Swedish sailors Anna Östling and Martina Carlsson are within striking distance of the Santa Maria Cup semi-finals after powering through day two of qualifying in Annapolis, Maryland. With only Friday’s final round-robin races separating them from the knockout stages, the battle for the four semi-final spots has never been tighter.

Östling, a former Santa Maria Cup winner, produced the day’s standout performance by winning all five of her races. Just behind her, Carlsson claimed five victories from six starts, recovering impressively after a penalty-plagued opening day cost her ground on the leaderboard. The pair’s surge up the rankings reflects the relentless competitive standard of professional women’s match racing, where single-boat tactics and crew execution separate winners from the rest.

The American defending champion, Allie Blecher, remains firmly in contention with four wins from her races, maintaining her position among the frontrunners. Alongside these established names, Julia Aartsen from the Netherlands has injected fresh energy into the championship, making her Santa Maria Cup debut and collecting four wins from five races to position herself within reach of semi-final qualification.

Conditions on the water tested everyone equally. Light and variable southerly winds brought frequent shifts that demanded constant adjustment. Aartsen reflected on the unpredictability of the day: “The wind is all over the place and it’s a real game of snakes and ladders, but we are sailing well against both the teams we know and the new teams competing here this week.”

Carlsson echoed a similar sentiment about her recovery. “We managed to really find our speed today,” she said. “We had some trouble with penalties earlier in the regatta, but we kept pushing and today’s results were very good for us.” Her turnaround underscores what separates the top tier of match racing crews from the field: the ability to learn from mistakes and execute consistently when it matters most.
The Santa Maria Cup remains genuinely open heading into Friday’s decisive racing. Only a handful of wins separate the top contenders, meaning any team can still punch through to the semi-finals. New Zealand’s Megan Thomson and several other challengers will be working hard to mount their own pushes in the final round-robin races.
Match racing rewards precision, and the women competing here represent the sport’s best. Racing continues Friday, with the semi-finals and final scheduled for Saturday, June 6. For those following the professional women’s sailing calendar, the closing stages of this championship promise exactly the kind of high-stakes tactical racing that makes one-on-one boat-to-boat competition so compelling.











