1983 Louis Vuitton Cup

1st Louis Vuitton Cup
Date 1983
Winner Australia Australia II
Location Newport, Rhode Island, United States

The 1983 Louis Vuitton Cup was held in Newport, Rhode Island, United States in 1983. The winner, Australia II, went on to challenge for the 1983 America's Cup.

The teams

Club Team Skipper Yachts
Australia Royal Perth Yacht ClubAustralia IIAustralia John BertrandAustralia II (KA–6)
United Kingdom Royal Burnham Yacht ClubVictoryUnited Kingdom Phil Crebbin, Lawrie Smith and Rodney PattissonVictory of Burnham (K–21), Victory '83 (K–22)
Australia Royal Yacht Club of VictoriaChallenge 12Australia John SavageChallenge 12 (KA–10)
Italy Yacht Club Costa SmeraldaAzzurraItaly Mauro PellaschierAzzurra (I–4)
France Yacht Club de FranceFrance 3France Bruno TroubléFrance 3
Canada Secret Cove Yacht ClubSecret Cove Yacht Club ChallengeCanada Terry McLaughlinCanada I (KC–1)
Australia Royal Sydney Yacht SquadronAdvanceAustralia Iain MurrayAdvance

Australia II (AUS)

Owned by Alan Bond and helmed by John Bertrand, Australia II featured an innovative winged keel design developed by Ben Lexcen which helped to make it point higher, sail faster and be quicker in coming about. The boat was innovative in a number of ways, but the winged keel was the most striking design advance and the distinguishing feature of the boat.[1] The New York Yacht Club challenged the legality of the keel design, but it was ruled to be legal. Australia II dominated the Louis Vuitton Cup and took the trophy, earning the right to compete in the 1983 America's Cup.

Victory (GBR)

Peter de Savary funded the Royal Burnham Yacht Club's Victory Syndicate. The team used three skippers over the Cup; Phil Crebbin, Lawrie Smith and Rodney Pattisson. Two boats were constructed; Victory of Burnham (K 21), Victory '83 (K 22), although K 22 was ultimately used in the Cup.

Challenge 12 (AUS)

Owned by a number of Australian businessmen from Victoria headed by Dick Pratt. Challenge 12 was also designed by Lexcen and sold to the Victorian challenge after the Bond syndicate selected Australia II.[2] She was a fast, traditional 12 Meter, and lacked the winged keel of her sister boat Australia II. John Bertrand favored her initially, but was talked into sailing the new design by Alan Bond. She may have been superior to Australia II in heavy winds, and was a real threat to the men from the West of Australia. Skippered by John Savage.

Azzurra (ITA)

Managed by Luca Cordero di Montezemolo and funded by Aga Khan IV and Gianni Agnelli, Azzura was formed in 1982. Ambrosini was involved with the construction of the yacht Azzurra (I-4), and they proved to be a competitive new challenge. Skippered by Cino Ricci and with Mauro Pelaschier on the helm, the original Azzurra team won 24 of 49 races and developed a large and loyal following in Italy.[3]

France 3 (FRA)

France 3, skippered by Bruno Troublé, returned for its second challenge for the America's Cup. The syndicate was financed by Yves Roussert-Rouard who had purchased the boat from Marcel Bich who had financed the first four French challenges. The syndicate was hampered by money problems and an inexperienced crew.[4]

Canada (CAN)

Canada returned to the Cup as a challenger for the first time in over a hundred years. Their boat Canada would be completely revamped and compete again three years later at the 1987 Cup as Canada II.

Advance (AUS)

A Sydney challenger owned and run by Australian sailing legend, Syd Fischer. A very radical but ultimately slow design by Alan Payne, the designer of Gretel I and II. Skippered by 18-foot skiff champion, Iain Murray.

Finals

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
 
 
 
Australia Australia II
 
 
 
Italy Azzurra
 
Australia Australia II4
 
 
 
United Kingdom Victory '831
 
United Kingdom Victory '83
 
 
Canada Canada I
 

Semi-finals

Australia II defeated Azzurra while Victory '83 defeated Canada I.[5]

Final

Australia II defeated Victory '83 4-1 in the final to win the Louis Vuitton Cup and go on to compete in the America's Cup.

References

  1. Anderson, Dave (5 May 1988). "SPORTS OF THE TIMES; Yachting's Crocodile Dundee". Sports. New York Times. Retrieved 2008-03-13.
  2. Robinson, Blue (2 October 2009). "Ben Lexcen: A crazy, lovable rogue". Scuttlebutte News. Archived from the original on 27 November 2010. Retrieved 8 November 2010.
  3. Azzurra now showing at Olbia airport Louis Vuitton Trophy, 15 May 2010
  4. Russell Coutts. America's Cup 2000, Hodder Moa Beckett, 1999. ISBN 1-86958-717-0 p.128.
  5. Victory 83 Gains Challenger Final New York Times, 22 August 1983
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