“They tried to match us jibe for jibe, tact for tact on the next two legs, but we were just able to hold on,” Andrew Mason said.
Clark added this win gave the team a huge advantage.
“We knew we had a mental edge,” he said. “They were expecting to go undefeated and crush us like they did in the round robins, but I think we just got in their head a little bit after the second win.”
The advantage proved to be irrelevant as Royal New Zealand won the final race and ended NHYC’s bid to win three straight Gov Cups.
“When we crossed that finish line in the last race, we thought we sailed as well as we probably could,” Andrew Mason said. “We just got beat by a very deserving opponent.”
King Harbor and NHYC will have another opportunity to race against Royal New Zealand in February, as the top two U.S. teams from the Gov Cup are invited to New Zealand for the International Youth Match Racing Series.
The second-place finish for NHYC is somewhat surprising for spectators because of a disappointing Day One, but coach Zander Kirkland knew the team would be fine.
“It’s really cool to see what a good month of preparation can do,” he said. “They got back from college and teamed up ... They went from not being experienced at all to almost winning a major event.”
Kirkland added Kinney will be a freshman at University of Redlands to play football and the others will go east to continue their sailing careers.
“Andrew is going to be a sophomore at Georgetown University and has a lot of sailing ahead of him,” he said. “Brooks is going to be a freshman at College of Charleston [in South Carolina] and he’s going to sail there. It’ll be fun to watch the college results through the year and see their names in the different events.”
Even though Andrew Mason will be ineligible to compete in next year’s Gov Cup due to his age, he leaves this regatta with more valuable things than a trophy.
“The way I’ve progressed and the guys on the team progressed ... we’ve matured as sailors and individuals,” he said of the Gov Cup experience.