Mathieu Richard (FRA) will be looking for revenge after the Troia Portugal Match. In Bermuda, he’ll battle against fellow Frenchman Sebastian Col (FRA) who took first place in the finals of the seventh tour event last week plus six of the other top ten skippers from the ISAF open match race rankings. Richard had been relegated to the petite finals after loosing to eventual second place finisher Magnus Holmberg. Richard is the defending champion of Bermuda’s King Edward VII Gold Cup presented by Argo Group and ranked #1 in the world by ISAF. He currently stands third in the World Match Racing Tour championship. He will have to defeat #1 Ian Williams (GB) and #2 Sebastian Col to retain his Gold Cup crown. Richard has sailed in the Gold Cup four times as a skipper. He was runner up in 2006 and winner in 2007. “We sailed very well in 2006 and 2007, with the same crew.” Richard commented. “In 2008 we have again the same crew for the third time in a row, so I think that we can have a very good result. We feel very good on the International One Designs (IOD’s used in the Gold Cup). I love the tricky conditions that we often have in Hamilton Harbour. Experience sailing in IOD’s helps a lot because the IOD are very specific and different from the other boats that we are used to sailing on the World Tour.” Two of his four Gold Cup events are most memorable for Richard. “The first one in 2004,” Richard noted, “because in quarterfinal we were leading 2-0 against Russell Coutts, and we had the lead at the bottom mark of the 3rd match. But we lost 3-2 and Russell won the event! It was frustrating but also very exciting. And our victory last year was great. A great feeling because in the last match we were 4 or 5 boat lengths behind Bjorn Hansen, but we passed him on the last beat and won the Gold Cup.” Hansen ranks #7 on the WMRT and #6 in ISAF world rankings. He also has great experience in the IOD’s having sailed the Gold Cup five times. Hansen said he has to be in top form to win. “All teams on this level have their good and bad weeks,” Hansen commented. “We just have to hope we have a good week and can do as good or better than last year. We will have two newcomers compared to last year, but they have both been to Bermuda with me before. Last year one of our crew got ill and had to leave Bermuda before the event started, but fortunately Bermuda has really good local sailors and Will Thompson helped us to get second. We come to Bermuda year after year because it is a fantastic regatta in a fantastic environment. The members of RBYC do a great job and it is nice to come back to visit friends we have made during the years.” Great Britain’s Ian Williams, winner of the 2006 Gold Cup and the 2007 WMRT Championship and now ranked #1 on the tour and #2 in the ISAF rankings, will be sailing hard to regain his championship form in the Bermuda classic. He has skippered four times in Bermuda. He is sailing with a new crew this year and remarked, “Team Pindar has had a new team this year which has been consistent throughout the year – it is important to keep as much consistency as possible as the teamwork is very important. “Winning the World Match Racing Tour last year is my greatest sailing accomplishment,” Williams said. Winning two Tour championships in a row would be even greater. As the second to last event on the Tour, teams will be looking to gather as many Tour points as possible to carry forward to the Monsoon Cup in Malaysia. Bermuda will be the place where the psychological games intensify. This year’s event also welcomes Ben Ainslie of Team Origin fresh from his Olympic success in Beijing. Eric Monnin returns to Bermuda for his fifth consecutive Gold Cup, along with Bermuda’s threat for the gold, Blythe Walker. Walker, a favorite with the locals and has competed in numerous Gold Cup regattas and other international match racing events. He thrilled Bermudian spectators at the 2006 Gold Cup when he won the Petit Finals to place third. In 2007, he placed fourth. He will team up with his same Bermuda crewmembers from 2007… Adam Barboza, Somers Kempe and Carola Cooper and is looking for his chance to take the cup for Bermuda. Match Racing in Bermuda is a spectator sport and a top attraction for visitors and Bermuda residents alike. Multiple Gold Cup matches are sailed simultaneously all week just off the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club marina in Hamilton Harbour. Sometimes the action is so close that spectators seated on the marina wall must lift their feet to allow competitors to skim the bulkhead or tack for water. On the weekend, just in time for the Gold Cup semi-finals and finals, the first-ever Festival of Sail will draw Bermuda children and families to Barr’s Bay Park for two days of fun focused on sailboats and sailing, Bermuda’s unofficial national sport. The festival will have a pirate theme and feature a fun castle, face painting and other children’s activities in addition to offering tours of boats from nine to fifty feet including the Spirit of Bermuda. There will be youth sailing demonstrations of Optimist Dinghy sailing and a sailing experience aboard several J105 sailboats with volunteers from the RBYC. The Renaissance Re Junior Gold Cup Championship finals will be sailed in the harbour on Sunday, an exciting Optimist Dinghy event for spectators young and old. October seventh will mark the sixtieth time the King Edward VII Gold Cup trophy has been contested. For 2008, Argo Group, the Bermuda based international underwriter of specialty insurance and reinsurance products in the property and casualty market, will sponsor the competition. In addition to Argo Group, the new title sponsor, the Bermuda Department of Tourism continues as the Host Sponsor, the Max Capital Group, Renaissance Reinsurance and Guy Carpenter & Company, LLC are aboard as associate presenting sponsors assuring that the minimum prize purse for 2008 will be $100,000. Renaissance Reinsurance is also the sponsor of the Junior Gold Cup competition for 2008. About The King Edward VII Gold Cup: http://www.bermudagoldcup.com Stage 8 of the World Match Race TourThe King Edward VII Gold Cup, now stage 8 of the World Match Race Tour sailed for the match-racing world championship, is the oldest match-racing competition in the world for one-design yachts. The trophy presented to the winning team was originally given at the Tri-Centenary Regatta at Jamestown, Virginia, in 1907 by King Edward VII in commemoration of the 300th Anniversary of the first permanent settlement in America. C. Sherman Hoyt, a renowned American sailor, won the regatta and was presented with this now historic cup. Through the years Bermuda has won the Cup 21 times, the United States 17 times, New Zealand 10 times, Australia 5 times, the United Kingdom 3 times, and in 2002 Denmark claimed the King Edward VII Gold Cup for the first time. The 2006 winner was Ian Williams (UK) who defeated a fleet including the 2005 winner, Luna Rosa Skipper James Spithill, who in that year had shut out Russell Coutts’ incredible string of wins. Mathieu Richard of France became the third consecutive first-time winner of the King Edward VII Gold Cup in 2007. The King Edward VII Gold Cup is the 8th out of 9 events on the 2008 World Match Race Tour’s World Championship schedule. It is sailed in Hamilton Harbour adjacent to the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club. The venue brings world-class match racing close to shore where spectators can easily see the competition. The 24 invited crews including two winners of qualifying events will be divided into three groups of 8 to sail a round robin elimination series Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. The leading 8 skippers go on to the Quarter and Semi Finals, to be sailed on Friday and Saturday respectively. The Finals take place on Sunday with the top two teams in a “Knockout” head to head battle and the losing semi finalists in their own “Knockout” Petite Final. Between the second and third races, the course is taken over for the final race of the Renaissance Junior Gold Cup, which will have been underway simultaneously since Thursday in the Great Sound. The King Edward VII Gold Cup was a founding member of the World Match Racing Tour. The tour is a series of 9 events, which has extensive television coverage and worldwide promotion. The television broadcast of the 2007 event appeared in November on Eurosport, ESPN, Versus Network, the Sky network and other regional broadcasters. This network reaches more than 300 million homes in 90 countries. An exciting summary video of all the tour events can be viewed at http://www.worldmatchracingtour.com/. Headquartered in Bermuda, Argo Group International Holdings, Ltd. (NasdaqGS: AGII) is an international underwriter of specialty insurance and reinsurance products in the property and casualty market. Argo Group offers a full line of high-quality products and services designed to meet the unique coverage and claims handling needs of businesses in four primary segments: Excess and Surplus Lines, Commercial Specialty, International Specialty and Reinsurance. Information on Argo Group and its subsidiaries is available at www.argolimited.com. About The Royal Bermuda Yacht Club: http://www.rbyc.bm The Royal Bermuda Yacht Club is a private Club and is the third oldest club holding a Royal Warrant outside the British Isles. The Royal Bermuda Yacht Club was established on the 1st of November 1844 by a party of thirty gentlemen, consisting largely of officers in the British Army. There are now approximately 850 resident and non-resident members.
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