1992 Louis Vuitton Cup Explained

3rd Louis Vuitton Cup
Date25 January - 30 April 1992
Winner Il Moro di Venezia
LocationSan Diego, United States

The 3rd Louis Vuitton Cup was held in San Diego, United States in 1992. The winner, Il Moro di Venezia, went on to challenge for the 1992 America's Cup.

The teams

Eight challengers from seven nations contested the 1992 Louis Vuitton Cup. Together they spent over $250 million.[1] Il Moro di Venezia alone constructed four boats and spent over $85 million.

ClubTeamSkipperYachts
Compagnia della Vela di VeneziaIl Moro di Venezia Paul CayardITA-25
Cruising Yacht Club of AustraliaAustralian Challenge Syd FischerAUS-17
Darling Harbour Yacht ClubSpirit of Australia Peter GilmourAUS-21
Monte Real Club de Yates de BayonaDesafio Español Copa America Pedro Campos Calvo-SoteloESP-22
Yacht Club de SèteLe Defi Francais 95 Marc PajotFRA-27
Nippon Ocean Racing ClubNippon Challenge Chris DicksonJPN-26
Mercury Bay Boating ClubNew Zealand Challenge Rod DavisNZL-20
Stenungsbaden Yacht ClubSwedish America's Cup Challenge Gunnar KrantzSWE-19

Il Moro di Venezia

The Italian challenge Il Moro Challenge was funded by Raul Gardini and skippered by American Paul Cayard. The primary designer was Germán Frers and the operations manager was Laurent Esquier. John Kolius was involved but could not sail as he had not completed his Italian eligibility requirements.[2] Tommaso Chieffi was the tactician and Enrico Chieffi was the navigator. Other crew included Robert Hopkins and Steven Erickson.[3] [4]

Australian Challenge

From Sydney's Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, the Australian Challenge was skippered by Syd Fischer. Colin Beashel was the helmsman and Hugh Treharne the tactician.

Spirit of Australia

A second Australian challenge from Sydney, Spirit of Australia was headed by Iain Murray, skippered by Peter Gilmour and the team included Tom Schnackenberg.[5]

Desafio Español Copa America

From Spain, ESP-22 was skippered by Pedro Campos Calvo-Sotelo and coached by Peter Lester.[6] The crew included Antonio Gorostegui.[5]

Le Defi Francais 95

Le Defi Francais 95 was skippered by Marc Pajot. Bertrand Pacé was the backup helmsman and navigator.

Nippon Challenge

The first entry from Japan, Nippon Challenge was skippered by Chris Dickson, who had fallen out with the New Zealand Challenge during the 1987 Louis Vuitton Cup. John Cutler was the tactician and the crew included Erle Williams and Mike Spanhake.

New Zealand Challenge

Michael Fay financed what would be his final New Zealand Challenge. Managed by Peter Blake, the team was skippered by Rod Davis and NZL 20's crew included tactician David Barnes, bow, Alan Smith; mid-bow, David Brooke; mast, Barry McKay; pit, Denis Kendall; floater, Mark Hauser; grinders, Andrew Taylor and Sean Clarkson; genoa trimmers, Kevin Shoebridge and Grant Loretz; mainsheet traveler, Don Cowie; mainsheet trimmer, Simon Daubney; and running backstays, Tony Rae and Peter Evans. Russell Coutts sailed the second boat and additional crew members included Chris Salthouse, Robbie Naismith, Ross Halcrow, Warwick Fleury, Matt Mason, Dean Phipps, Gavin Brady and Nick Heron.[7] [8]

Coutts and Brad Butterworth replaced Davis and Barnes during the Louis Vuitton Cup finals.[9]

Swedish America's Cup Challenge

From the Stenungsbaden Yacht Club, the challenge was skippered by Gunnar Krantz.

Round robin

Team nameRacesWonRR1 Pts.RR2 Pts.RR3 Pts.Total Pts.Ranking
Nippon Challenge211862056821
New Zealand Challenge211862840742
Il Moro di Venezia211652440693
Le Defi Francais 95211451640614
Desafio Español Copa America21721216305
Spirit of Australia2173816276
Swedish America's Cup Challenge213148137
Australia Challenge21100888
During RR1 a team scored 1 point per win.During RR2 a team scored 4 points per win.During RR3 a team scored 8 points per win.

Finals

Semi finals

Team nameRacesWonRanking
New Zealand Challenge971
Il Moro di Venezia952
Nippon Challenge933=
Le Defi Francais 95933=

Final

width=175 Team Namewidth=50 abbr="Race1" 1width=50 abbr="Race2" 2width=50 abbr="Race3" 3width=50 abbr="Race4" 4width=60 abbr="Race5" 5width=50 abbr="Race6" 6width=50 abbr="Race7" 7width=50 abbr="Race8" 8width=50 abbr="Race9" 9width=20 abbr="Points" T
New Zealand ChallengeW (1:32)LW (0:34)W (2:26)W (2:38)*LLLL3
Il Moro di VeneziaLW (0:01)LLL*W (0:43)W (0:53)W (0:20)W (1:33)5
*Race removed from records after Il Moro di Venezia were successful in a protest over New Zealand's bowsprit.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Bill Center. America's Cup '95: The Official Record. Hong Kong, Tehabi Books, 1995. p.33
  2. Web site: Yachting. 1 January 1992.
  3. Web site: Red yacht from Italy has red, white, blue brains.
  4. The Louis Vuitton Cup Bruno Trouble, p.171.
  5. Web site: Yachting. 1 May 1991.
  6. Web site: Peter Lester competing, not commentating, on the water at World Masters Games. Stuff. 21 April 2017. 27 July 2017.
  7. Web site: Kiwis Pick American as Skipper. RICH. ROBERTS. 6 December 1991. 27 July 2017. LA Times.
  8. Web site: America's Cup final pits old against new.
  9. Web site: America's Cup- Team NZ wish Davis well with new team.