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COLLISIONS AND COMEBACKS ON OPENING DAY OF BERMUDA GOLD CUP
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COLLISIONS AND COMEBACKS ON OPENING DAY OF BERMUDA GOLD CUP

(Hamilton, Bermuda, 21 October 2025) An incident-packed first day at the 2025 Bermuda Gold Cup featured a collision in the first flight of the day before eight-time match racing world champion Ian Williams shot to the top of the leaderboard with Switzerland’s Eric Monnin. It is also shaping up to be a thrilling Aspen Bermuda Women’s Match Racing Regatta with Sweden’s Anna Östling, Denmark’s Lea Vogelius and USA’s Nicole Breault heading the standings.

The 73rd edition of the iconic Bermuda Gold Cup in Hamilton Harbour started literally with a bang as New Zealands’s Nick Egnot-Johnson collided with Ian Garreta from France in the second race of the opening flight. The day ended with the cream rising to the top as Williams was victorious in all three of his races against Chris Poole, Egnot-Johnson and Garreta.

The British skipper was delighted to be back in Bermuda with his new team sponsored by Pindar by Manuport Logistics and Gladstone’s Long Beach, after a year’s hiatus but admitted it took time to get back into the groove of sailing the IOD (International One Design) yachts.

“The IODs are so much fun to sail and very challenging,” Williams said. “I wouldn’t say we’ve been particularly comfortable in them over the years, but we feel that now we’ve been here over a dozen times, we’re starting to figure it out.”

Despite his strong start to the regatta, Williams knows there is plenty to work on as the regatta progresses. “There is plenty to improve upon as it’s a match racing regatta and what’s good enough on day one is never good enough on day two and certainly not later in the regatta,” he said. “We’ll have a good debrief, work on all those details and come back stronger tomorrow.”

Switzerland’s Monnin was beaten narrowly by defending champion Johnie Berntsson in the final here last year, losing the deciding race in the last 15 metres in a move he described as his “most stupid mistake” of the year.

The Swiss skipper got one over on Berntsson in the second flight but insisted that revenge was not on his mind. “We didn’t remember it on the water but the mistake we did last year was so bad that it hurts every time you think of it,” Monnin said. “But that’s sailing and sometimes you win, sometimes you lose and sometimes you make the most stupid mistakes at the worst time. That’s life and sailing is good training for life. We’ve had so many great races over the last years with Johnie and today we caught him at the last downwind.”

Monnin has never won the Bermuda Gold Cup but was victorious earlier this year at the Congressional Cup in Long Beach in May and is hoping that is a good omen for making a breakthrough here. “We had a great experience in the Congressional Cup,” he said. “We had tried so many times, and we finally made it. To have been so close here last year, that win is maybe releasing something in my head. We’re at the very beginning and we could still be last or first, but we’re ready to go as fast as we can.”

Garreta faced a tough baptism after being hit by Nick Egnot-Johnson in his first experience of racing in IODs and in Bermuda. Both sailors were originally docked half a point for the incident, but Garreta’s penalty was withdrawn after a successful appeal. “It was such a tough race because Nick got a penalty at the start, but he came back faster and stronger, so there was a situation at the upwind mark,” he said. “Nick tried to get his penalty down by turning around us and there wasn’t enough room so there was contact, but I am pleased my points deduction was removed.”

The 24-year-old is the second-youngest skipper at the event and picked up two wins as he faced the challenge of racing an unfamiliar boat. “It’s nice to start with two wins because it’s our first time here and yesterday was our first time on an IOD,” he said.

Meanwhile, reigning champion Johnie Berntsson, chasing a hat-trick at the regatta, will need to bounce back from a disappointing first day after picking up just one win.

In the Aspen Bermuda Women’s Match Race Regatta, running alongside the Bermuda Gold Cup this week, anybody under the impression that defending event champion Pauline Courtois and her Match in Pink Normandy Elite team was in for a victory lap of honour can think again.

Courtois has already made a successful defence of her 2024 Women’s Match Racing Tour crown and is counting down the days until she is presented with the 2025 women’s tour trophy, but the pre-regatta favourite did not have it all her own way on the opening day in Bermuda. After beating American Lindsey Baab in the first of four flights in Hamilton Harbour, the French skipper was beaten in the second by Lea Vogelius, of Denmark, and in the third by American Nicole Breault.

A five-time US national women’s match racing champion, Breault won three of her first four races ― the others came against compatriot Baab and Denmark’s Kristine Mauritzen ― as she tackles the steep learning curve of racing in IODs, and in Bermuda, for the first time. “Humble is my key word for this week,” Breault said. “I’m here to enjoy racing in Bermuda, racing against my friends and to learn. “I don’t have high expectations so anything that comes my way is frosting on the cake. We’ll take it one race at a time.”

Breault was most thrilled to come out on top against her protege Baab. “We come from the same club, train together and she is my mentee,” Breault said. “I love racing a good race against her because it means I am winning in a different way as she can dish it out.”

Despite losing out to Breault, Baab was one of the happier skippers upon her return to the dock after picking up her first two wins at the regatta against Vogelius and Martina Carlsson. Another of the competitors grappling with IODs on their first visit to Bermuda, Baab was pleased with how quickly she learned.

“Once you accept the fact that they don’t turn, it’s a little easier,” she said. “It was definitely a little adjustment needed as it handles like a bigger boat than it actually is. But our boat speed was pretty good, although our pre-starts were sketchy. Everybody here is so good that it’s always nice to post a point on the scoreboard and it’s really fun to be in the mix.”

Anna Östling is one of three sailors atop the leaderboard with three wins after the first day alongside Vogelius and Breault.

The Swedish skipper’s only defeat in four flights came against her old rival Courtois, who beat her in the final in Bermuda last year, but she was pleased with victories over Julia Aartsen and Scandinavian rivals Carlsson and Mauritzen. “It was a great day and the wind that we were hoping for came,” she said. “We’re here to win but we know that is going to be tough as there are many teams here that are hoping to do that. “A lot will come down to producing your best performances at the end of the event, but we are hoping to develop and learn as much as we can through the week.”

The Bermuda Gold Cup and Aspen Bermuda Women’s Match Race runs through to Sunday 26 October. Follow live results at https://wmrt.com/live-results/ and for the Aspen Bermuda Women’s Match Race at https://womenswmrt.com/live-results/

2025 Bermuda Gold Cup Entries

🇺🇸 Chris Poole, Riptide Racing (World ranking #1)
🇨🇭 Eric Monnin, Capvis Swiss Match Racing (World ranking #2)
🇸🇪 Johnie Berntsson, Berntsson Sailing Team (World ranking #3)
🇬🇧 Ian Williams, Pindar by Manuport Logistics (World ranking #10)
🇳🇿 Nick Egnot-Johnson, Knots Racing (World ranking #7)
🇫🇷 Ian Garreta, Med Racing (World ranking #4)
🇫🇷 Timotheë Rossi, Sudistes Sailing Team (World ranking #5)
🇨🇦 Peter Wickwire, Storm Racing (World ranking #9)

2025 ASPEN Bermuda Women’s Match Race Regatta Entries

🇸🇪 Anna Östling, SWE – WINGS – SWE
(Crew Anna Holmdahl, Elisabeth Nilsson, Annika Carlunger, Linnea Wennergern)
🇫🇷 Pauline Courtois, FRA – Match in Pink by Normandy Elite Team
(Crew Maelenn Lemaitre, Louise Acker, Laurane Mettraux, Claire Pruvot)
🇺🇸 Nicole Breault, USA – Vela Racing
(Crew Molly Vandemoer, Maggie Bacon, Dana Riley Hayes, Hailey Thompson)
🇳🇱 Julia Aartsen, NED – Team Out of the Box
(Crew Iris Van Gerrevink, Ismene Usman, Eva Asbeck Brusse, Floortje Hoogstede)
🇩🇰 Kristine Mauritzen, DEN – Those Seagulls
(Crew Julia Toroi, Christina Andersen, Sophia Jorgensen, Sofie Slotsgaard)
🇩🇰 Lea Vogelius, DEN – WOW Racing
(Crew Joan Hansen, Sille Christensen, Josefine Boel, Louise Ulrikkeholm)
🇸🇪 Martina Carlsson, SWE – Beyond Racing Team
(Crew Svea Sahlin, Amanda Ljunggren, Hanna Gaskell-Brown, Hedvig Medstrom)
🇺🇸 Lindsey Baab, USA – Baab Racing
(Crew Kate Shiber, Elena Vandenberg, Sally Mace, Julie Mitchell)

ABOUT BERMUDA GOLD CUP
The Bermuda Gold Cup, a World Championship event of the World Match Racing Tour, is one of the world’s most storied match race regattas. The trophy, the King Edward VII Gold Cup, was first awarded by King Edward VII at the 1907 Tri-Centenary Regatta in Virginia. First raced as a match race regatta in1937, the King Edward VII Gold Cup is the oldest match racing trophy in the world for competition in one-design yachts and is the only King’s Cup ever to be offered for competition in the United States, which could be won outright. The winner’s list includes the most prominent names in international sailing, including America’s Cup winners Sir Russell Coutts (the event’s all-time winner with seven championships) of New Zealand and James Spithill of Australia, as well as luminaries such as Sir Ben Ainslie(Great Britain), Taylor Canfield (USA), Chris Dickson (New Zealand), Peter Gilmour (Australia) and Ian Williams (Great Britain). www.bermudagoldcup.com

For More Information
Nicole Butterworth, Royal Bermuda Yacht Club Sailing Office, sailing@rbyc.bm
James Pleasance, World Match Racing Tour, info@wmrt.com

Visit the Bermuda Gold Cup and Women’s World Match Racing Tour websites for more information.

For live results, follow https://womenswmrt.com/live-results/

For enquiries, contact info@wmrt.com

For more updates and information on the Women’s World Match Racing Tour and event documents, visit womenswmrt.com and follow us on social media at Facebook (@womenswmrt), Instagram(@womenswmrt) and X (Twitter) (@womenswmrt)

Women’s World Match Racing Tour 2025 Schedule:

Stage 1 Casa Vela Cup, San Francisco USA, 28-31 May
Stage 2 Santa Maria Cup, Annapolis USA, 4-7 June
Stage 3. Normandy Match Cup, Le Havre, 6-9 June - CANCELLED
Stage 4. Nordea Women’s Trophy – Match Cup Sweden, Marstrand, 30 June – 5 July
Stage 5. Women’s Match Racing World Championship, Chicago, 17-20 September
Stage 6. Bermuda Women’s Match Race, Bermuda, 21-26 October

*Dates listed race days only

About Women’s World Match Racing Tour

The Women’s World Match Racing Tour was launched in 2022 to continue the hugely successful legacy of the WIM Series (Women’s International Match Racing Series) providing a global match racing series for female sailors. The name of the series was re-launched as the Women’s World Match Racing Tour with its continued mission to expand and strengthen global match racing and promote opportunities for competitive women’s sailing at every level. The Women’s World Match Racing Tour is the world’s first and only professional sailing series for women providing a valuable pathway for aspiring female world champions in the sport of sailing. womenswmrt.com
womenswmrt.com
Posted on Oct 22, 2025 by WIMRA Webmaster

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