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Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup Day 4

by New York Yacht Club 13 Sep 2025 05:37 UTC September 6-13, 2025

A Van-Tastic Day of Racing Lifts Canadian Club to Second

In preparation for the 2025 Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup, the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club acquired an IC37 in the hope that better familiarity with the regatta's platform would lift the team into podium contention after a 12th in 2021 and a ninth in 2023. However, without another one within 2,000 miles, their training in the boat was limited to solo efforts on English Bay, which, as any one-design yachtsman will tell you, is far from ideal; you never lose a one-boat regatta.

With a 5-1-1 on the course on Friday and a vault into second place in the regatta, clearly the solo training was nonetheless quite effective. Tomorrow, the Canadian team will start the final race of the regatta with a top-4 position locked in and first place within reach.

"It felt amazing," said Ben Mumford, the team's skipper (at left with Rear Commodore Peter Cummiskey). "This is what we've been shooting for, this is what we wanted for the past three cycles. We have been working so hard on moding the boat, the crew working in unison, and making sure that they were on the same page moding the boat all the time. And when you're in those trying conditions, especially today in that chop, it was all the crew. It was the trimmers up and down and the team moving in unison, everybody just working together. That's what got us around the racecourse and into podium position today."

Despite a tough day on the water, a first followed by a 16th and a ninth, San Diego Yacht Club remains in first and will fly the leader's yellow spinnaker on the final day. But the lead that started the day at 17 points is now effectively 7 points. The Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club remains in contention, 9 points out of first. Behind the top three is a gaggle of five boats, separated by 12 points, fighting for the final two spots on the five-deep podium. The forecast is for light winds in the morning, so the race committee has delayed the start of the final race until 1 p.m. The race area will be determined in the morning.

Twenty teams from 12 countries will compete in the ninth Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup, a biennial regatta hosted by the New York Yacht Club Harbour Court in Newport, R.I. Since the event was first run in 2009, it has attracted top amateur sailors from 52 of the world's most prestigious yacht clubs from 23 countries.

After five editions in the Swan 42 class, the 2025 event will be the fourth sailed in the IC37, designed by Mark Mills. The strict one-design nature of this purpose-built class, combined with the fact that each boat is owned and maintained by the New York Yacht Club, ensures a level playing field not seen in any other amateur big-boat sailing competition. The regatta will run from Saturday, September 6, through Saturday, September 13, with racing starting on Tuesday, September 9. A live broadcast on Facebook and YouTube, starting on Wednesday, September 10, will allow fellow club members, friends, family and sailing fans from around the world to follow the action as it happens. The 2025 Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup is brought to you by title sponsor Rolex and regatta sponsors Helly Hansen, Safe Harbor Marinas and Peters & May.

"We've been sailing together on the IC37 for about 18 months," said Arthur Gooch, the Royal Vancouver pitman. "A bunch of us sail together on another program and we've probably been together for like six or seven years. So we know each other incredibly well and are pretty dialed, knowing where each other are on the boat. And all that time together just translates really well into maneuvers."

While the J/111 on which the team usually sails is about the same size and speed as an IC37, it's still a different boat.

"The spinnaker takedown line and the runners are the big rig changes, compared to what we usually race on," said Gooch. "So just getting used to how those things work, and we have crew members doing slightly different positions, and it takes time to get used to that.

"We were fortunate to be able to hire a coach that could come in and, politely, I'll say, criticize us. It was a lot of windward-leeward, hot-lap practice, really dialing in the boat handling as much as we can. You can't tune boat-on-boat when you're the only ones out there. A lot of our practice back home was focused on maneuvers."

The regatta almost came crashing down on their heads before it even started. A collision of rigs during the first start left Royal Vancouver's IC37 with a bent spreader bracket that couldn't be fixed. The team started the regatta for which it had been preparing for 18 months with a sixth and two DNFs. While they would received redress for the missed races, a bigger problem was what to sail the rest of the way. While the other crews were enjoying socializing on Tuesday after three hard-fought races to open the regatta, the Royal Vancouver crew was helping past sunset to prepare a replacement boat.

A sixth in Wednesday's first race helped calm any nerves, and the team set about building its scoreline from there. Like every team in this hyper-competitive regatta, it's been an up-and-down affair. RVYC had a 10th on Wednesday and a 14th to close racing on Thursday.

"Yesterday finished in a pretty tough way," says Gooch. "We were in a strong position. We had a really difficult last race. So everyone was focused, but trying to like keep it glued down going into today. We did really well today. So on the other end of the spectrum. We're all just trying to enjoy it, but not think about it too much because we have one more race and we have to get it done."

Picking off San Diego will not be easy. Royal Vancouver will need to put seven boats between itself and the defending champions. Not counting the 16th in Friday's second race, SDYC hasn't finished worse than eighth in a race. But win, place or show, the Royal Van team has already made the home club proud.

"I've been getting a bunch of text messages, as have a bunch of the rest of the crew," said Gooch. "We were reading them off as we were driving in. A lot of people are really excited about what we're doing."

Results after Day 4:

PosTeamBoat NoMNAR1R2R3R4R5R6R7R8R9R10R11Pts
1San Diego Yacht Club2USA71112872116955
2Royal Vancouver Yacht Club12CAN65.65.6610341451161.1
3Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club4HKG344320435231364
4Corinthian Yacht Club9USA57111181081114278
5Royal Cork Yacht Club17IRL145121062121032682
6Royal Canadian Yacht Club16CAN10322355171572089
7Royal Swedish Yacht Club8SWE11257966161410389
8Royal Thames Yacht Club19GBR2113135110124131690
9Eastern Yacht Club18USA1315148492688895
10New York Yacht Club6USA896512711817915107
11Yacht Club Costa Smeralda5ITA1889161614166512111
12Japan Sailing Federation1JPN1910164114NSC39117115
13Howth Yacht Club10IRL9161512111315412124123
14Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club7AUS126101616121818181510151
15Royal Irish Yacht Club3IRL1612182071516971418152
16Yacht Club Italiano14ITA1514191419199720611153
17Yacht Club Punta del Este15URU417131713111720131819162
18Itchenor Yacht Club11GBRDSQ131819171821119205163
19Yacht Club de Ilhabela13BRARET1871619201313101717171
20Yacht Club Argentino20ARG18199181417NSC19161914184

The 2025 Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup will conclude on Saturday, with the lone remaining race starting at 1 pm (EDT). Live coverage of the deciding race, via YouTube and Facebook, will start roughly at 12:55 pm.

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