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HomeSailGPSailGP 2025Consistency, the key in tight Mubadala SailGP New York battle

Consistency, the key in tight Mubadala SailGP New York battle

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Day one of the Mubadala New York SailGP served up a reminder of what separates contenders from champions: consistency. Across three races on a flat, wind-starved Hudson River, conditions tested not just boat speed but resilience and adaptability. Spain emerged as the day’s most consistent performer—topping the leaderboard with a 1st, 4th, and 3rd place finish. But it was New Zealand’s Black Foils who stole the spotlight with a commanding win in the final race, putting a stamp on a day of mixed fortunes and foiling failures.

Coming into New York, Australia, Great Britain, and Spain led the Season 4 Championship standings. Spain did their campaign no harm, showing they’re serious about the overall title with steady performances in all three races. They opened with a win in Race 1 and followed up with a solid fourth and third—proving they can handle marginal conditions and keep their composure when others fall apart.

Australia and Great Britain, on the other hand, unravelled. The Australians delivered a dominant win in Race 2 but sandwiched it between a middling fifth and a woeful tenth in Race 3—classic symptoms of a team struggling to adapt. Meanwhile, the British team was barely sighted: 11th in Race 1, 6th in Race 2, and 9th in Race 3. For a team sitting second on the season leaderboard, New York has so far exposed worrying fragilities.

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Denmark and France, both on 20 points and tied for second place in the event standings, also lacked consistency. Denmark finished 3rd, then slumped to 8th in Race 2 before rebounding with a 2nd in the closer. France sailed a tighter set—6th, 3rd, and 4th—but still lacked the punch to dominate any one race.

New Zealand’s journey through the day was anything but smooth—but crucially, they ended on a high. A solid second place in Race 1 underpinned a strong opening, before a disastrous Race 2 saw them finish 11th after dropping off their foils at Gate 4 and never recovering. Yet in the most testing conditions of the day—drizzle, dying breeze, and barely any lift—Pete Burling, Blair Tuke, and Liv Mackay turned Race 3 into a masterclass. They hit the front early and never looked back.

“It was super painful at times, but we got through the day really well,” Burling said after the race. “When we got in front, we just stuck with it. It was tricky out there with the current and the rain—you couldn’t see much and reading the wind was really hard.”

That clarity and composure in marginal conditions mattered. New Zealand now sit in fourth overall, just six points off the lead and with strong momentum heading into the second day. Their results—2nd, 11th, and 1st—don’t read as consistent, but they show a team capable of learning fast and responding under pressure. That final race win, where they crossed the line nearly a minute ahead of Denmark, turned heads.

Brazil, meanwhile, enjoyed a breakout moment with a historic second in Race 2 and a solid fifth in Race 3. They now sit level with Australia on 17 points—both within striking distance but needing a flawless Sunday to stay in the hunt.

What New York has reinforced is simple: in SailGP, consistency wins races. Spain are leading because they’ve avoided big mistakes. New Zealand are dangerous because they can recover from them. And the traditional powerhouses—Australia and GBR—are suddenly looking vulnerable.

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With just one day of racing left, the top six teams are separated by only eight points. The leaderboard may be tight, but only one trend really matters. When the wind dies, and the Hudson flattens into glass, it’s not just speed that wins—it’s the ability to deliver, race after race. Right now, Spain and New Zealand look the most prepared to do exactly that.

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Kirsten Thomas
Kirsten Thomas
Kirsten enjoys sailing and is a passionate writer based in coastal New Zealand. Combining her two passions, she crafts vivid narratives and insightful articles about sailing adventures, sharing her experiences and knowledge with fellow enthusiasts.

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