Changing the face of the sport
Published on April 28th, 2025
During the SailGP second season, in 2021, the league instituted a rule that each team must have a woman on their crew. Rather than replace men, the rule expanded crew from five to six, and each team fitted a female onboard in a new role – strategist.
It was progress, sort of. While men retained key roles of helm, wing trimmer, and flight control, the strategists proved important as the fleet size grew. But when a new ownership group took over the USA Team in 2023, CEO and co-owner Mike Buckley became the first male strategist for helm Taylor Canfield.
To fulfill the league rule, Buckley’s solution was to bring on Anna Weis, a Nacra 17 crew at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, and put her 5’9” frame on the grinder. “She’s probably the best athlete on our boat,” Buckley shared with Women’s Health, though he also likes how the decision has attracted attention.
“We believe that diversity is a competitive advantage in every aspect of our business on and off the water. She’s the one that little girls—and not even just little girls—boys want to take photos with. I’ve been pretty vocal about this. I think Anna has the tools to be the face of our sport.” – Full report
SailGP information – YouTube – Facebook
Season 5 Leaderboard (after 4 events)
1. Australia – Tom Slingsby, 39 points
2. Great Britain – Dylan Fletcher, 38 points
3. Spain – Diego Botin, 36 points
4. New Zealand – Peter Burling, 35 points
5. Canada – Giles Scott, 34 points
6. France – Quintin Delapierre, 28 points*
7. Switzerland – Sebastien Schneiter, 18 points
8. Italy – Ruggero Tita, 13 points
9. Denmark – Nicolai Sehested, 9 points**
10. Brazil – Martine Grael, 2 point**
11. United States – Taylor Canfield, 2 points**
12. Germany – Erik Heil, -1 points**
* France was awarded points for the first two events as their F50 was not available
**Teams receive season penalty points for incidents during practice or racing
Season 5 Schedule – 14 events *
2024
November 23-24 – Dubai, UAE
2025
January 18-19 – Auckland, New Zealand
February 8-9 – Sydney, Australia
March 15-16 – Los Angeles, USA
March 22-23 – San Francisco, USA
May 3-4 – Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
June 7-8 – New York City, USA
July 19-20 – Portsmouth, Great Britain
August 16-17 – Sassnitz, Germany
September 6-7 – Taranto, Italy
September 12-13 – Saint-Tropez, France
September 20-21 – Geneva, Switzerland
October 4-5 – Andalucía – Cádiz, Spain
November 7-8 – Middle East
November 29-30 – Grand Final – Abu Dhabi, UAE
* The season began with 14 events but Tranto was replaced with Saint-Tropez, while Rio and Middle East were cancelled though Rio may be rescheduled.
Format for Season 5:
• Teams compete in identical F50 catamarans.
• Each event runs across two days.
• Five qualifying fleet races of approximately 15 minutes may be scheduled for each regatta.
• The top three teams from qualifying advance to a final race to be crowned event champion and earn the largest share of the prize purse (amount not confirmed; Season 4 had $400,000.00 USD prize purse with winning team earning $200k at each event).
• The season ends with the Grand Final, which includes the Championship Final Race for the top three teams in the season standing with the winner claiming a monetary award (amount not confirmed; Season 4 had $2 million USD prize).
• The top team on points ahead of the three-boat Championship Final will get a monetary award (amount not confirmed; Season 4 had a $350,000.00 prize).
• Ten of the 12 teams are privately owned, with the league having ownership of New Zealand and Spain.
For competition documents, click here.
Established in 2018, SailGP seeks to be an annual, global sports league featuring fan-centric inshore racing among national teams in some of the iconic harbors around the globe.