LOGJAM AT TOP OF MONSOON CUP STANDINGS
Peter Gilmour (foreground) clips Thierry Peponnet’s transom, sending the Frenchman into the windward mark, in their Flight 9 match, won by Gilmour. (©Swedish Match Tour/Guido Cantini)
Peter Gilmour (foreground) clips Thierry Peponnet’s transom, sending the Frenchman into the windward mark, in their Flight 9 match, won by Gilmour. (©Swedish Match Tour/Guido Cantini)

The Sultan of Terengganu, Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin, sailed two races with Peter Gilmour and Yasuhiro Yaji at the Monsoon Cup. (©Swedish Match Tour/Guido Cantini)
The Sultan of Terengganu, Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin, sailed two races with Peter Gilmour and Yasuhiro Yaji at the Monsoon Cup. (©Swedish Match Tour/Guido Cantini)

Thierry Peponnet (left) and Russell Coutts get up close and personal during their Flight 7 match, won by Peponnet. (©Swedish Match Tour/Guido Cantini)
Thierry Peponnet (left) and Russell Coutts get up close and personal during their Flight 7 match, won by Peponnet. (©Swedish Match Tour/Guido Cantini)

Chris Dickson (right) and Ian Williams rub gunwales during their Flight 8 match, won by Dickson. (©Swedish Match Tour/Guido Cantini)
Chris Dickson (right) and Ian Williams rub gunwales during their Flight 8 match, won by Dickson. (©Swedish Match Tour/Guido Cantini)

KUALA TERENGGANU, Malaysia (Nov. 30, 2005) — After nine of 17 scheduled flights of the inaugural Monsoon Cup, the celebratory 50th event of the Swedish Match Tour, there are five skippers in a logjam at the top of the standings.

The leader depends on whether you consider total wins as the basis for leading or winning percentage. And then there are tiebreakers to consider.

If you choose winning percentage then there’s a three way tie for the lead. Crews led by Chris Dickson (BMW Oracle Racing), Peter Gilmour (PST) and Staffan Lindberg (Alandia Sailing Team) all have four wins in five races, a winning rate of 80 percent. The three haven’t raced each other yet.

If you go for total wins then Ian Williams (Williams Racing Team) is the event leader. Williams’ 5-2 record is good for a winning rate of 71 percent. Magnus Holmberg (Victory Challenge) is also 5-2, but Williams holds the tiebreak advantage after yesterday’s come-from-behind win in Flight 2.

The 50th event of the Swedish Match Tour is offering great racing, and the regatta isn’t even out of the round robin stage yet.

“Today was a thoroughly enjoyable day of racing,” said Tour director Scott MacLeod, who prefers number of wins as the basis for leading. “There was everything to like; lead changes, penalties and the sultan racing.”

The Sultan of Terengganu, Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin, sailed two races with Gilmour. They won against Thierry Peponnet and lost against Dean Barker.

“He’s a charming man,” said Gilmour. “He realized it’s a sporting situation and said to sail the boat as we have to. I think he finds peace on the water. He asked to do another race after the first one. He’s enthused by sailing. I think we have a sailor on our hands.”

The sultan was treated to some classic “crash” Gilmour racing in their match against Peponnet. The Frenchman who is skipper of the K-Challenge syndicate got an early lead on the reigning two-time Tour champion by playing the left side of the first leg.

Gilmour, however, held starboard tack approaching the windward mark. Peponnet seemed to be just crossing, but Gilmour hunted him down as they converged. Gilmour clipped Peponnet’s transom, which pushed the bow of the port-tack boat down and into the windward mark. The umpires issued three penalties, two to Gilmour.

“We gave a penalty to Gilmour for breaking Rule 16, a right-of-way boat altering course,” said Chief Umpire John Standley, who umpired the match. “We also gave a penalty to Peponnet for hitting the mark. But Gilmour gained an advantage so we gave him a second penalty. It was fairly straightforward.”

Gilmour stretched enough of a lead over the next lap and a half to perform his penalty turn on the finish line and win. But afterwards apologies were flying on his boat.

“I apologized to the sultan,” Gilmour said, “but he said don’t worry, it was the most fun of the race.”

The Gilmour-Peponnet match wasn’t the only with contact. Williams and Dickson rubbed gunwales, while Coutts and Peponnet also got up close and personal. So far in the event the umpires have had 48 requests for calls from competitors and 24 penalties have been issued. “That’s a high proportion,” said Standley. “It shows the sailors aren’t putting up questionable Y flags.”

Just over half of the 17 scheduled flights have been completed. Principal Race Officer Peter Reggio said he had hoped to complete 10 flights by this time. After the round robin the top eight advance to the quarterfinals while the bottom four are eliminated.

The round robin is scheduled to resume tomorrow at 10:00 a.m.

Swedish Match Tour partners include Swedish Match, BMW and the Match Race Association. Swedish Match Tour Official Sponsors include Musto, Sebago and Travel Places.

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Logjam at Top of Monsoon Cup Standings

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Sean McNeill
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MONSOON CUP STANDINGS
Round Robin (After 9 of 17 scheduled flights)
1. Chris Dickson (NZL) BMW Oracle Racing, 4-1
(Crew: Jamie Gale, Robbie Naismith, Ed Smyth, Paul Westlake)
T. Peter Gilmour (AUS) PST, 4-1
(Crew: Rod Dawson, Kazuhiko Sofuku, Tatsuya Wakinaga, Yasuhiro Yaji)
T. Staffan Lindberg (FIN) Alandia Sailing Team, 4-1
(Crew: Martin Berntsson, Nils Bjerkås, Carl-Johan Uckelstam, Daniel Wallberg)
4. Ian Williams (GBR) Williams Racing Team, 5-2
(Crew: Gerry Mitchell, Mark Nichols, Guy Salter, Mark Williams)
5. Magnus Holmberg (SWE) Victory Challenge, 5-2
(Crew: Anders Dahlsjo, Martin Krite, Lars Linger, Mattias Rahm)
6. Dean Barker (NZL) Emirates Team New Zealand, 3-2
(Crew: Don Cowie, James Dagg, Jared Henderson, Terry Hutchinson)
7. Russell Coutts (NZL) Coutts Racing Team, 3-3
(Crew: Jes Gram-Hansen, Christian Kamp, Rasmus Kostner, Jann Neergaard)
8. Francesco Bruni (ITA) Luna Rossa Challenge, 2-3
(Crew: Michele Cannoni, Gaetano Figlia de Granara, Manuel Modena, Massimiliano Sirena)
9. Björn Hansen (SWE) Team Apport.Net, 2-4
(Crew: Mattias Bredin, Andus Jonsson, Pontus Meijer, Johan Templeman)
10. Thierry Peponnet (FRA) K-Challenge, 2-5
(Crew: Benoit Briand, Herve Cunningham, Gilles Favennec, Albert Jacobsoone)
11. Cameron Dunn (NZL) Mascalzone Latino – Capitalia, 1-6
(Crew: Santino Brizzi, Cicho Chicchetti, Marco Constant, Pietro Mantovani)
12. Sally Barkow (USA) Team 7, 0-5
(Crew: Sofia Bekatorou, Debbie Capozzi, Chafee Emory, Carrie Howe, Annie Lush)

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