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    SCUTTLEBUTT 2484 – November 28, 2007

    Scuttlebutt is a digest of major sailing news, commentary, opinions, features
    and dock talk . . . with a North American focus. Scuttlebutt is published
    each weekday with the support of its sponsors.

    SPANISH OUT – GGYC IN
    As a result of problems seen with the Protocol for the 33rd America’s Cup,
    the Golden Gate Yacht Club, the sponsoring club of the BMW Oracle Racing
    team, had filed a lawsuit in the New York Supreme Court against Société
    Nautique de Genève (SNG), the sponsoring club of the defender Alinghi. As the
    Deed of Gift requires disputes to be settled in the NY courts, the first day
    in court was September 10th, and on November 27th, a decision by Justice
    Herman Cahn was handed down, agreeing with the position of GGYC, which was
    that Alinghi had enlisted the services of an invalid Challenger of Record to
    create the Protocol. Here are statements from the team:

    * Statement from Alinghi, SNG and AC Management: Today’s decision against the
    validity of the Club Náutico Español de Vela (CNEV), the Challenger of
    Record, is a disappointment to the Société Nautique de Genève (SNG), AC
    Management (ACM), Alinghi and the seven entered Challengers affected by the
    outcome. There will now be a thorough review of the Judge’s decision and an
    analysis of the various options offered by the Deed of Gift. Ernesto
    Bertarelli, President of Alinghi, says: “We are disappointed that a
    technicality made the CNEV invalid and we are now looking forward to
    discussions with the Golden Gate Yacht Club to keep the America’s Cup
    functioning.”

    * Statement from GGYC: The Golden Gate Yacht Club (GGYC) today welcomed a
    ruling by the New York State Supreme Court that its challenge for the 33rd
    America’s Cup was valid. “We are very pleased by the decision as it enables
    everyone to focus on getting the Cup back on track quickly,” said Russell
    Coutts, CEO of the club’s BMW ORACLE Racing team. He said GGYC wanted to see
    a conventional America’s Cup regatta in Valencia and is planning to speak
    with Alinghi as soon as possible to organize a meeting seeking a mutual
    consent challenge.
    GGYC’s first preferences would be to: 1) Seek to agree rules with all
    competitors along the lines of the October 17 “nine points” compromise
    proposal and race a conventional America’s Cup competition in Valencia in
    2009; 2) If a Deed of Gift challenge went ahead, the club would seek to race
    under the AC90 monohull rule already published. If Alinghi did not agree to
    that, in multi-hulls, and; 3) In all scenarios, GGYC would seek by mutual
    consent to have a Challenger Selection Series with as many challengers as
    possible. “We will immediately endeavour to meet with the other challengers
    to mutually agree a fair set of rules negotiated with all the other teams,”
    Coutts said. “We will be very happy if we can put the last few months behind
    us and get on with sailing.”

    QUOTE / UNQUOTE
    Prior to the beginning of the court proceedings, on whether SNG would prevail
    in the NY Supreme Court, Ernesto Bertarelli said, "It is not possible that we
    will lose. We have the best lawyers."

    JUSTICE CAHN TIGHTLY CLOSES THE DOOR
    by Cory E. Friedman, Scuttlebutt legal analyst
    (November 27, 2007) The yachting sky has not fallen and sailing’s Chicken
    Littles have had a bad day, because Justice Cahn has done exactly what a
    Justice of the Commercial Division is supposed to do. He has quickly and
    carefully disposed of the dispute between GGYC (Oracle) and SNG (Alinghi) in
    a way that makes a successful appeal unlikely and puts the parties where they
    belong – on the water. To cut to the chase, he has handed GGYC complete
    victory, ruling that the Spanish CNEV is not a valid challenger and that GGYC
    is the Challenger of Record. SNG and GGYC will either negotiate a Protocol or
    meet in 90-foot catamarans for the fastest match races ever.

    As expected, Justice Cahn’s decision was based upon the Court of Appeals’
    Mercury Bay decision and went straight to George Schuyler’s intent, as
    expressed within the four corners of the Deed of Gift. The two issues were
    whether CNEV is an organized yacht club and whether it qualifies by “having”
    an annual regatta. The way he dealt with the organized yacht club issues
    demonstrates how an experienced judge works. Rather than stretch to resolve
    the issue, and possibly be reversed, he decided that resolution of the
    meaning of the term would require an evidentiary hearing – a trial on “custom
    and practice in the sport.” Talk about an open ended inquiry. He was free to
    take that position because he could decide the case based upon the “having”
    issue alone and did not need to resolve it. On the “having” issue he found,
    as a matter of law, that CNEV did not qualify as a valid challenger and thus,
    was out and the next challenger in line, GGYC, was in. End of case. Why it
    really is the end of the case is that it puts SNG between a rock and a hard
    place. -- Read on: http://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/news/07/cf/#p9

    * Curmudgeon’s Comment: The decision of Justice Herman Cahn is posted on the
    Scuttlebutt website. It is 19 pages, and far from light reading, so we are
    fortunate to have Cory Friedman’s analysis. It is a shame that CNEV went to
    the trouble of finally hosting their “annual” regatta last weekend. Now I
    wonder if they plan to host it again next year, or if the club will even
    exist then. -- Court decision: http://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/news/07/1127

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    THE PROCESS OF CHOOSING OLYMPIC EVENTS
    by The Daily Sail (subscription website)
    Two and a half weeks ago we saw the ISAF, at their Annual Conference in
    Estoril, make the huge decision not to include a women’s high performance
    skiff in the 2012 Games, to swap women’s keelboat fleet racing for match
    racing and to drop the multihull from competition. Just how unpopular this
    proved to be quickly became evident with much of the sailing community
    expressing its distaste and often anger at the outcome. Perhaps now this
    feeling has begun to dissipate a little it is worth taking some time to
    investigate just how an unpopular decision was able to be made.

    A key point in the process that riled many was that at the Conference the
    ISAF Events Committee met the day before the ISAF Council were due to make
    their decision and voted on a list of suggested events. The Events Committee
    is made up of experts in Olympic sailing and classes and with the brief that
    they had to drop two classes to be replaced by one – the women’s high
    performance skiff - they came up with a list many were happy with.
    Effectively they chose to get rid of the two keelboat classes. Their decision
    was then passed onto the ISAF Council who appeared to completely ignore the
    expert advice, making up their own mind.

    Before we further blast the ISAF for their decision it is worth taking a
    moment to understand who exactly makes up the ISAF Council and who therefore
    has a vote in the Olympic Events that are selected for the Games. The Council
    itself is made up of one President, seven Vice-Presidents, 28 MNA (Member
    National Authority) representatives, one Offshore representative, one ISAF
    Classes Committee Representative and one Women’s representative. Essentially,
    then, the biggest contributors to the council are MNA reps. In theory, if you
    are a member of your national sailing authority like the RYA, you should be
    able to have some say about the direction of your MNA and so the way in which
    they vote. But of course if this were actually the case, clearly we would not
    now be in a situation with so many disgruntled sailors. -- Read on
    http://tinyurl.com/3cyl5r

    * Curmudgeon’s Comment: It would seem that self-interest is a leading
    consideration when MNA’s are placing their votes. If they are to be choosing what
    is best for the future of Olympic sailing, than it seems that the process is clearly
    flawed. There has been a lot of criticism of how some of the MNAs have voted,
    but we suspect that the following adage applies to this circumstance: “Don’t
    hate the player – hate the game.”

    BOARDSAILING BATTLEGROUND
    The US Olympic Trials finished five weeks ago, but not in the minds of some
    of the boardsailing contestants. Bad blood between winner Ben Barger and
    runner-up Mike Gebhardt (Ben’s former coach) allegedly existed before the
    Trials, but surfaced at the event during measurement with equipment protests,
    continued during the event with heated dialogue and allegations of Barger
    lying to get out of a protest with Robert Willis, and now continues with the
    filing of misconduct reports to US Sailing: Gebhardt filed one against
    Barger, and the event PRO filed one against Gebhardt. Depending on the
    validity of these separate reports, they will either be disallowed or a Rule
    69 hearing will commence.

    On the women’s side, runner-up Farrah Hall continues to pursue avenues to
    vindicate her loss, after her leading position was changed following a last
    race redress hearing that resulted in a reduction of Nancy Rios’ points total
    to give her the win. Hall is seeking consideration from both US Sailing and
    the USOC, and has retained legal counsel to facilitate her case. Hall
    continues to train, currently in Europe with the Polish Olympic Team, and in
    January will be heading to the World Championships in New Zealand. -- The
    Curmudgeon

    HARNESSING WIND POWER
    The Wind Dam Project uses a giant spinnaker sail suspended in a mountain
    gorge near Northern Russia’s Lake Ladoga. The £2.5 million dam will include a
    unique cup-shaped spinnaker sail (25 meters high and 75 meters wide), which
    will capture and harness wind to generate renewable energy by funneling wind
    through an attached turbine.

    The spinnaker shape is similar to the mainsail of a yacht, and is thought to
    be particularly effective in capturing the wind with its kite-like
    properties. Project architect Laurie Chetwood stated that the shape of the
    sail was influenced by functionality and a desire to produce something
    “sculptural”. “The sail looks like a bird dipping its beak into the water,
    which will be much less of a blot on this beautiful and unblemished
    landscape…It is also highly effective at capturing the wind because it
    replicates the work of a dam and doesn’t let the wind escape in the way it
    does using traditional propellers.” -- Litoralis blog, full story:
    http://litoralis.blogspot.com/2007/11/wind-dam.html

    BARCELONA WORLD RACE
    Open 60 doublehanded round the world race (started Nov 11; 25,000-miles)

    (November 27, 2007) The top seven boats in the Barcelona World Race fleet
    have escaped the clutches of the doldrums and are now racing on a tight reach
    towards the third scoring gate, off the coast of Brazil, at Fernando de
    Noronha. PRB and Paprec-Virbac 2, as race leaders, were first to pick up the
    southeast tradewinds and as a result of sailing in stronger winds, have added
    to their lead over the chasing group. This afternoon, the only team still
    lingering in the doldrums is Estrella Damm. A tired sounding Guillermo
    Altadill said he can’t wait to get into the trade winds and get further
    south. -- http://www.barcelonaworldrace.com

    Day 17 Positions - November 27, 2007 - 18:00 (GMT)
    1. PRB - Vincent Riou (FRA)/Sébastien Josse (FRA), 21,257 DTF
    2. Paprec-Virbac 2 - Jean-Pierre Dick (FRA)/Damian Foxall (IRE), 34 miles DTL
    3. Veolia Environnement - Roland Jourdain (FRA)/Jean-Luc Nélias (FRA), 176
    4. Hugo Boss - Alex Thomson (GBR)/Andrew Cape (AUS), 286
    5. Delta Dore - Jérémie Beyou (FRA)/Sidney Gavignet (FRA), 264
    6. Mutua Madrilena - Javier Sanso Windmann (ESP)/Pachi Rivero (ESP), 306
    7. Temenos II - Dominique Wavre (SUI)/Michéle Paret (FRA), 306
    8. Estrella Damm - Guillermo Altadill (ESP)/Jonathan McKee (USA), 469
    9. Educación sin Fronteras -Albert Bargués (ESP)/Servanne Escoffier (FRA),637

    * Curmudgeon’s Comment: The BWR has nine boats, a decent fleet for a first
    time event, though it is now looking like a two-boat contest. The leaders are
    now sailing at a pace that is twice as fast as a week ago, and in the past 24
    hours, have put 100+ miles on those from 4th to 7th, and nearly 200 miles on
    Estrella Damm. The Scuttlebutt website is taking a weekly snapshot of the
    fleet, and this week we see that they have been on a long port tack toward
    the third scoring gate, which now has them closer to South America than
    Africa. When we took the snapshot, Estrella Damm was the only boat seeking
    some separation on starboard tack. Race tracker:
    http://www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/news/07/bwr

    * (November 27, 2007) After beginning his assault on the solo round the world
    record last Friday, Francis Joyon and the giant multihull IDEC have gradually
    extended themselves from the pace world record holder Ellen Macarthur set in
    2005. As of 17:00 UTC, Joyon enjoyed a 313 mile advance, due in large part to
    his second consecutive 500+ mile day where the speedo was averaging 24.2
    knots. At his current pace, Joyon will be passing the Barcelona World Race
    fleet later in the week. -- http://www.trimaran-idec.com

    BE THE ULTIMATE GIFT GIVER!
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    gifts, visit us at http://www.ultimatesailing.com

    SAILING SHORTS
    * Between February and October, six world championship titles were settled in
    wave sailing, slalom racing, and freestyle during the 2007 Professional
    Windsurfers Association (PWA) Season between the most talented men and women
    windsurfers on the globe. Event recaps at http://tinyurl.com/23ytu4

    * Hall Spars & Rigging has done an extreme makeover of their website, and
    have expanded it into a boat parts superstore. Besides being a builder of
    custom and production masts, Hall is now vying to be the most complete
    rigging resource on the web. -- http://www.hallspars.com/

    * California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has signed into legislation a law
    that would require a dealer or buyer of a marine engine under 500hp to submit
    documentation to the state verifying it meets California emissions
    requirements. The new law will start on July 1, 2008. For engines over 500hp,
    dealers or owners will submit the registration documents on January 1, 2009.
    The law is designed to prevent Californians from purchasing a recreational
    boat outside the state with a non-compliant engine in order to circumvent the
    new emissions requirement. -- IBI News, full report:
    http://www.ibinews.com/ibinews/newsdesk/20071012025724ibinews.html

    * On Monday morning at 03 hours 02 minutes and 22 seconds, French hour,
    Giovanni Soldini and Pietro d' Ali crossed the finishing line of this 8th
    edition of the Transatlantic race Jacques Vabre as winners in Class 40.
    "Italia Telecom" sailed the course in 22 days 13 hours of race, nearly five
    hours ahead of "Atao Audio System". Arriving in the afternoon to take the
    final podium position was Monbana Chocolates. -- Scuttlebutt Europe, full
    story: http://www.scuttlebutteurope.com/content/view/327/5/


    LETTERS TO THE CURMUDGEON
    Letters selected for publication must include the writer's name, and may be
    edited for clarity or simplicity (letters shall be no longer than 250 words).
    You only get one letter per subject, so give it your best shot, don't whine
    if others disagree, and save your bashing and personal attacks for elsewhere.
    As an alternative, a more open environment for discussion is available on the
    Scuttlebutt Forum.

    -- Scuttlebutt Letters: editor@sailingscuttlebutt.com
    -- Scuttlebutt Forum: http://sailingscuttlebutt.com/forum

    * From Rich Roberts: (From the Alinghi press release) “We are disappointed
    that a technicality made the CNEV invalid . . ." Gotta feel sorry for
    Bertarelli. Like the guys at Enron, those darn technicalities (laws, rules,
    Deeds of Gift) will trip you up every time.

    * From Adrian Morgan: Judge Cahn sits at his mahogany desk this morning and
    sighs. "What is the world coming to?" He has three cases of major company
    fraud, involving the pension funds of seven million Americans, six violations
    of bankruptcy and a dozen involving money laundering through drug dealing,
    child slavery and prostitution.

    And then he allows himself a little chuckle. "Ah yes. It is time to settle
    that case where one billionaire wants me to tell another billionaire that
    he's jimmying the rules over, let me see, a yacht race!" Now that's more like
    it. He can rest assured that all his legal training and years of practice in
    the pursuit of truth and justice have not been in vain.

    * From Rob Snyders: I've been reading daily Scuttlebutt messages more often
    lately. Many of the articles and response messages make me undertand how Andy
    Rooney (the old dude on 60 minutes) stays on as a reporter of sort. I usually
    enjoy drinking my coffee and reading Scuttlebutt as the sun rises each
    morning to learn about fun stuff, how old friends are performing, and about
    race results. Your site has offered this great opportunity prior to checking
    the stock market and going to work each day. Can the court BS move on to
    Court TV rather than to your sailing website? Coffee tastes much better with
    soul rather than with an attorney in mind.

    * From Geri Conser: Goodbye Steve Fossett, thank you for sharing your spirit
    of adventure with the sailing and flying world. You did what many of us would
    have loved to do. Sharing with the world you gave us the thrill of all your
    adventures. We will join you in that wide blue yonder where adventurers
    gather to trade stories of their thrills and grand fun. It was an honor to
    know you.

    * From Bob Colpitts: Some readers may be left with the impression that it was
    Il Moro di Venezia's loss to America 3 that was the cause of Gardini's
    suicide. Rather it was the knowledge he was about to be jailed prior to trial
    (and almost certain conviction) for the huge fraud and bribery scandal that
    rocked the Italian political scene in the early '90's. Death before dishonor.

    * From Mason Chrisman: I would remind those who are proud of not supporting
    US SAILING because "their only criterion was to support the classes that gave
    the USA its best medal prospects", that the organization is much more than
    just an Olympic Committee. US SAILING is also about training, safety, youth
    activities, racing rules, judging certification, running regattas, insurance
    for sailing clubs, supporting disabled sailors, and much more. To condemn the
    whole organization just because you disagree with the focus of one committee
    chairman out of many seems to me to be unsound logic.

    CURMUDGEON’S OBSERVATION
    "Bravery is being the only one who knows you're afraid." -- Col. David
    Hackworth

    Special thanks to Ockam Instruments and Ultimate Sailing.



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