By Paul Harris
March 28th 2008 @ 7:01am
America’s Cup 2008: Lawyers at 30 paces
The America’s Cup is becoming more bizarre by the minute.
As many of you will remember, immediately after the last America’s Cup the winning Alingi syndicate declared that the next Cup would be held by a faux Spanish Yacht Club in Valencia in July ‘09 in newly designed boats to be 90ft long.
Some 12 entries were received and everyone thought that was that until Oracle BMW came along with a challenge in the State Supreme Court of New York stating that the new Spanish Club was a sham and the rules for the racing biased towards the defender. Supported by the best lawyers money can buy they were successful and it has now been decreed by the Court that the challenger of record will be the Golden Gate Yacht Club whose challenger will of course be Oracle.
To add more grist to the mill, Oracle has declared that the races will be in multi-hulls, catamarans or Trimarans we don’t know, to be 90ft long and 90ft wide. Shades of 1998 when New Zealand’s huge single hulled yacht was wiped off the course by Dennis Connor’s catamaran. The Oracle syndicate have been busy training in 40ft cats and are said to have their design well progressed.
To add further spice the GGYC has stated that the race will be in October 2008, only 7 months away. The Alingi syndicate, in the person of Ernesto Bertarelli, then staged a tantrum and said they would rather forfeit than race. However cooler heads have since withdrawn that rather empty threat. To add a further twist, designed for the lawyers to enjoy, the America’s Cup deed states that “The Challenging Club shall give ten months notice in writing naming the days of the proposed races”.
The two syndicates met yesterday in Geneva to try to iron out differences particularly over the timing, which Alingi wants for May 2009. It will be no surprise to learn that nothing could be agreed and so it is back to Justice Cahn in the NY Supreme Court. The principle argument seems to be over when the ten months began and whether or not a waiver was granted and if so by whom and when.
In the meantime the other 12 syndicates have gone off to do something more interesting, probably including actually doing some yacht racing.
For those wanting to know where Australia stands in all this the answer is nowhere; however the Oracle syndicate has nominated Aussies James Spithill as helmsman and Joe Newton as a sail trimmer on whatever floating apparatus the race is finally sailed in. Presumably Syd Fischer is talking to our best legal brains to see if we can get to the starting line at the Court!
When and if this series for two takes place it is most likely to be very one sided since the designs could be completely different and as a result boat speed quite dissimilar. Both syndicates are rushing about looking for catamaran talent. Alingi has hired Alain Gautier, who won the Vendee Globe race, amongst many others, in a huge catamaran and our Australian medal wining Olympic Tornado sailors might suddenly find themselves in a more lucrative occupation than Olympic sailing.
One thing’s for certain, when it is eventually sailed it will be a bare knuckle affair and don’t be surprised to see gentlemen (or ladies) in wigs seated on both sides of the helmsman.
Like this content? Buzz it up!
Free Email updates:
Our daily emails are only sent if there is content for the sport or that author. You can subscribe to multiple daily emails; or get the daily Roar email with all our content in it. We value privacy. More...


(5)
![“Oh Lucky Man”, the penultimate episode of the current season of “Underbelly”, screened in New Zealand this week. What has this to do with sport? Believe it or not, there is a topical connection.
The topic is the positive cocaine tests that were announced last weekend for Richard Gasquet, world no. 23 tennis player, and for [...] Greg Russell: Oh unlucky men](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/oh-unlucky-men-wendell-sailor-th.jpg)
![The 2010 Australia-Pakistan Test at the SCG will be rated as one of the most incredible matches in the long history of cricket. All those doomsayers predicting the end of Test cricket have been exposed. Test cricket, put simply, can often be – and in this case was – the greatest game of all.
Australia was [...] Spiro Zavos: Test cricket’s demise has been greatly exaggerated](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/ponting-only-current-player-th.jpg)
![The race-fixing scandal involving the Renault F1 team is getting ugly with the team commencing legal proceedings against Nelson Piquet for defamation and blackmail following his bombshell accusations. The saga is only going to get uglier.
For the uninitiated, Renault have been accused of fixing the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix by allegedly ordering Nelson Piquet [...] Adrian Musolino: The ramifications of race-fixing saga will run deep](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/is-formula-1-rotten.jpg)
![FIFA uses the Confederations Cup as a warm-up for the World Cup, which is good given the problems that have already sprung up. But the off-field issues don’t concern me as much as the on-field ones do.
Egypt is furious after Brazil was awarded a penalty on the basis of a video replay that was screened [...] David Wiseman: FIFA turns a blind eye when it comes to new technology](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/fife-turns-blind-eye-th.jpg)
![With The Ashes reaching its unfortunate but typically thrilling crescendo in London in the early hours of Monday, and Sri Lanka’s two Test series with New Zealand due to wrap up by month’s end, Test cricket now takes an extended break until Australia and the West Indies resume hostilities in Brisbane in late November.
So while [...] Brett McKay: What can be done to keep Test cricket alive?](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/what-can-be-done-th.jpg)
![Finally, a tennis great has said what everyone who has suffered through those awful grunting matches between women tennis players thinks: it’s cheating.
Martina Navratilova, arguably the greatest woman tennis player of all with eighteen grand slam singles titles, has told the ITF’s Philippe Chatrier Award dinner that “the grunting has reached an unacceptable level. It [...] Spiro Zavos: Sharapova shut up! Tennis grunting is cheating](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/maria-sharapova-grunts-th.jpg)
![Can he do it again? Despite the strong list of contenders, the majority of the focus at this year’s Tour de France will be on Lance Armstrong and whether he has the capability to record a remarkable eighth victory.
Mystery surrounds just what Armstrong can do at the Tour.
Age is certainly against him.
He was already [...] Adrian Musolino: Le Tour 2009 intrigues like few before it](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/le-tour-2009-th.jpg)
![The concessions to be given to the new Gold Coast club have given rise to this year’s draft being termed as “the last uncompromised draft.” But should clubs really be all that worried?
Paul Roos fronted the media this week expressing his fear over what may lie ahead in coming years. “We can’t go down for [...] Michael DiFabrizio: Clubs can benefit from compromised draft](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/clubs-benefit-gold-coast-th.jpg)
![The AFL released the fixtures for the 2010 season on Friday, but with chief operating officer Gillon McLachlan admitting blockbusters took preference to fairness in fixturing, its time to analyse who got a good deal and who got a raw deal.
Adelaide
Matches in Adelaide; 12 (all at AAMI)
Interstate Trips; 10 (Vic 6, WA 2, Qld 1, [...] Ben Somerford: The winners and losers of the 2010 AFL fixtures](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/the-winners-losers-2010-afl-dangerfield-th.jpg)
![Last week, Cricket Australia issued a brief statement confirming that the chairman of the selection panel for Australia’s national cricket teams, Andrew Hilditch, has been re-appointed for two more years.
This means that Hilditch will preside over the selection policies and processes involved in trying to regain the Ashes in 2010/2011 after a series this year [...] Spiro Zavos: Two more years for chairman Hilditch? Amazing!](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Two-more-years-for-Hilditch.jpg)
![Let’s make one thing clear. Robbie Deans knows rugby. 10 years of provincial rugby and five test matches proves he is capable of understanding the game at the highest level. He can coach – that surely isn’t in dispute.
He led the Crusaders to five Super 12/14 championships. No other team has even won the [...] David Wiseman: It’s time to go Wallabies](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/its-time-to-go-wallabies-th.jpg)
![Casting an eye over the A-League over the past month or two, what is becoming abundantly clear is that the teams that are using technique and mobility in the front third are the ones playing the most fluid and effective football.
You only have to look at the top of the table to see how [...] Tony Tannous: Technique and mobility up front are all the rage](http://www.theroar.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/technique-mobility-up-frontrudan-ognenovski-reinaldo-th.jpg)




Kento said | March 28th 2008 @ 9:14am | Report comment
This is an excellent analysis. What a farce…how could they let a sport get to this? Is there any salvation for the America’s Cup, or is it now doomed as a sport.
Rabbitz said | March 28th 2008 @ 9:22am | Report comment
Seriously, it has been many years since this could be called a sport. Perhaps a “lawyers blood-sport”?
It has descended into nothing more than a rich mans d%^k measuring contest. It surprises me that it gets any “sports news” coverage at all.
Rabz
sheek said | March 28th 2008 @ 10:14am | Report comment
Since 1987 when Australia defended & lost the America’s Cup, it’s become a farce. Sad……….
Mark said | March 28th 2008 @ 1:37pm | Report comment
Sheek, look back before 87, it always was a farce.
Paul Cotton said | March 28th 2008 @ 8:56pm | Report comment
Thank you for an excellent update. Please keep on top of this story for us.