The New York Sail Grand Prix reached its crescendo with a high-pressure, high-speed final that showcased the razor-thin margins separating victory from defeat in SailGP. Spain, New Zealand, and France lined up for the winner-takes-all showdown—three teams, one race, and just seven minutes to determine the event champion.
From the outset, it was clear this wouldn’t be a runaway. All three finalists were quick off the line, but Spain found a slight edge in the opening seconds. New Zealand’s Black Foils, helmed by Peter Burling, stayed glued to their stern, barely three seconds adrift through the early marks. France, meanwhile, couldn’t match the raw pace and tactical precision of the leading pair and trailed by nearly ten seconds by Gate 3.
Spain keep it clean, Kiwis crack under pressure
While the early stages were evenly matched, the defining moment came at Gate 4. Spain, maintaining consistent foil flight, rounded with clinical accuracy and accelerated straight down the next leg. New Zealand’s trajectory looked just as clean—until it wasn’t.
In a critical turn near the top of Leg 5, the Kiwi boat misjudged their rounding. Entering the mark in disturbed, choppy water, they failed to stay airborne, slamming heavily off their foils. That single error, just a second’s miscalculation, blew open the gap. What had been a tight two-boat duel instantly became a clear lead for Spain, and suddenly, the Kiwis found themselves side-by-side with France in a fight just to hold second.

It’s a pattern we’ve seen before in SailGP: foiling errors are punished quickly and decisively. Once off the foils, the drag is immediate and merciless. The Black Foils dropped from a close second to nearly 20 seconds behind Spain in under 200 metres. France, who had quietly chipped away at the deficit, surged into contention as the Kiwis struggled to regain flight and composure.
Spain stay focused and fast
Spain, led by driver Diego Botin, delivered a flawless performance under pressure. Their tactical calls were conservative but precise, their transitions fluid, and their pace unrelenting. They clocked a top speed of 83 km/h down the final downwind leg, leaving nothing to chance.
Crossing the finish line at 6 minutes and 57 seconds, Spain secured their first event win of the 2025 SailGP season. It was an emphatic result that reflected not just one good race, but a rising trajectory over the last few events.
Black Foils save second—just
New Zealand did rally. After the misstep, they composed themselves and focused on recovery, successfully holding off a final French assault. They crossed the finish at 7 minutes and 4 seconds, seven seconds behind Spain but nine ahead of France, who clocked in at 7 minutes and 13 seconds.
It was a respectable outcome but fell short of the win they looked capable of just minutes earlier. For Burling and his crew, it will feel like a missed opportunity—a near-perfect event undone by a single costly mistake.
What it means going forward
From a broader championship perspective, New Zealand’s second-place finish maintains their strong season performance. They remain well in the hunt for the overall title. But they’ll leave New York knowing they let a winnable event slip away. The pressure only builds from here.
Spain, meanwhile, emerge as serious Championship contenders. They’ve steadily improved across the season, and their composure under fire in New York bodes well for the upcoming events. Their fleet race strategy was sharp, their final race execution clinical, and their teamwork cohesive. It wasn’t just a good day on the water—today was a clear statement of intent.
France, while finishing third, remain a wildcard. Their performance showed moments of brilliance, but also inconsistency. They will need sharper starts and cleaner transitions if they hope to convert more final appearances into wins.
Takeaways
In SailGP, there is no room for error at this level. With foiling boats travelling at highway speeds, the smallest miscalculation can cascade into decisive gaps. This New York final was proof of that. For Spain, it was a deserved win and a reward for consistency. For the Kiwis, it was a hard lesson on timing and precision. And for France, it was another podium—but also another reminder that small improvements could yield much bigger results.
The SailGP season now moves on with Spain holding new momentum, New Zealand with something to prove, and France still searching for that breakthrough.