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HomeSailGPSailGP 2026KPMG Sydney Sail Grand Prix (Press Conference): racing returns under sharper focus

KPMG Sydney Sail Grand Prix (Press Conference): racing returns under sharper focus

The KPMG Sydney Sail Grand Prix arrives with unfinished business.

Auckland changed the tone of the season. The collision between France and New Zealand halted racing and sent two sailors to the hospital. New Zealand flight controller Louis Sinclair continues his recovery. French strategist Manon Audinet has returned home after two weeks in hospital.

SailGP has launched a detailed review. Engineers are analysing onboard data, including foil height, rudder angle, and lateral speed at impact. Audio and video from race management are also under examination.

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Sir Russell Coutts confirmed the review extends to response systems and communication protocols. Possible design changes are being assessed, including control systems and athlete protection.

Southern Spars fixing SailGP FR. Photo credit: Southern Spars / FB

France and New Zealand will not race in Sydney. The French F50 is being repaired at Southern Spars in Auckland and is expected back for Rio.

Split fleet now part of the plan

Auckland also marked the debut of the split fleet format. It reduced congestion in stronger breeze and will become permanent next season when a fourteenth team joins the championship.

It does not eliminate risk. But fewer boats at the line reduces density around gates and marks. Race management has also refined course geometry.

Sydney is forecast to be lighter, but the structural shift remains significant.

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Riviera Australia

Australia v Great Britain intensifies

Australia’s Bonds Flying Roos ended a year-long drought with victory in Auckland. Tom Slingsby admitted the win relieved pressure after multiple finals without converting.

Now they return to Sydney Harbour, where local knowledge has often counted.

Tom Slingsby, driver of BONDS Flying Roos SailGP Team, speaks to the media in a pre-event press conference alongside Hannah Mills, strategist of Emirates Great Britain SailGP Team, ahead of the KPMG Australia Sail Grand Prix in Sydney, Australia. Friday 27 February 2026. Rolex SailGP Championship Event 3 2026 Season. Photo: Andrew Baker for SailGP.

Across the course, Emirates Great Britain remains the reference team. Hannah Mills’ squad finished last season strongly and opened this one in a similar fashion.

Slingsby made it clear. Great Britain is the benchmark.

The rivalry is no longer subtle.

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Artemis closing in

With France and New Zealand absent, the opportunity widens.

Nathan Outteridge’s Artemis team has been consistently competitive. A race win in Perth and steady podium contention have marked them as serious contenders.

Sydney Harbour will test decision-making. An easterly breeze and wind shadow around Shark Island could create a compressed, tactical racecourse.

Artemis SailGP Team helmed by Nathan Outteridge races behind the Emirates Great Britain SailGP Team helmed by Dylan Fletcher 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.

Brazil continues to search for consistency after crew changes. Canada’s Giles Scott described the margins as minimal. One manoeuvre can swing a result.

Twilight adds another variable

Racing begins at 5.30 pm local time in SailGP’s first Sydney twilight session.

Changing light and a cooling breeze will alter preparation and race management. An easterly forecast suggests heavy wind shadow near the island and a pressurised start line.

It will not be straightforward.

Sydney SailGP weather throws out the usual Harbour script

A consequential weekend

Sydney will not resolve the questions raised in Auckland. But it will shape momentum.

Safety systems are under review. Split fleet racing is becoming structural. Australia and Great Britain are openly measuring each other.

For New Zealand supporters, the absence of the Black Foils will be noticeable.

The season continues regardless.

And in SailGP, it moves quickly.

Last year’s racing at Sydney. Photo credit: SailGP media
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Chris Woodhams
Chris Woodhams
Adventurer. Explorer. Sailor. Web Editors of Boating NZ

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