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Sunday, 18 May 2025

Bye Bye Burling. Peter Burling leaves Emirates Team New Zealand • Live Sail Die

Bye Bye Burling. Peter Burling leaves Emirates Team New Zealand • Live Sail Die 

In news that is set the shock the nation, and the sailing world, Three-Pete Peter Burling is leaving Emirates Team New Zealand.

How you feeling? Have you reached for the rum to take a shot yet?

Peter Burling rose to fame when he was handed the keys to Emirates Team New Zealand, taking over from Dean Barker.

He was at the helm when New Zealand won the 2017 (Bermuda), 2021 (Auckland) and 2024 (Barcelona) America’s Cup events.

He’s a unicorn of the sailing world – one of the best, but does he come as a packaged deal with long-time sailing partner Blair Tuke? Will we soon hear news that he is departing as well?

We have to remember one simple thing – pro sailors are professionals. Sailing is their job. It’s how they put a roof over their heads and food on their table, and a Rolex on their wrist

Pete’s decision to leave is one that we respect. He’s putting is faith in himself and pushing ahead with his own path.

But that doesn’t mean we won’t see him with an America’s Cup team in the future. We reckon (but don’t know for sure), that other teams will be lining up with their cheque books ready to sign one of the legends of the sport.

Three-Pete Peter Burling. Photo: Georgia Schofield / Live Sail Die

Official Statement on Peter Burling leaving Emirates Team New Zealand

Emirates Team New Zealand and Peter Burling have today confirmed that they have agreed to part ways ahead of the 38th America’s Cup.

Discussions by the team management and Burling have been ongoing since Barcelona, however an agreement was not able to be reached.

With the America’s Cup now shaping up to be contested in more regular cycles, the requirements on team members are changing. As the balance between design, simulation, boat build, testing and racing windows become more compressed, the integration of key sailors with the design team becomes more critical than ever.

Emirates Team New Zealand CEO Grant Dalton said: “Pete has been a central figure who has grown incredibly within Emirates Team New Zealand since he joined 10 years ago. We can all look back with great pride on what has been achieved, having enjoyed unprecedented success as a team with Pete at the helm,” continued Dalton.

“Winning the America’s Cup three times in a row was uncharted territory, but what has enabled winning in the past does not always equate to winning in the future, especially in much tighter America’s Cup cycles which require a dedicated and new approach for continued success.”

Sunday, 11 May 2025

Cayard and Spithill Join America’s Cup Hall of Fame Class of 2025 – XS Sailing

Cayard and Spithill Join America’s Cup Hall of Fame Class of 2025 – XS Sailing

by deleteme · Article

California sailing legend Paul Cayard, Australian-born racer Jimmy Spithill, and Susan Henn, the first known woman to compete in the America’s Cup, have been announced as the Herreshoff Marine Museum/America’s Cup Hall of Fame Class of 2025. Each sailor is recognized for their personal achievements and positive influence on the sport and in America’s Cup racing.

Paul Cayard has been in the sailing news for decades and has won seven world championships and the Whitbread Round the World Race, competed in seven America’s Cup campaigns, and is a two-time Olympian. He has also been highly active in official roles behind the sailing scene including board chair for the St. Francis Yacht Club, former executive director of US Olympic Sailing, and president of the International Star Class Association.

Cayard’s sailing career began aboard the El Toro at the age of 8.

© 2025 International Star Class

Cayard’s first America’s Cup campaign was as a sail trimmer aboard the 12 Meter Defender in 1983. He served as tactician in the 1987 America’s Cup in Fremantle, Australia. He went on to win multiple sailing events and championships including the International Star Class Worlds, the Maxi Yacht World Championship, and the 1997–98 Whitbread Round the World Race. In 2000 Cayard launched an America’s Cup campaign on behalf of his home club, the St. Francis Yacht Club, with his team AmericaOne. He is also an inductee of the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame.

Jimmy Spithill was just 4 years old when Australia II won the 1983 America’s Cup. His first boat was a race-ready dump-find, recovered from a dump and made ready for racing, and in 1989, together with his sister, he won the first race he ever entered. In 1997 he captained his crew to win the Australian High School Sailing Championship. That same year Spithill was named New South Wales Youth Yachtsman of the Year.

Jimmy Spithill during his last SailGP Skipper’s Press Conference.

© 2025 Kieran Cleeves/SailGP

In 1998 Spithill was recruited to race the Rolex Sydney Hobart race aboard Ragamuffin, and in 2000 at age 20, he became skipper of Young Australia for the 2000 America’s Cup in San Diego — the Cup’s youngest-ever helmsman. Subsequent America’s Cup campaigns followed, including roles with the USA’s American OneWorld and ORACLE teams, and Italy’s Luna Rossa. In 2024, Spithill retired at the conclusion of the America’s Cup in Barcelona but not before having led numerous teams aboard foiling trimarans, the foiling wing sail AC72 and AC50 catamarans, foiling AC75 monohulls, and the foiling F50s as captain for the US SailGP Team.

Susan Matilda Cunninghame-Graham Henn (1853-1911) is celebrated as the first woman to compete, and ultimately command a yacht, in the America’s Cup. Henn sailed aboard the 102-ft steel cutter Galatea in the 1886 match against the Mayflower. Henn and her husband Lt. William Henn sailed across the Atlantic for the race against Mayflower, proving Henn’s disposition for a life at sea. When her husband became ill during a race, Henn took charge of their yacht, once more demonstrating her exceptional sailing skills.

The story goes that Henn insisted on traveling with her pet monkey and raccoon to help keep the race timing. (We have no idea how or why this would work.)

© 2025 Harpers Weekly, August 1886

The America’s Cup Hall of Fame has inducted over 100 individuals since its founding in 1992. Candidates eligible for consideration include sailing team members, designers, builders, syndicate leaders, supporters, chroniclers, and other individuals of merit. Each nominee is judged on the basis of outstanding ability, international recognition, character, performance, and contributions to the America’s Cup. The members of the Selection Committee are intimate with the history and traditions of the America’s Cup and are committed to maintaining the integrity of the Hall of Fame.

Cayard, Spithill, and Henn will be honored on October 16 at the America’s Cup Hall of Fame Induction at the New York Yacht Club.

The post Cayard and Spithill Join America’s Cup Hall of Fame Class of 2025 appeared first on Latitude38.

Read more on Latitude 38



Friday, 2 May 2025

The last stand of Bob Baffert, horse racing's top trainer - Los Angeles Times

The last stand of Bob Baffert, horse racing's top trainer - Los Angeles Times
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The last stand of Bob Baffert, horse racing’s most successful and embattled trainer

Horse trainer Bob Baffert walks through the stable area during morning workouts for the Breeders' Cup World Championship.
Horse trainer Bob Baffert before the 2020 Breeders’ Cup at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky.
(Mark Humphrey / Associated Press)

In his claustrophobic and cluttered office at Santa Anita Barn 5, Bob Baffert, the hall of fame trainer, was pushing papers and moving stacks, hunting for a faded photo of his 17-year-old self aboard a long-forgotten quarter horse from a small racing circuit in Arizona.

He won his first race on that 1970 afternoon — but not as a trainer.

“See, I bet you didn’t know I was a jockey?” Baffert said. “You wouldn’t know it now.”

No, you wouldn’t.

Baffert parlayed a hobby as a 5-foot-9 jockey into a job as a quarter-horse conditioner into a career as a thoroughbred trainer before jumping onto the highest pedestal of horse racing and becoming the most recognizable name in the sport. Two Triple Crown winners and a signature shock of white hair will do that for a man.

Now 68, Baffert is seeing his livelihood and reputation under attack after a series of medication infractions have made him an outcast to some in the industry and a pariah to many more outside of it. He’s the person few in the business want to talk about, but everyone wants to hear about.

“It’s truly painful when you know what the truth is,” Baffert told The Times earlier this week in his first interview on the subject since May. “There have been so many false narratives that have come up and the hearing process isn’t even done yet. The consolation is knowing the truth will come out as the process plays out.

Wednesday, 30 April 2025

Alberta oil and gas companies could install solar panels to avoid cleanup costs | The Narwhal

Alberta oil and gas companies could install solar panels to avoid cleanup costs | The Narwhal

Oil and gas companies could avoid full reclamation of old well sites in Alberta if they put renewable energy projects on the disturbed land.

That’s one of several dozen ideas offered in a new report commissioned by the Alberta government. The reports looks at how to manage the province’s persistent oil and gas pollution problem, and contrasts sharply with moves by the same government to restrict renewable energy following a seven-month moratorium, and ensure companies provide full clean-up costs upfront for wind and solar projects. 

The report, written by current Alberta Energy Regulator board member and long-time industry insider David Yager, says oil and gas well sites could be “utilized for solar power generation instead of undergoing full reclamation, delivering both environmental and economic benefits.”

Critics say the idea contradicts other government policies — especially around renewables, which could make it unrealistic. 

“They justified that moratorium and the restrictions on the basis of end-of-life cleanup. Now they’re saying that, in a way, renewables could be used to help the oil and gas industry avoid its reclamation,” Phillip Meintzer, a spokesperson for the Coalition for Responsible Energy, said in an interview. 

“Would someone even be allowed to put renewables on these well sites because of the restrictions that were put in place? I don’t know,” he said. The coalition, made up of environmental organizations, focuses on energy regulation. 

It’s unclear how much remediation a company could avoid by installing renewables on its leases and is only one of many recommendations and ideas presented in the report. Meintzer wants more details to understand what’s on the table and just how much cleanup a company could avoid. 

Meintzer says his organization is focusing on ensuring the polluter pays principle — the idea that a company is responsible for cleaning up the mess it leaves behind — is upheld and costs are not downloaded on to taxpayers. 

Sunday, 27 April 2025

A century ago, the Victoria Cougars won the Stanley Cup in Oak Bay - Greater Victoria News

A century ago, the Victoria Cougars won the Stanley Cup in Oak Bay - Greater Victoria News

A century ago, the Victoria Cougars won the Stanley Cup in Oak Bay

Oak Bay is not a mere footnote in hockey history; it offers an exciting chapter of innovation and triumph

When ice hockey’s greatest prize, the storied Stanley Cup, visits Oak Bay in March this year, local sports fans will celebrate its homecoming, a century in the making, recalling when our capital city played a starring role in Canada's professional ice hockey development. On March 30, 1925, the Victoria Cougars triumphed over the defending champion Montreal Canadiens, to win Lord Stanley’s glittering silver bowl—hockey’s holy grail—in front of thousands of boisterous fans in the Patrick Arena on Cadboro Bay Road, right here in Oak Bay.  

For those in the know, Oak Bay is not a mere footnote in hockey history, but offers a fulsome and exciting chapter of innovation and triumph during the sport’s formative years. Several exciting hockey ‘firsts’ happened here, including the introduction of the forward pass and the blueline. Oak Bay was once home to the world’s first purpose-built indoor artificial ice hockey rink and hosted the first professional hockey game played on artificial ice in Canada.  

That story begins with two famous brothers, Lester and Frank Patrick, both skilled hockey players, innovators and ambitious businessmen, who along with their father Joseph, founded the Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA) in 1911. To support their new league, the Patrick family built the 4,200-seat Patrick Arena at the corner of Cadboro Bay Road and Epworth Street (across from today’s Oak Bay High School) and the 10,500-seat Denman Arena on West Georgia Street in Vancouver—both constructed within a year of announcing their plans for the new league. The arena cost over $100,000, opened to great fanfare on Christmas Day 1911, and hosted the first game of the new PCHA on January 2, 1912, between the Victoria and New Westminster teams. A newspaper called it a spectacle featuring “the fastest men and the fastest game on earth.”  

stanleycupob-3
The 1924-1925 Victoria Cougars ice hockey team were Stanley Cup champions. Courtesy of B.C Archives

With the PCHA as their experimental laboratory, the Patrick brothers brought many innovations to ice hockey, including numbering players’ jerseys, awarding assists, substituting players ‘on the fly,’ as well as introducing a farm system and pioneering a post-season playoff format. They also invented the penalty shot, first scored by Victoria player Tommy Dunderdale during an away game against the Vancouver Millionaires at the Denman Arena in 1921. 

Victoria’s PCHA team, now famously remembered under the Cougars’ moniker, was known by various names over the years, both official and unofficial, including the “Senators,” “Aristocrats” and “Capitals.” 

The PCHA operated from 1911 to 1924, until merging with the Western Canada Hockey League. Under this league’s banner, the Victoria Cougars competed for and won the Stanley Cup, already then well established as ice hockey’s most prestigious prize. 

Originally costing ten pounds sterling, and crafted by a British silversmith, the Stanley Cup is the oldest trophy in North American professional sports. Steeped in myths and legends intertwined with those of Canada itself, it was commissioned in 1892 by Lord Stanley of Preston, then serving as Governor General of the Dominion of Canada. He gifted it as an annual prize awarded to Canada's top amateur ice hockey team. Professional hockey teams became eligible to win it in 1906. From 1915 to 1926, the champion teams of the two main professional hockey leagues at the time, the National Hockey Association/National Hockey League and the Pacific Coast Hockey Association/Western Canada Hockey League competed with each other for Cup glory.  

During the 1924-25 Western Canada Hockey League season, the Victoria Cougars finished third out of six teams in 28 regular season games, behind the Calgary Tigers and the Saskatoon Sheiks. In the first two playoff rounds, the Cougars beat both Saskatoon and Calgary to advance, as WCHL league champions, to the Stanley Cup final against the defending champions Montreal Canadiens from the NHL. 

The Cup final that year was a best-of-five format, and the Cougars had ‘home ice advantage’ as all games were played on the West Coast. Three of the four games were held in Oak Bay’s arena, with one played in front of an overcapacity crowd of 11,000 at the Denman Arena in Vancouver. 

The Cougars won the first two games, 5-2 and 3-1 respectively, before the Canadiens mounted a comeback, notching a win in the third game 4-2. The fifth and final game was played to a sold-out crowd in Oak Bay, who cheered on the Cougars to a thrilling and decisive 6-1 victory, winning the series and the Stanley Cup three games to one. The Daily Colonist proudly proclaimed: “Cougars Win Stanley Cup. Victoria’s Own Are World Hockey Champions.” 

The Victoria Cougars were both the last non-NHL team and most recent British Columbia team to win the Stanley Cup. They made it to the Cup final again in 1926 but failed to repeat as champions, losing to the Montreal Maroons at the newly built Forum in Montreal. Shortly afterwards, the team was sold and moved to the U.S., initially becoming the Detroit Cougars, then the Falcons and finally the Detroit Red Wings, one of the NHL’s famous “Original Six” franchises, in 1932.  

The Patrick Arena burnt to the ground on Remembrance Day 1929 in a fire that was likely deliberately set. Except for a commemorative banner honouring the 1924-25 Victoria Cougars which proudly hangs from the rafters of the Memorial Centre downtown, for decades little trace of Oak Bay’s starring role in hockey history remained until 2001, when a cairn was installed on the grounds of Oak Bay High School engraved with an image of the Stanley Cup and a description of our community’s pioneering role. 

cougarsob
In 2001, a cairn was installed on the grounds of Oak Bay High School to commemorate the 1925 Victoria Cougars’ Stanley Cup victory and Oak Bay’s pioneering role in ice hockey history. Ivan Watson

The 1925 Victoria Cougars have been inducted into the Greater Victoria and B.C. Sports Halls of Fame. Of all the memorable moments in Vancouver Island sporting history, their Stanley Cup victory over the Montreal Canadiens remains the greatest. Even today, Oak Bay residents who live by the former arena site occasionally dig up an old beaten-up hockey puck or two while tending to their garden—and in doing so discover a keepsake of an errant ‘slapshot from the past,’ from a bygone era when Oak Bay was ‘centre ice’ of the hockey universe, and the 1925 Stanley Cup winning Cougars its greatest champions.  

The Victoria Hockey Legacy Society is planning a “Century Celebration” in honour of the 1925 Victoria Cougars, from March 29 – 30. For info, visit: vhls.ca. Other events are being planned across the region for March 28-30.

This article is from the spring edition of Tweed.

Wednesday, 23 April 2025

Federal Liberals surging in B.C. in ways not seen since Trudeau-mania: poll - Greater Victoria News

Federal Liberals surging in B.C. in ways not seen since Trudeau-mania: poll - Greater Victoria News
Once dominated by the federal New Democrats, the southern tip of Vancouver Island could see spots of federal Liberal red, while its northern parts could turn federal Conservative blue
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Liberal Party of Canada Leader Mark Carney speaks to a packed ballroom at the Sheraton Vancouver Airport Hotel in Richmond on Monday, April 7. It was his second day in B.C., and second rally in the province.

Federal Liberal Leader Mark Carney may have left B.C. after a two-day swing, including a stop in Richmond Monday night, but a poll released Tuesday points to solidifying strength in Canada's most western province not seen since the Trudeau-mania of the late 1960s.

The Research Co. poll shows the federal Liberals (44 per cent) leading the federal Conservatives under Pierre Poilievre by six points in B.C. Nationally, the federal Liberals are leading the Conservatives 44 per cent to 36 per cent.

"We have to go back to 1968 to have a level of support for the Liberals similar to what they have right now," Mario Canseco, president of Research Co., said. "In the first Trudeau-mania election, they got 42 per cent of the vote in B.C. They are at 44 per cent, so it's historic."

Canseco added that the current support for the federal Liberals puts them ahead of their 2015 showing when they won 35 per cent of the popular vote and picked up seats in areas that had not voted for the federal Liberals in decades, such as Kelowna. 

"(The) explanation is essentially the collapse of the NDP vote across the country and that includes British Columbia," Canseco said. "They are in the single digits everywhere." 

Nationally, the federal New Democrats are polling at eight per cent, equal to their level of support in British Columbia. That means that New Democrats are on pace to win less than half of their popular vote (17 per cent) in 2021. 

Canseco said some New Democratic voters are going to the Conservatives. "But many of them are going to the Liberals and it raises the question about the viability of some long-term incumbents," he said. 

New Democrats held 24 seats at dissolution, with 12 of those in British Columbia, including five seats on Vancouver Island. A sixth New Democrat MP -- Randall Garrison -- retired before dissolution. Four incumbents (Lisa Marie Barron, Laurel Collins, Gord Johns and Alistair MacGregor) are running again in their Vancouver Island ridings, while Rachel Blaney won't be running in North Island-Powell River. 

Carney Sunday campaigned in Collins' riding of Victoria, then made an environmental announcement in Saanich-Gulf Islands, the riding of long-time federal Green MP Elizabeth.

Historically, federal Liberals have done well in Metro Vancouver with federal Conservatives and federal New Democrats competing against each other in parts of the province, including Vancouver Island. 

Canseco said Carney is fishing in NDP and Green waters because the Liberals sense an opportunity to have a massive majority government based on their large and growing leads in Ontario and Quebec. 

"It would be rare to see pockets of (federal Liberal red) on (Vancouver Island), but if you start to see this trend of the vote for the NDP dropping and the vote for the Liberals rising, you could see some red," he said. "But it also raises the question of an interesting strategic voting decision, particularly in the north (of Vancouver Island)."

If New Democratic support in the northern half of Vancouver Island drops with the federal Liberals gaining, federal Conservatives, including controversial candidate Aaron Gunn, could end up as winners, he said. 

In other words, surging Liberals could actually benefit federal Conservatives on northern Vancouver Island by taking away support for New Democrats. "I think that is a real possibility in the north," Canseco said. 

Conservatives, for their part, have identified Vancouver Island, along with parts of B.C.'s interior for pick-ups and incumbent federal New Democrats on northern Vancouver Island, in other words, appear in trouble, according to available polls. Their incumbency, in other words, might make no difference, just as it did not make any difference for the former B.C. United MLAs who ran as independents during last year's provincial election. 

"I think that's a good analogy," he said. He added that in Ontario, New Democrats finished with more seats than the provincial Liberals, even though they won fewer votes, because of their local connections. "But this one (election) is different, because it is ultimately a referendum on Trump," he said. 

This point shines through when looking at the issues most important to voters. According to the survey, three-in-ten likely voters (31 per cent, up one per cent) think Canada-U.S. relations to be the most important issue facing the country. Far fewer choose the economy and jobs (19 per cent, minus one per cent), housing, homelessness and poverty (18 per cent, up one per cent), health care (11 per cent, up two) and immigration (five per cent, minus two per cent).

Canseco said these figures play to Carney's strengths, especially among Canadians 55 years and older. Among that age cohort, 40 per cent consider U.S.-Canada relations the most important issue. The issue becomes less important for younger voters, with whom Conservatives are still connecting, Canseco said. 

"But you can't win with that group," he said. "You need to be able to bridge the gap with (voters 55 years and older)," Canseco said. He added that Conservatives tried to do that to a degree with his promise to increase the annual limit on contributions to the tax-free savings account, but only for funds invested in Canadian companies.

"But this group (55 years and older) is completely galvanized by the Trump thing, Canada-U.S. relations and the effect it will have on the economy and jobs," Canseco said. He added that Poilievre needs to discuss what the country would look like if he were Trump's rival. "That is also part of what changed things," he said. "It was fairly easy for Poilievre to go out there and say, 'Justin Trudeau is not respect. This is why we are being called the 51st state." 

But Trump's tone toward Canada has changed since Carney has become prime minister by replacing Trudeau as federal Liberal leader. "He (Poilievre) can't say, 'well, Carney is not respected.'" 

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