Humblement, je pense que cette analyse est fausse. Sur n'importe quel bateau normal, oui c'etait justifié d'aller ainsi complètement à droite. Mais sur les AC72 où les virements sont hyper couteux, il valait mieux choisir la trajectoire permettant de rester hors courant le plus longtemps possible avant la "boundary", MAIS SUR UN SEUL BORD! Ce qu'ont fait les Kiwis... Alors que pour bien faire et rester aussi longtemps (en termes de gain au vent), Oracle devait faire 3 virements contre un seul pour TNZ!!!“Foiling tack!” called Oracle Team USA’s tactician John Kostecki as Oracle’s big, black 17 sped toward the first leeward gate with a comfortable lead in Race 5 of America’s Cup 34. As he said it, armchair tacticians and fans of the American team were probably asking the obvious: “Why would you give up your lead, especially with a high-risk maneuver you have not perfected?”
It was this decisive and surprising move of the day that instantly gutted their lead and turned control of the race over to Emirates Team New Zealand. Was it the wrong move? Well, not really. It may be the only move they have left in their arsenal. Hampered by inferior upwind speed and an inability to tack from speed to speed, Oracle can not effectively engage with Emirates Team New Zealand. Their only strategy, as Kostecki alluded to after winning Race 4, is to sail around the racecourse as fast as possible.
What he means is that the only way Oracle can out-sail the New Zealanders is to not sail against them, and instead, sail around the track as fast as possible, using every little physical advantage they can—current and geographic windshifts.
Kostecki wanted the immediate gain of the Alcatraz Cone. If they’d gotten it they could have had that much more of a cushion to sail the course as they wish. Unfortunately, as everyone witnessed, the team’s foiling tack around the mark did not work. They went into the turn slower than they needed, the port hull touched down, and their speed plummeted. Their inability to execute a maneuver under pressure failed them once again.
As they sailed toward the Alcatraz Cone with the Kiwis on their hip they couldn’t find a mode that worked, as Kostecki could be heard from the onboard audio feed saying, “We’re a lot lower than them.”
By the time they approached the outside boundary, ETNZ was coming at them with pace, and Oracle’s right-hand advantage was suddenly in jeopardy. As soon as skipper Dean Barker footed off and passed behind he was on his way to owning the outer boundary and the starboard advantage. The race was all theirs.
“The cone was very favored,” said ETNZ tactician Ray Davies. “It’s a race to get in there. We were going to tack early anyway. It gave us a little opportunity, but the boat is seriously going well upwind so that makes it easier for me.”
- premier virement à la bouée
- 2eme virement à la boundary forcement plus vite parce qu'on "coupe le triangle"
- 3eme virement juste avant de retomber dans le courant (à peu près lorsqu'ils croisent TNZ).
Avec un monocoque, pas de probleme. Avec un AC72, même avec un bon virement en bas, ils étaient morts.
=> Grosse erreur de Kosteki, oui il faut le dire. Peut-être a-t'il du mal à tactiquer + wincher, faut reconnaitre que c'est complètement pas naturel. Ou alors il ne réussit pas à s'adapter aux AC72 qui sortent complètement de tout ce qu'on connait.
Donc perso je parie que Kosteki sera remplacé (allez je parie une bière aux Timbrés), et je m'avance un peu en imaginant Ben Ainsly à la tactique.... plutot que RC. Mais bon le scénario RC est possible....
Qu'en pensez-vous?
PS: l'histoire du triangle nécessiterait un schéma, mais j'ai pas trouvé comment faire