Spithill to take helm of U.S. team in SailGP circuit
Send a link to a friend
[December 09, 2020]
By Alexander Smith
LONDON (Reuters) - America's Cup
veteran Jimmy Spithill will lead the United States SailGP Team when
the high-speed "foiling" catamaran championship resumes in April
after a pandemic pause.
Spithill skippered Oracle Team USA for more than a decade, during
which time he twice won the coveted America's Cup, before losing out
to Emirates Team New Zealand in Bermuda in 2017.
"Having raced under the American flag for a significant part of my
professional career, this opportunity is ... all about creating a
pathway that allows us to identify, develop and train the best U.S.
talent," the Australian-born sailor, who lives in San Diego,
California, said on Tuesday.
Spithill is currently part of the Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli team
which is seeking to become the challenger for the 36th America's Cup
which will be sailed in revolutionary foiling monohulls in Auckland,
New Zealand in 2021.
SailGP's $1 million winner-takes-all global circuit, which is
entering its second season, is due to begin in Bermuda in April once
the America's Cup wraps up in March.

"We'll have eight incredibly competitive teams, each
racing in identical, high-speed foiling catamarans in nine different
countries around the world," SailGP CEO Russell Coutts said.
In joining the ranks of SailGP, Spithill will be pitting his wits
against rivals including New Zealanders Peter Burling and Blair Tuke,
Britain's Ben Ainslie and Australians Tom Slingsby and Nathan Outteridge,
the latter representing Japan.
"It's shaping up to be some of the most thrilling racing the sport has
ever seen," Coutts added in a statement from SailGP.
[to top of second column] |

United States SailGP Team
sails during training day of the SailGP event in Marseille, France,
September 19, 2019. REUTERS/Jean-Paul Pelissier

Spithill's appointment means that Rome Kirby, who previously led the
U.S. SailGP team, will shift to the flight controller position on
board the F50 foiling catamaran, which can hit speeds of more than
50 knots (93 kms per hour).
The pair, who previously sailed together with Oracle Team USA, will
be part of a SailGP circuit with events scheduled in Italy, Britain
and Denmark before a 2022 San Francisco finale.
(Reporting by Alexander Smith; Editing by Christian Radnedge)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
 |