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HomeSailGPSailGP 2026After the crash: SailGP splits the fleet for a tense day two in Auckland

After the crash: SailGP splits the fleet for a tense day two in Auckland

A dramatic collision on Saturday has reshaped the ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix. With the Black Foils out after a high-speed loss of control and France caught up in the aftermath, SailGP has moved swiftly to a split-fleet racing format for Sunday on the Waitematā Harbour.

Saturday’s—yesterday’s—accident between the Black Foils and DS Automobiles SailGP Team France unfolded fast. The New Zealand F50 appeared to lose control when its rudder lifted clear of the water. The boat veered sharply to starboard. In the confined stadium-style course, the French crew had no room to escape. Their F50 rode up over the starboard hull of the Black Foils’ F50 in a heavy, unavoidable impact.

It was the kind of moment that reminds everyone just how finely balanced these 50-foot foiling catamarans are when pushing beyond 80 km/h. High loads, tight boundaries, no margin.

With that backdrop, Sunday’s racing configuration will look different.

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Split-fleet racing format confirmed

SailGP has introduced a split-fleet racing format for day two. The decision reflects both the tighter harbour course and a stronger wind forecast building through the day.

The teams are divided into two groups based on the current leaderboard.

Pos Team Driver Points
1 DS Team France (France) Quentin Delapierre 17 pts
2 BONDS Flying Roos (Australia) Tom Slingsby 17 pts
3 Los Gallos (Spain) Diego Botin 12 pts
4 Black Foils (New Zealand) Peter Burling 10 pts
5 Emirates GBR (GBR) Dylan Fletcher 9 pts
6 ROCKWOOL Racing (Denmark) Nicolai Sehested 9 pts
7 Artemis (Sweden) Nathan Outteridge 8 pts
8 Germany by Deutsche Bank (Germany) Erik Heil 6 pts
9 Mubadala Brazil (Brazil) Martine Grael 4 pts
10 Switzerland Sébastien Schneiter 3 pts
11 U.S. SailGP Team (USA) Taylor Canfield 3 pts
12 NorthStar (Canda) Giles Scott 1 pts
13 Red Bull Italy (Italy) Phil Robertson -1 pts
Penalties and notes
  • Black Foils handed 8 penalty points for collision with DS Team France during Fleet Race 2
  • Red Bull Italy handed 4 point penalty for colliding with a racecourse mark during Fleet Race 1

 

Allocation alternates (in this fashion: Group A, Group B, Group B, Group A, Group A, etc) down the order.

Group A: France, New Zealand, Great Britain, Germany, Brazil, Canada, Italy
Group B: Australia, Spain, Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland, United States

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But only eleven of the F50s will race. France and New Zealand remain classified in the event standings (as seen above, they’ve been included in the split fleet configuration) because both started the regatta, but neither will compete today. In effect, Group A will have five crews, while Group B will have six crews competing.

The damaged hull of the DS Automobiles SailGP Team France F50 catamaran is worked on in the technical area following a collision with the Black Foils SailGP Team during racing on Race Day 1 of the ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix in Auckland, New Zealand. Saturday 14 February 2026. Rolex SailGP Championship Event 2 2026 Season. Photo: James Gourley for SailGP.

Each group contests two fleet races. That delivers four fleet races in total before the Auckland final.

Points are awarded within each group on a 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0 scale. Those scores are added to each team’s cumulative tally from Saturday to create one overall leaderboard for the weekend.

At the end of the four races, the top three teams advance to the winner-takes-all final—in my understanding the top three teams advance whether the teams all come from one group or both groups. As always in SailGP, whoever wins the final wins the event.

If teams are tied, standard SailGP tiebreaker rules apply, looking first to the most recent race result.

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A harbour that demands precision

The Waitematā Harbour provides spectacular viewing, but it is tight. Bottom mark compressions can turn chaotic when a full fleet charges in at speed.

By splitting the fleet, SailGP reduces congestion at critical turning points. Fewer boats on the course mean cleaner mark roundings and clearer tactical lanes. After Saturday’s impact, that matters.

Artemis SailGP Team helmed by Nathan Outteridge leads Emirates Great Britain SailGP Team helmed by Dylan Fletcher and ROCKWOOL Racing SailGP Team helmed by Nicolai Sehested in action on Race Day 1 of the ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix in Auckland, New Zealand. Saturday 14 February 2026. Rolex SailGP Championship Event 2 2026 Season. Photo: Felix Diemer for SailGP.

Sunday’s forecast also plays a role. Sustained winds sit around the mid-teens in knots, with gusts climbing much higher through the race window. In a confined racecourse, managing boat-on-boat risk becomes just as important as outright speed.

High stakes, fewer boats

The racing will still be intense. Four fleet races offer plenty of movement on the leaderboard. Head-to-head battles become more defined when the fleet is smaller.

For those still in contention, the pathway remains simple. Deliver two strong results within your group. Climb into the top three overall. Then win the final.

SailGP split fleet format sets up a very tense Auckland showdown

After a bruising day one, SailGP’s response is measured rather than reactive. The boats that line up on Sunday will still push hard. They always do.

But on this harbour, after what unfolded 24 hours ago, precision and judgment may count more than ever.

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The SailGP F50 catamaran fleet with the Auckland Harbour Bridge in the background, on Race Day 1 of the ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix in Auckland, New Zealand. Saturday 14 February 2026. Rolex SailGP Championship Event 2 2026 Season. // Photo credit: Simon Bruty for SailGP.
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Chris Woodhams
Chris Woodhams
Adventurer. Explorer. Sailor. Web Editors of Boating NZ

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