logo
‘A very scary situation': Australia's wingsail collapses at start of SailGP race in San Francisco

‘A very scary situation': Australia's wingsail collapses at start of SailGP race in San Francisco

The Guardian24-03-2025

Despite a catastrophic wingsail collapse on Australia's boat at the weekend's SailGP event, all of its crew were able to walk away unscathed, with an investigation launched to determine the cause of the 'very scary' incident.
Veteran driver Tom Slingsby was left shaken following the incident as Australia came close to Italy's boat on the way to the start line in the seventh fleet race of the event. The main wing crumpled into the water on San Francisco Bay.
'It's a bit of shock, obviously. A very scary situation,' Slingsby said. 'Fortunately, we're all safe, that's the first priority. Now we've just got to try and save the boat as best we can.'
Wing failure onboard Australia 🤯Happy to account for no injuries onboard, the cause of the incident is not yet known #SailGP pic.twitter.com/tw0YrZo72O
Race organisers confirmed all athletes had been accounted for and were physically unharmed.
It meant Australia, who were sitting in third place after an impressive weekend of racing, were unable to take their place in the three-way final race, although they had already done enough in San Francisco to take top spot in the overall championship standings.
'It's heartbreaking,' Slingsby said. 'Obviously, the results and the points are what they are, but we're not even concerned about that. Just save the boat the best we can, everyone is safe and we've got a lot of work to do here.'
SailGP said the teams involved would undertake an in-depth analysis to determine what caused the incident.
'We've got to go look at the camera angles,' Slingsby said. 'It was obviously close to the other boats, we need to determine if it was a wing failure, or was there something else at play? Did we make an error, or did the boat fail?'
France took Australia's place in the three-way podium race, with defending series champions Spain securing victory over Canada and the French boat.
Spain crew member Florian Trittel described his team's win as 'bittersweet' after what he described as 'the Aussie breakage'.
'We would like to send huge energy from the Spanish team to the Aussie team, we could hear it through our comms even though we had noise cancelling on, so it must have been a massive one and seeing that is never nice,' Trittel said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Spain triumph in New York for consecutive SailGP victories
Spain triumph in New York for consecutive SailGP victories

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Spain triumph in New York for consecutive SailGP victories

NEW YORK, June 8 (Reuters) - Reigning champions Spain put in a battling performance on the second day of the sixth round of SailGP on Sunday, beating New Zealand and France in the final race in New York to clinch consecutive wins as the season reached the halfway point. Coming off their season's first victory in San Francisco in March, Diego Botin's team went five points clear into day two and overcame a slump in race five to make the top three. With shifting winds in the shadows of the Statue of Liberty, Spain took control of the showdown on the Hudson River with an impeccable start, arriving three seconds ahead of New Zealand at gate two and three, and held their lead to clinch the victory. Peter Burling's New Zealand, winners in New York last year, lost more distance in the final stages and reached the finish line 43 seconds behind the Spaniards. The win saw Spain move up two places in the championship table on 46 points as they moved above three-times champions Australia, who finished fifth in New York, by one point. But it was not all smooth sailing for Spain on the event's final day. They started off well with a second-place finish in the day's opening race four, 16 seconds behind Martine Grael's Brazil, who won their first-ever fleet race at SailGP since joining the league at the beginning of the season. The Brazilians, who sat fifth after day one, were hopeful of a top-three finish, and were well positioned for just that when they finished fourth in the next race. A tricky race five, meanwhile, did a lot of damage to Spain, who were 11th and dropped from top spot to fourth in the event standings. Botin's crew earned a penalty in the decisive race six but made massive gains and got ahead of Brazil on the second-to-last leg to secure a spot in the event final. Australia held onto their early lead to win the sixth race, grabbing their second victory of the event after they came out on top in the second race on Saturday. France, who sailed very consistently on both days, put in a flawless performance to pick up a win in race five. The season next moves to Europe, first returning to Britain as the fleet races in Portsmouth from July 19-20 before heading to Germany in August for the very first time.

Carlos Alcaraz ‘really happy' after battling Jannik Sinner for French Open glory
Carlos Alcaraz ‘really happy' after battling Jannik Sinner for French Open glory

Glasgow Times

timean hour ago

  • Glasgow Times

Carlos Alcaraz ‘really happy' after battling Jannik Sinner for French Open glory

The Spaniard showed incredible reserves of energy and willpower to win a five-hour 29-minute marathon and deny world number one Sinner a third consecutive grand slam title. It was the first time in his career that Alcaraz had overturned a two-set deficit as he claimed his fifth major crown at exactly the same age as his idol Rafael Nadal did, aged 22 years, one month and three days old. Alcaraz has now won all five grand slam finals he has played – and this was the first to be played between two players born this century. It was also the first grand slam final meeting of the two young superstars of men's tennis, the best players on the planet, who have now shared the last six major titles. And it is one that will go down as a cast-iron classic, a final for the ages, a high-quality, no-holds barred box office smash which finished 4-6 6-7 (4) 6-4 7-6 (3) 6-4 (10-2) to the man from Murcia. Alcaraz said: 'This one was the most exciting match that I've played so far, without a doubt. 'I think the match had everything, really good moments, really bad moments. I'm just really, really happy. I'm proud about how I deal with everything today. 'I mean, it wasn't easy. The first match that I came back from two sets to love down. I think it was in a better occasion to do it in the final of a grand slam.' Italian Sinner, on a 20-match winning streak at the slams, looked certain to add the French title to his US and Australian Open crowns when he forged two sets ahead. He had lost his previous four matches against Alcaraz – the most recent in the Rome final last month, his first tournament after serving a three-month doping ban. Some loose hitting from Alcaraz gave Sinner a break in the first game of the third, but perhaps being short of matches after his enforced absence was beginning to tell as last year's winner clawed back the deficit to force a fourth. That ended a run of 31 consecutive sets won by Sinner at grand slam tournaments, stretching back to the Australian Open fourth round. Alcaraz has wriggled out of some scrapes in big matches before, but none tighter than finding himself facing three championship points on his own serve. But he gathered himself on the baseline, took a deep breath, and served nervelessly, saving all three before breaking back to force a tie-break, and subsequently a decider. Sinner has never before won a match lasting longer than four hours – mainly because rarely has to – but he was guzzling the pickle juice at the changeover to try and find more energy. But Alcaraz, having clinched an early break, served for the set – only for Sinner to somehow chase down an outrageous drop shot to level a roller-coaster match again. A 10-point tie-break was needed to separate them, an early-evening shoot-out to decide the champion, and by now Alcaraz had his eye in. Jannik Sinner had three championship points (Thibault Camus/AP) A glorious winner, a drop-shot and volley and some wayward swats from Sinner helped him race ahead and a final, spectacular forehand winner sealed an unbelievable victory. Sinner said: 'Of course, I'm happy to deliver this kind of level, and happy about the tournament still. But obviously, this one hurts. 'There's not so much to talk right now. But again, I'm happy how we are trying to improve every day and trying to put myself in these kind of positions. 'It's a very high-level match, that's for sure. So I'm happy to be part of this. But yeah, the final result hurts.'

Carlos Alcaraz ‘really happy' after battling Jannik Sinner for French Open glory
Carlos Alcaraz ‘really happy' after battling Jannik Sinner for French Open glory

North Wales Chronicle

timean hour ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Carlos Alcaraz ‘really happy' after battling Jannik Sinner for French Open glory

The Spaniard showed incredible reserves of energy and willpower to win a five-hour 29-minute marathon and deny world number one Sinner a third consecutive grand slam title. It was the first time in his career that Alcaraz had overturned a two-set deficit as he claimed his fifth major crown at exactly the same age as his idol Rafael Nadal did, aged 22 years, one month and three days old. Alcaraz has now won all five grand slam finals he has played – and this was the first to be played between two players born this century. Carlos Alcaraz won this final.#RolandGarros — Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 8, 2025 It was also the first grand slam final meeting of the two young superstars of men's tennis, the best players on the planet, who have now shared the last six major titles. And it is one that will go down as a cast-iron classic, a final for the ages, a high-quality, no-holds barred box office smash which finished 4-6 6-7 (4) 6-4 7-6 (3) 6-4 (10-2) to the man from Murcia. Alcaraz said: 'This one was the most exciting match that I've played so far, without a doubt. 'I think the match had everything, really good moments, really bad moments. I'm just really, really happy. I'm proud about how I deal with everything today. 'I mean, it wasn't easy. The first match that I came back from two sets to love down. I think it was in a better occasion to do it in the final of a grand slam.' Italian Sinner, on a 20-match winning streak at the slams, looked certain to add the French title to his US and Australian Open crowns when he forged two sets ahead. He had lost his previous four matches against Alcaraz – the most recent in the Rome final last month, his first tournament after serving a three-month doping ban. Some loose hitting from Alcaraz gave Sinner a break in the first game of the third, but perhaps being short of matches after his enforced absence was beginning to tell as last year's winner clawed back the deficit to force a fourth. HIStory.#RolandGarros — Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 8, 2025 That ended a run of 31 consecutive sets won by Sinner at grand slam tournaments, stretching back to the Australian Open fourth round. Alcaraz has wriggled out of some scrapes in big matches before, but none tighter than finding himself facing three championship points on his own serve. But he gathered himself on the baseline, took a deep breath, and served nervelessly, saving all three before breaking back to force a tie-break, and subsequently a decider. Sinner has never before won a match lasting longer than four hours – mainly because rarely has to – but he was guzzling the pickle juice at the changeover to try and find more energy. But Alcaraz, having clinched an early break, served for the set – only for Sinner to somehow chase down an outrageous drop shot to level a roller-coaster match again. A 10-point tie-break was needed to separate them, an early-evening shoot-out to decide the champion, and by now Alcaraz had his eye in. A glorious winner, a drop-shot and volley and some wayward swats from Sinner helped him race ahead and a final, spectacular forehand winner sealed an unbelievable victory. Sinner said: 'Of course, I'm happy to deliver this kind of level, and happy about the tournament still. But obviously, this one hurts. 'There's not so much to talk right now. But again, I'm happy how we are trying to improve every day and trying to put myself in these kind of positions. 'It's a very high-level match, that's for sure. So I'm happy to be part of this. But yeah, the final result hurts.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store