if they can find a way to match the impressive Great Britain team heading into tomorrow.

Racing resumes at 4:30 p.m. local time (AEDT) and can be watched across the globe via comprehensive broadcast coverage and the award-winning SailGP APP.

Limited tickets are available at SailGP.com/Sydney.

SailGP Season 2 Overall Leaderboard

1 // Great Britain // 30 pts
2 // Japan // 23 pts
2 // Australia // 23 pts
4 // United States // 19 pts
5 // Spain // 15 pts *9 points deducted from total score
6 // Denmark // 13 pts *2 points deducted from total score
7 // France // 5 pts

Individual Sydney SailGP Race Results

Race 1

1 // Great Britain // 10 pts
2 // Australia // 9 pts
3 // Japan // 8 pts
4 // United States // 7 pts
5 // Spain // 6 pts
6 // France // 5 pts
7 // Denmark // 4 pts

Race 2

1 // Great Britain // 10 pts
2 // Spain // 9 pts
3 // Australia // 8 pts
4 // Japan // 7 pts
5 // Denmark // 6 pts
6 // United States // 5 pts
7 // France // 0 pts *Did not start

Race 3

1 // Great Britain // 10 pts
2 // Spain // 9 pts
3 // Japan // 8 pts
4 // United States // 7 pts
5 // Australia // 6 pts
6 // Denmark // 5 pts
7 // France // 0 pts *Did not start