Misplaced Pages

Louis Vuitton Cup

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
See also: America's Cup
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (January 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Challenger Selection Series for the America's Cup
Team New Zealand at the 2013 Louis Vuitton Cup

The Louis Vuitton Cup is the name of the Challenger Selection Series sailing competition from 1983, named after its sponsor, Louis Vuitton. The winner of the competition became the challenger to compete with the defender of the America's Cup. The competition for the 2017 America's Cup changed format and name to the Louis Vuitton Challenger’s Trophy. The following series, in 2021, was named the Prada Cup after its new sponsor. In 2024 the challenger selection series will again be named after Louis Vuitton. Five out of the nine winners of the Louis Vuitton Cup competitions subsequently won the America's Cup itself.

History

In 1970, for the first time in America's Cup history, multiple "international" challengers competed for the right to challenge the New York Yacht Club, the defender of the America's Cup (the key word being "international": in 1964, for example, two British challengers competed for the right to challenge the NYYC.)

For the 1983 America's Cup match, the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron, the "Challenger of Record", contracted with New York Yacht Club member, Paul Madden, to create "The Challenger's Cup". Paul Madden then contracted with Louis Vuitton to be the first sponsor of this Cup series that led up to the main event. Louis Vuitton offered a trophy to the winner of the challenger selection series; the idea was Paul Madden's, but is generally credited to Bruno Trouble, a French yachtsman. The initial Louis Vuitton Cup was contested off Newport, United States, with Australia II prevailing, thereby earning the right to meet the NYYC’s defending yacht Liberty in that year’s America’s Cup.

With the exception of the America's Cup races in 1988 and 2010, the winner of the Louis Vuitton Cup has been awarded the right to challenge the current defender for the America's Cup. During the 1992 and 1995 regattas Citizen Watch offered a trophy to the winner of the defender selection series (the Citizen Cup) as the defense’s counterpart to the Louis Vuitton cup.

Due to the large number of challengers in recent decades the Louis Vuitton Cup has had to eliminate challengers in two phases. A round-robin points accruing phase, and then a pair of semi-finals involving the top four, followed by a final between the top two. The semi-finals and finals are a best of nine races between two boats.

Between the 2004 and 2007 Cups, Louis Vuitton sponsored thirteen "acts" of competition, with the first three acts not awarding points toward rankings. Some challengers do not enter the competition by the start of the acts. Rules for the current races (2005–2007) stipulate that ranking points awarded for each act of competition will increase as they get closer to the final. For acts taking place in 2005, standard points were awarded, with 11 ranking points for a first-place finish, and points awarded decreasing based on placing. Acts in 2006 double the points, with 22 ranking points for first place, and the final act 13 which takes place in 2007 will award triple points, giving 33 points to the winner.

History shows that the Louis Vuitton Cup series enhances the chances of the challenger due to the intense racing against different opponents which improves the tactics and crew co-ordination of the winner. Differences in boat speed are becoming less and less, placing an even greater premium on reliability, superior tactics, and crewing. In the weeks leading up to the America's Cup competition, the defender has to mainly practice using in-house racing which can never be as intense as real competition.

In July 2007, Louis Vuitton announced termination of all its sponsorship activities associated with the America's Cup after 25 years of involvement, arguing the organisation of the America's Cup was taken over by business under the rule of Ernesto Bertarelli, leader of Alinghi, winner in 2003. Louis Vuitton instead sponsored the Louis Vuitton Pacific Series and Louis Vuitton Trophy.

After Oracle Racing won the America's Cup for the Golden Gate Yacht Club in the 2010 Deed-of-Gift race against Alinghi, Louis Vuitton again sponsored the challenger series for the 34th America's Cup which was held in 2013 on the San Francisco Bay.

Louis Vuitton also sponsored the heats to the 2013 and 2017 America's Cups; These "world series" were sailed in smaller 45 ft wingsail catamarans, the AC45. Participation was compulsory to take part in the Louis Vuitton Cup.

Louis Vuitton Cup results

Rule Year Venue Winning club Winning syndicate Losing club Losing syndicate Score
IYRU 12mR 1983 Newport, United States Royal Perth Yacht Club Australia America's Cup Challenge '83 (Australia II), KA-6 Royal Burnham Yacht Club United Kingdom Victory Challenge (Victory '83) 4–1
1987 Fremantle, Australia San Diego Yacht Club United States Sail America Foundation, US-55 Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron New Zealand New Zealand Challenge 4–1
1988 uncontested, America's Cup challenger of record only
IACC 1992 San Diego, United States Compagnia della Vela di Venezia Italy Il Moro di Venezia, ITA-16 Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron New Zealand New Zealand Challenge 5–3
1995 San Diego, United States Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron New Zealand Team New Zealand, NZL-32 Southern Cross Yacht Club Australia One Australia 5–1
2000 Auckland, New Zealand Yacht Club Punta Ala Italy Prada Challenge, ITA-45 St. Francis Yacht Club United States AmericaOne 5–4
2003 Auckland, New Zealand Société Nautique de Genève Switzerland Alinghi, SUI-64 Golden Gate Yacht Club United States BMW Oracle 5–1
2007 Valencia, Spain Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron New Zealand Emirates Team New Zealand, NZL-92 Yacht Club Italiano Italy Luna Rossa Challenge 5–0
2010 uncontested, America's Cup challenger of record only
AC72 2013 San Francisco, United States Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron New Zealand Emirates Team New Zealand, Aotearoa Circolo della Vela Sicilia Italy Luna Rossa Challenge 7–1
AC50 2017 Great Sound, Bermuda Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron New Zealand Emirates Team New Zealand, New Zealand Kungliga Svenska Segelsällskapet Sweden Artemis Racing, Magic Blue 5–2
AC75 2021 different sponsor see 2021 Prada Cup
2024 Barcelona, Spain  Royal Yacht Squadron United Kingdom INEOS Britannia Circolo della Vela Sicilia Italy Luna Rossa Challenge 7-4
indicates: won that year's America's Cup

See also

References

  1. Ryder, Bethan (20 May 2017). "America's Cup: Louis Vuitton unveils new Challenger's Cup trophy created by Thomas Lyte". The Telegraph.
  2. "Prada to replace Louis Vuitton as key America's Cup naming sponsor - report". Stuff. 20 September 2017. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  3. Krumnacker, Lars (24 October 2023). "LOUIS VUITTON wird Titelsponsor 37. Louis Vuitton America's Cup Barcelona - SEGEL.DE". Das deutsche Segelportal seit 1996 (in German). Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  4. « Louis-Vuitton se retire de la Coupe de l'America, jugée trop commerciale », Le Monde, 13 July 2007.
  5. « www.americascup.com/en/Discover/Race-Format/Louis-Vuitton-Cup » Archived 19 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved 17 April 2012

External links

America's Cup
Editions
Challenger Selection Series
Herbert Pell Cup (1970–1980)
Louis Vuitton Cup (1983–2017 & 2024)
Prada Cup (2021)
Defender Selection Series
Citizen Cup (1992–1995)
Youth America's Cup
Women's America's Cup
Class
Related
Media
Categories: