logo
America's Cup adding female sailors, battery power in 'seismic change'

America's Cup adding female sailors, battery power in 'seismic change'

National Post2 days ago
New rules for the America's Cup sailing regatta announced Tuesday have been described as a seismic moment for the historic event and the 'boldest change in 174 years of the Cup.'
Article content
Crews competing in the 38th Cup regatta in Naples, Italy in July of 2027 will comprise five members, including at least one woman. Under new criteria, at least two members of each crew, including a female, must be nationals of each team's country of origin.
Article content
Article content
Each 76-foot America's Cup boat will also carry a sixth 'guest' crew member who could be a celebrity, influencer, media representative or sponsor.
Article content
The America's Cup will now be contested every two years and the protocol or governing document for the event now establishes a system of governance under which all competing teams will have equal responsibility for organizing the event on and off the water and for the control of media and commercial rights.
Article content
Most functions of the boats will now be powered by batteries, rather than the brute strength of their crews.
Article content
The moves to modernize the Cup have mostly been well received by competitors and key shareholders.
Article content
'As the founding Trustee of the America's Cup, we are completely supportive of the move to modernize the oldest sporting trophy in the world,' said Jay Cross, commodore of the New York Yacht Club.
Article content
The NYYC was the first to win the America's Cup when its schooner America — from which the trophy takes its name — beat 15 yachts representing Britain's Royal Yacht Squadron in a race around the Isle of Wight in 1851.
Article content
Article content
The United States held the trophy until 1983, when the challenger Australia II ended the streak. Team New Zealand has dominated the recent regattas.
Article content
'As the three-time successive winner and defender of the America's Cup and along with the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron as current Trustee, we feel the responsibility to continue to drive the growth of the America's Cup event,' Team New Zealand chief executive Grant Dalton said.
Article content
'Although the America's Cup is the oldest trophy in international sport and the pinnacle of sailing, its Achilles heel has always been its lack of continuity,' he said. 'So this transformation now gives all teams collective stewardship and we are introducing a new executive management team to be headed up by a new independent CEO.'
Article content
In a move to contain costs, a cap of 75 million Euros ($87 million) has been imposed on each team competing in 2027. Teams returning from the last America's Cup will be required to retain the same hulls while new teams will have to either acquire an AC75 hull or build to the same specifications.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Oliver Dawson is taking his World Champs experience to upcoming Junior Worlds
How Oliver Dawson is taking his World Champs experience to upcoming Junior Worlds

CBC

time5 hours ago

  • CBC

How Oliver Dawson is taking his World Champs experience to upcoming Junior Worlds

Oliver Dawson captured a bronze medal at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships in Singapore as part of the Mixed 4 x100m Medley Relay, and he'll be looking for the chance to take the podium again in Romania this August, at the World Aquatics Junior Swimming Championships. He tells Brittany MacLean Campbell about his desire to win, his podium-producing walk-up song and even translates some Instagram captions from Gen Z to Millennial.

Canada's Auger-Aliassime rides powerful serve, advancing to Cincinnati Open quarterfinals
Canada's Auger-Aliassime rides powerful serve, advancing to Cincinnati Open quarterfinals

CBC

time19 hours ago

  • CBC

Canada's Auger-Aliassime rides powerful serve, advancing to Cincinnati Open quarterfinals

Canada's Felix Auger-Aliassime is through to the Cincinnati Open quarterfinals after a fourth-round win over Benjamin Bonzi of France. Auger-Aliassime rode his powerful serve to a 6-4, 6-3 victory on Wednesday, firing nine aces across the one-hour, 14-minute match. The 25-year-old from Montreal won all three available break points and 89 per cent of his first-serve points. Auger-Aliassime will face the top-seeded Jannik Sinner of Italy in the quarterfinals of the hard court tournament. Sinner is coming off a 6-4, 7-6(4) win over French qualifier Adrian Mannarino in the round of 16. Auger-Aliassime is the lone Canadian singles player still in the tournament, though Canadian doubles specialist Gabriela Dabrowski and her partner, New Zealand's Erin Routliffe, are set to play American Caty McNally and Linda Noskova of Czechia in third-round action on Thursday.

Polish-born NHL defenceman John Miszuk came to Canada as a refugee after the Second World War
Polish-born NHL defenceman John Miszuk came to Canada as a refugee after the Second World War

Globe and Mail

time21 hours ago

  • Globe and Mail

Polish-born NHL defenceman John Miszuk came to Canada as a refugee after the Second World War

John Miszuk, a refugee from war-torn Europe who only learned to skate at age 12, overcame a late start to forge an 18-season career in professional hockey. A dependable, stay-at-home defenceman, Mr. Miszuk (pronounced MISH-ook) gained a reputation for delivering punishing bodychecks, including once knocking out an opponent with a clean hit during a playoff game. Mr. Miszuk, who has died at age 84, was an original member of the expansion Philadelphia Flyers. He skated in 237 National Hockey League games for the Flyers, the Detroit Red Wings, the Chicago Black Hawks (now Blackhawks) and the Minnesota North Stars. The 6-foot-1 (185-centimetre), 192-pound (87-kilogram) defenceman rarely rushed the puck, preferring instead to pass to forwards. He was known for playing his man, pushing a rival from the front of the net, or knocking him into the boards. 'You don't have to be a great skater to play that style,' he said in 1976, 'which suits me fine because I'll never make it to the Ice Capades.' The defenceman joined the likes of Denmark's Poul Popiel and Stan Mikita, who was born in the Nazi client state of the Slovak Republic, as rare European-born players in the NHL in their era. As a teenager, Mr. Miszuk became determined to become a pro hockey player, much to the disappointment of his parents, who wanted him to learn a trade. 'I know it will be tough, but I've already beaten a lot of tough things,' he said then. 'When I was two, Hitler drove my parents out of Poland and into slave labour camps in Germany. When I came [to Canada] at nine, I had to learn English. A lot of people say I won't make the pros, but at least I'll give it a try. I'll never be satisfied if I don't give it a try.' Jan Miszuk was born on Sept. 29, 1940, in Naliboki, a Polish village occupied the previous year by the invading Red Army of the Soviet Union. His parents Maria (née Nowicki) and Kazimierz Miszuk were farmers who had the great misfortune of living in the heart of what historian Timothy Snyder would later describe as the Bloodlands. At the time of the boy's birth, the village, about 80 kilometres west of Minsk, had been absorbed into the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic. The German army swept through the village in 1941. The family was removed from their farm, and the parents were conscripted as forced labourers in Germany. They spent time in transit and relocation camps. Even Germany's surrender did not end their deprivations. 'We lived in seven different places in Germany,' the hockey player told the Philadelphia Inquirer newspaper in 1967. 'It wasn't pleasant. We had a family of six and you were lucky to get an apartment with two rooms. There wasn't much work either. My father had a tough time.' With the family farm once again in territory controlled by the Soviets, the family sought to build a new life outside of Europe. They were among 157,000 refugees known as displaced persons who came to Canada after the Second World War. The boy's father and an uncle left a resettlement camp at Bremerhaven, Germany, for Canada in the summer of 1950. In January, 1951, the 10-year-old boy joined his mother and two sisters, the younger one having been born in Germany, aboard the United States transport ship General C.C. Ballou, which carried about 400 passengers bound for Halifax. Many were miners and woodsmen seeking work in the Val d'Or region of Quebec and lumber camps in northern Ontario. The family settled in Hamilton, where the father found a job as a shipper with Mohawk Mills, which produced yarns for hosiery and underwear, before working as a labourer with the International Harvester Company. The mother became a dietary aide at St. Joseph's Hospital, a position she held for 31 years, while his older sister worked at a shoe factory. The boy became a newspaper carrier for the Hamilton Spectator, using his earnings to buy clothes and a bicycle while taking industrial courses at Central Secondary with plans to become an electrical engineer. He played baseball, softball, basketball and soccer, once scoring six goals to lead his Hamilton team to a 12-0 victory over a squad from Belleville to claim the Ontario bantam championship. Hockey was his favourite sport, though he was several years behind in his development compared to peers, and he thrived playing in leagues organized by the Hamilton Police Minor Athletic Association, which developed such future NHLers as Harry Howell and Murray Oliver, as well as Bill Friday, a referee whose father helped create the association. Mr. Miszuk played junior hockey for the Tiger Cubs and Red Wings in Hamilton before turning pro with the Edmonton Flyers in 1961. Under coach Norman (Bud) Poile, the Flyers won the Lester Patrick Cup as champions of the Western Hockey League. The defenceman made his NHL debut with Detroit during the 1963-64 campaign, seeing spot duty over 42 games as a fill-in for injured defencemen. 'Miszuk isn't the world's best skater,' said Red Wings coach and general manager Sid Abel, 'but he seems to block [opponents] out and get the job done.' He was traded to Chicago in 1964, playing in five regular-season and five playoff games over two seasons. He knocked out Detroit's Dean Prentice with a clean bodycheck into the boards in a 1966 semifinal game. At training camp in 1966, he lost a competition for the fifth defence spot on the Chicago roster to Ed Van Impe. At a time when the NHL only had six clubs, the late bloomer seemed doomed to spend most of his career in the minors, playing for such farm teams as the Pittsburgh Hornets, Buffalo Bisons and St. Louis Braves. The NHL doubled in size with expansion in 1967. The Philadelphia Flyers selected Mr. Miszuk in the ninth round, 51st overall, reuniting him with the expansion club's general manager, Mr. Poile. (Mr. Van Impe was taken by the team in the third round.) 'I'm really glad about going to a new club because I feel I'm finally going to get a real chance to show what I can do,' Mr. Miszuk said. 'I feel I have what it takes to be a frontline defenceman and that's the only way to play hockey.' When the Toronto Maple Leafs made their visit to the Spectrum in Philadelphia that season, Mr. Miszuk was the surprise scoring star, putting two pucks past Johnny Bower in the Toronto goal in the first period. He said later he could not remember ever having scored two goals in a game as a professional. He would record only five in the season. In his NHL career, he scored seven goals with 39 assists. He had three assists in 19 playoff games. After two seasons in Philadelphia, the defenceman was traded to Minnesota. In 1974, he signed a free-agent contract with the Michigan Stags of the World Hockey Association, a major-league rival to the NHL. The Detroit-based franchise failed at the gate and on the ice, becoming the Baltimore Blades midway through the season only to go bankrupt and fold. The next summer, he paid his own way from San Diego to try out with the WHA's Calgary Cowboys, only to have coach Joe Crozier tell him all roster spots were filled. He persisted, hanging around the club until injuries opened a spot. 'At first I didn't think I needed him,' the coach said, 'but by November he was my best defenceman. He isn't fancy, but he's steady.' Mr. Miszuk skated with the Cowboys for two seasons. He also played for the minor-league Iowa Stars, San Diego Gulls and San Francisco Shamrocks before ending his career in 1979 with the San Diego Hawks. He played games for charity for another two decades as a member of the touring NHL Alumni club. In 1998, he was added to the Copps Coliseum (now TD Coliseum) Wall of Fame in Hamilton, a display that has since been dismantled. After retiring from hockey, he and his wife became well-known Tim Hortons franchise owners and philanthropists. In 1992, they opened a new, 4,000-square-foot, 116-seat restaurant in downtown Hamilton, the coffee-and-donut chain's largest in Ontario. Prime Minister Kim Campbell attracted 300 people when she held a campaign town hall in the outlet the following year. Six years ago, he traveled 7,000 kilometres to visit his birthplace in what is now Belarus. The family farm had been burned to the ground during the war. He returned to Canada with an envelope filed with a handful of the bountiful soil his family once tilled. Mr. Miszuk died at home on July 28. He leaves his wife of 63 years, the former Cora Bakalech, whom he met while playing in Edmonton. He also leaves two sons, two daughters, five grandchildren, three great-grandchildren and two sisters. A grinder and journeyman for much of his career, the defenceman once appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated magazine. Under the headline 'Those big bad Black Hawks,' a photograph shows a furious Bobby Hull tangling with a rival player identifiable only by his No. 18 Red Wings sweater. The rookie was pleased with the outcome of his first NHL fight. 'You've got to show them you belong up here,' he told The Hockey News. 'I figure I was lucky to get a standoff, though. He's a pretty strong boy.' You can find more obituaries from The Globe and Mail here. To submit a memory about someone we have recently profiled on the Obituaries page, e-mail us at obit@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store