SailGP 2025 Results: Updated Race results
Welcome to the latest SailGP 2025 results. It includes race outcomes and highlights from each event in the 2025 SailGP season. If you are like me – a SailGP tragic, you’ll find all the key updates here.
I follow SailGP because it’s more than just sailing – it’s awesome. The boats look like something out of Star Trek. They’re super fast (clocking speeds of up to 90 km per hour), the competition is intense, and every event is a race in itself. I update this page regularly.
#5 Spain SailGP Team wins San Francisco
March 23. Spain has triumphed once again in San Francisco, defeating NorthStar Canada (2nd) and France (3rd) to become the fifth winner in five events this season. Despite a catastrophic wing collapse at the start of race seven, Australia moves into first overall. All athletes are accounted for with no injuries on-board. The cause of the incident is not yet known.
In a nail-biting winner-takes-all final race, France hit the line flying, surging ahead to win the sprint to mark one. But after splitting the course at the second gate, Spain raced away with the lead, sweeping the line in first ahead of Canada in second and Les Bleus in third.
RACE MEDIA
#4 Canada SailGP win Los Angeles
March 17, 2025 – Los Angeles | Northstar Canada broke a two-year drought with a landmark victory in the 2025 SailGP season, securing their first win since Christchurch in March 2023. Led by double Olympic gold medalist Giles Scott, the team outpaced powerhouse rivals New Zealand and Australia, who finished second and third, respectively. Their triumph marks the fourth different winner in as many events this season, underscoring the intensifying competition in the Rolex SailGP Championship.
Reflecting on the team’s performance, Scott said, “I think we sailed really well all weekend. We got off the water yesterday second overall, and we still felt really frustrated. We put it together today.”
RACE MEDIA
#3 Great Britain SailGP win Sydney
February 9. The Emirates Great Britain SailGP Team have claimed their inaugural 2025 Season victory on Championship Sunday in Sydney. The win was also a first for driver Dylan Fletcher after a hard-fought three-boat showdown against the Northstar Canada SailGP Team, who finished second, and hometown favourites Australia in third. Unfortunately for the Kiwis, no race win on Aussie soil.
Much of the Final saw Fletcher jostle for first with the man he replaced at the start of the season – Canadian driver and double Olympic gold medalist Giles Scott. Fletcher claimed a narrow defeat, rounding the last mark just meters ahead of Scott to claim victory in front of thousands of cheering fans watching from Shark Island and the official spectator fleet.
RACE MEDIA
#2 Aussies win SailGP Auckland
January 19. The ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix came to a dramatic close with an Australian win on rival waters. After delivering a racing master class across the weekend, the Flying Roo claimed a well-deserved victory in a Final between three of the league’s most dominant teams – Australia, Spain and Emirates GBR.
Driver Tom Slingsby said, “This win means so much to us – the team set us up so well. We had an amazing last race. It felt like we were fighting the British on the first leg, and then the Spanish caught us on the final, upwind leg. They [Spain] had chosen to sort of concede and take a second, but they went for it and went for the win, and we managed to get around them.” As a kiwi that hurt!
RACE MEDIA
#1 New Zealand wins in Dubai
November 24, 2024. Dubai, UAE — Picking up where they left off in January, Peter Burling’s ‘Black Foils’ have claimed their third consecutive win in the UAE, soaring ahead of the Emirates Great Britain and U.S. SailGP Team on the pristine waters of Port Mina Rashid. The Black Foils are back-to-back-winners of the Rolex SailGP Championship’s season-opening event.
New Zealand Driver Peter Burling said, “Awesome play from the group – I mean as a new team to get to the final this week – it’s one of the hardest things in this light air. And we really pulled it out this season and got a great start and hit it right at mark one. I made a bad choice making it a bit more complicated – taking a right turn – which put us right back in the pack but then it was clean, and it was good to race from there to take a win.”