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Auckland Action  Nov 23, 13:02

BMW ORACLE Racing afterguard member, Gavin Brady was leading the New Zealand Match Racing championships in Auckland after the first Round Robin was completed today. Racing with Rod Dawson, Sean Clarkson, Jon Ziskind and Ed Smyth, Brady finished the day with a 7-2 record. Team skipper and CEO, Chris Dickson was on 5-4, with two skippers sandwiched in between on 6-3. With the first round robin completed today, the teams will start the second round robin on Friday.

Check our main team website for full reports throughout the weekend. In the meantime, here are some good shots of Thursday's action, courtesy once again of Ivor Wilkins.

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Day One: Gavin & Co Lead  Nov 23, 07:29

From the RNZYS website: "A fantastic day on the water with a great breeze and plenty of awesome results! Gavin Brady and Adam Minoprio finish on 7 wins each, Gavin leads on count back after beating Minoprio by just 3 seconds in Flight Seven."

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Congrats to Gavin Brady and his team, leaders after Thursday's first day of racing for the New Zealand Match Racing Championship, in Auckland. Photo courtesy of RNZYS.

Nice Ink: Ready for Action  Nov 22, 18:13

Another nice story by Julie Ash in this (Thursday) morning's New Zealand Herald....


NZ_Herald_logosm_bmwPreviewThursday November 23, 2006
By Julie Ash

Chris Dickson's America's Cup syndicate BMW Oracle Racing hope to leave Auckland in February having finalised a race crew.

Oracle have arrived in Auckland for their first training session here since 2004. There are 38 team members here but that number will double in the new year, when the syndicate ships down a second boat.

Up until Christmas they will train on USA71, which was built for the last cup.

"We are done with testing," Dickson said. "We have spent four years on the design, research, boat speed development - the objective is to zero in on sailing the boats as well as we possibly can."

Oracle's sailing manager Craig Monk said there would be 34 sailors here in January and they hoped to come away with a solid group of 24 who could race the boat on any day.

"That is our goal. In the days of old it was just one group of 16 sailors who did the whole regatta. But three months sailing in pretty tough conditions over there - with the heat and the viruses that go around - we don't know how many sailors are fit and well on any given day."

It is generally felt that little will separate the boats in next year's event, so crew work could make all the difference.

"We have seen some of the closest racing ever in Spain this year. A couple of seconds is now regarded as a comfortable win, it used to be a couple of minutes," Monk said.

"I believe it won't be 5-0 [in the cup]. The boat speed edges are very small now, so it is up to the sailors to be able to really drive the boats a bit harder. We have got lighter wind over there so it means maybe some of the smaller teams can hang on."

Oracle would not reveal which boat would be shipped here - USA87, which was launched earlier this year, or the new second boat.

Several features differentiate USA87 from its rivals, most noticeably the bowsprit and the mast, which is further forward.

"Eighty-seven is very, very innovative, the most innovative of any this time around," Dickson said.

"She is innovative in her structure, in her laminate, in the internal layout, in her hull structure, rig placement, bowsprit and appendages - we didn't hold back.

"We have learned a lot from 87. Our second boat isn't out of the same mould, it is out of a different mould but you'll see more next year."

A series between Oracle and Team New Zealand, who will also train in the Hauraki Gulf until mid February, has been mooted and is something Dickson would like to happen.

"One thing that we and Team NZ have in common is getting it [the cup] off Alinghi. By racing Team NZ we'll gain a bit, they'll gain a bit but we'll both get stronger," Dickson said.


Full story


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Sailing Manager Craig Monk and Skipper/CEO Chris Dickson (both of NZL) share a light moment with reporters during Wednesday's media briefing at the BMWOR winter base in Auckland.

Sail Mail: Jane Reports In from AKL  Nov 22, 13:00

JaneFrom time to time our intrepid, globe-trotting media relations chief, Jane Eagleson (USA), sends out an email newsletter called "Sail Mail." It goes to our team members, partners, families and friends. The Sail Mail often mirrors or consolidates stories running on our main team website or here on the BOB. Sometimes, as in the case of today's Sail Mail, it is particularly newsworthy and well worth posting here for the edification of an even wider audience....


SAIL MAIL -- Wed 22 Nov 06
Thirty-eight team members are now in New Zealand preparing for our crew training session that will start next week with USA 71 on the Hauraki Gulf.

However, the session kicks off this week with two BMW ORACLE Racing teams competing at the New Zealand Match Racing Championships starting tomorrow. Chris Dickson and Gavin Brady are each helming entries. Chris’s crew is Paul Westlake, Jann Neergaard, Zach Hurst, and Kazuhiko Sofuku. Sailing with Gavin is Sean Clarkson, Jon Ziskind, Rod Dawson and Ed Smyth. Today the guys were out training in the MRXs on the Waitemata Harbour.

Earlier today, our CEO and Skipper Chris Dickson and Sailing Team Manager (and race crew member) Craig Monk met with the New Zealand media as we launched our first training session here since the Auckland summer of 2004, which was at the outset of our campaign. Chris and Craig said the focus now will be on crew work development and race training.

We are operating from the former Team New Zealand base in Auckland’s Viaduct Harbour. Grant Davidson has the ops side running smoothly. Tim Hacket and our shore team are putting the final touches on USA 71 for sailing next week. Aimee Daniel and Kristen Sneyd are making sure all team members are settling in. Except for the jetlag, the transition to New Zealand has been a fairly easy one as even those team members not from New Zealand have spent time here during the past two America’s Cups.

Even the taxi drivers here know our team -- when I asked to be taken to the BMW ORACLE Racing base in the Viaduct, the cabbie quickly noted that this was Chris Dickson’s team and said, "Welcome back!" Even the local restaurant proprietors seem know much of the latest scuttlebutt, and ask after some of our team members by name.

We would like take this opportunity to wish our American team members, partners, sponsors and supporters a Happy Thanksgiving.

Stay tuned to our team web site (www.bmworacleracing.com) and blog (www.bmworacleracing.com/blog) for the latest from New Zealand, the US, Spain and other locations around the globe as we continue our 24-7 preparations for next year's Louis Vuitton and America’s Cups. --Jane Eagleson


Following photos by Ivor Wilkins/BMWOR.


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Monkey and Dicko meet the New Zealand press, with Jane officiating, at the AKL base. Looks like Guthrie beavering away in the background.


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Dicko, Flipper, Zach, Jan and Fuku practicing in the Farr MRX's on Auckland Harbour for the start Thursday of the New Zealand National Match Racing Championship.


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Gavin, Rod, Z, Ed and Sean are a second BMWOR entry in the NZ MR Nationals.


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Dicko and Flipper.


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Rod and Gavin.


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Practice racing: Dicko leads Gavin into the top mark.


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Preparing for a bear-away set.


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Hoist!

Summerized  Nov 22, 10:23

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Halsey St side of our temporary "winter" (summer in NZL) team base in Auckland, the former base of Team New Zealand (see earlier post with the new lay of the land). There is no truth to the rumour that Henri Lloyd have issued the crew with spiffy, new "summer white" naval uniforms.


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The south side of the base that you first see when driving up Halsey St from Fanshawe St.


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The waterside, showing one of our ACC yachts in the south boat shed. The MSC container (nice that Guthrie patronized a Shosholoza sponsor) was one of several that came from VLC with team gear.


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Shore team members are readying our ACC yacht for the December sailing session.


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Ready-made sail loft.


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Sailmaker Dave "Little Dave" Little (NZL), not to be confused with his boss and head BMWOR sailmaker, big Dave "Duffy" Duff.


Thanks to our old friend and media maven, Ivor Wilkins (NZL), for the nice photos in this post.

Dicko & Gavin (among others)...  Nov 20, 14:48

NZMRlog062501...will be racing this week in Auckland, which as far as we were concerned never left "the world sailing scene." From the RNZYS website....

The City of Sails will be back on the world sailing scene with the New Zealand Match Racing Championships.

Hosted by the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron (RNZYS), the Grade 3 sailing event will take place on the Waitemata Harbour from the 22th to 26th November.

Ten NZ teams, consisting of a skipper and four crew members, will sail against each other in two round-robin flights with the four top qualifying for the semi-finals followed by final on Sunday.

Heading the list of entries is Dean Barker. Skipper of Team New Zealand, the event’s reigning champion has returned to try and make it three in a row.

The starting line up also includes BMW Oracle Racing's Chris Dickson, who was runner up here last year.

Entry List:

Dean Barker (NZL, Emirates Team New Zealand)
Chris Dickson (NZL, BMW ORACLE Racing)
Simon Dickey (NZL)
Phil Robertson (NZL)
Simon Minoprio (NZL)
Adam Minoprio (NZL)
Gavin Brady (NZL, BMW ORACLE Racing)
Scott Dickson (NZL)
Laurie Jury (NZL)*
Graeme Sutherland (NZL)*


*top two skippers from last week's qualifier series

AKL: The New Lay of the Land  Nov 15, 02:37

In the coming days we'll post some pictures from our "winter training base" in Auckland -- a bit of a misnomer inasmuch as it is about to be summer there. In the meantime, for those of you not familiar with the changes since the end of the 2003 Cup, these satellite photos should help you get the new lay of the land. Images are courtesy of Google Earth with the somewhat crude graphics added by your Ed. As usual, you can click on the image to enlarge.


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This is the big picture, showing the 40-minute tow (blue line) from the team bases in Viaduct Harbour out to the sailing area in the Hauraki Gulf.


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This is Auckland Harbour with the blue circle around Viaduct Harbour where the team bases are located. On the left is the Harbour Bridge, which runs from Westhaven (the RNZYS is at the SE foot of the Bridge) over to the "North Shore" (including Takapuna and Devonport).


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Viaduct Harbour used to be home to ten AC bases, of which four (sort of) remain. The area of the former south bases, from what was Team Dennis Conner to the old TNZ base (our new base), is now apartment buildings. The former northern-most base, the ex-Prada base, is now a parking lot for the fisherman. The former Oracle BMW Base, including the barge, is still intact; the sheds are used by boat building and repair companies, and the barge is owned by a special events company.

Nice Ink: "Oracle Breezing into City of Sails"  Nov 5, 21:47

nice_ink9Cup correspondent for the NZ Herald, Julie Ash, wrote a nice story for the Monday morning edition about our team breaking camp in VLC and heading for AKL....


Yachting: Oracle breezing into City of Sails
Monday November 6, 2006
By Julie Ash

America's Cup syndicate BMW Oracle Racing are on their way to Auckland, having wound up their sailing programme in Valencia.

The syndicate, headed by US computer billionaire Larry Ellison, will train in Auckland from mid-November until around February. The syndicate have so far shipped one boat here (2003- generation boat) USA71. It is not known whether they intend to fly or ship any of their new boats to New Zealand.

Since February, Oracle have sailed more than 150 days in Valencia, which has included performance testing, crew training, in-house racing as well as competing in the three Cup pre-regattas. The team launched their first new boat USA87 earlier this year which they raced in two of the pre-regattas. The construction of the team's second 2007-generation yacht continues in Anacortes, Seattle.

Chief executive and skipper Chris Dickson said they set an ambitious programme at the start of the year and felt they achieved their goals.


Full story


Should be interesting to have two of the top challengers training in the same waters over the next few months. Remains to be seen how much, if at all, we might sail against one another. Most of the Challengers have trained together in VLC at one time or another, including ourselves and ETNZ before they left in August.

As a group the Challengers remain as tight or tighter than at any time in my 25+ years of Cup involvement. This has translated into concerted efforts by the Challengers on and off the water. As always it will take a number of very good Challengers going at it hammer and tongs before and during the LVC to hone one of us to be good enough to take on and defeat what no doubt is and will be a very capable Team Alinghi.


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Soon, BMWOR will also be training in the beautiful and challenging waters of the Hauraki Gulf -- upper left corner of the photo above.