In the meantime a couple of teams were entertaining the crowds with speed runs along the sea wall, foiling as they were pulled behind their chase boats.
It was all the foiling the crowds would see on the first day unfortunately.
The Race Committee endeavoured to set a course suitable for racing shifting the course further down the river to try to find some more breeze to get a second start away.
Eventually the official race window closed without another start, but as insurance the race committee started a "substitute race" which will be used to count only if racing cannot be completed tomorrow.
Conditions once the substitute race began could be described as painfully race-able, with current ruling the race course, and a small gennaker twist stalled the kiwi boat long enough to put it out of the running in the race.
"A tough and long day at the office today for us," said skipper Glenn Ashby.
"With extreme current and sloppy water in the Hudson mixed with not a lot of breeze made sailing really testing for not only the sailors but also the race committee."
"But you put the day behind you and look forward to tomorrow with good breeze and the entire regatta to play for."
The substitute race will only count for points if three races cannot be raced tomorrow. But with a forecast of 14- 18 knots, the final day or Louis Vuitton America's Cup World Series New York looks set to be a dramatic one.