Herald on Sunday

CUP RUNNETH OVER

Team NZ could be facing seven challenger­s

- Paul Lewis paul.lewis@nzme.co.nz

The fifth challenger in the 36th America’s Cup in Auckland is thought to be US21 and the Long Beach Yacht Club — a second American challenge for an event looking as if it will be much beefier than many thought, with six challenges a possibilit­y and a slim chance of seven.

Make no mistake — though the new entries received recently by Emirates Team New Zealand are “late” challenges for the 2021 event, the conditions of entry (including US$4 million of fees and performanc­e bonds by the end of December) and the need to catch up on a difficult boat design mean these are no lightweigh­t, funsy, let’s-go-for-the-hell-of-it challenges. US$4m up front is, even for billionair­es, not chump change.

Friday’s confirmati­on of the Malta Altus challenge may also be shrugged off by some who think the tiny Mediterran­ean tax haven is likely only to come away with the title of smallest country ever to compete for the Cup (previously held by New Zealand, of course).

But not only does this challenge have the money, there are strong signals they are putting together a good sailing team involving some from Artemis — the 2013 and 2017 challenger not competing this time. Principal among them is said to be Iain Percy, the Olympic gold medallist and highly experience­d and respected America’s Cup sailor.

Malta might seem an odd contender but sprang out of the longantici­pated second Italian challenge. One version of the evolution of this challenge says at least one Italian yacht club wanted a large donation to be the challengin­g club — so the organisers hitched their wagon to the Royal Malta Yacht Club instead, through patron Pasquale Cataldi, head of Altus, who lives in Malta.

US21, now challengin­g through the Long Beach Yacht Club, are said to be the other syndicate accepted by ETNZ; they are headed by hot US match racer Taylor Canfield.

So that’s five challenger­s: Italy’s Luna Rossa (the challenger of record, COR), INEOS Team UK (Ben Ainslie), American Magic and the New York Yacht Club, plus Malta Altus (Altus being the real estate company behind the challenge).

The six other conditiona­l late entries still in front of ETNZ need to have certain requests granted before they can join the hunt — and those conditions also must be ratified by Luna Rossa as COR.

So it will be a little while yet — maybe the new year or after — before we know the identity of confirmed challenger­s for the 36th America’s Cup. However, the volume of barroom gossip/sailor speculatio­n is rising, pointing to some possibly left-field entries.

Like a joint China-Japan entry, yet another Italian entry or a Norwegian challenge; there are persistent rumours of a Dutch syndicate, too.

Perhaps the third Italian syndicate, said to be near Genoa, is the most likely. It may be that China and Japan are satisfied this time round with a World Series regatta (where points are gained for the challenger series in Auckland) ahead of the Cup. The first is in Sardinia next October.

However, if they can find the corporate backing, the Sino-Japanese team could become a reality, or they could still form single-country challenges, with the Chinese counted as more likely.

The big conclusion from all this, however, is that the 2021 Auckland regatta has grown in terms of the confidence shown in the event by other teams — given the high cost of entry and developing a new boat, the foiling monohull AC75.

Five challenger­s equal the number at Bermuda (although one of those 2017 challenger­s was Team Softbank Japan, propped up by Oracle Team USA giving them a design package and a helping hand for that regatta) and is way ahead of the 2013 Cup in San Francisco, when 10 syndicates originally challenged but most dropped out, leaving only two (Luna Rossa and Artemis) to race ETNZ.

Team NZ have played their cards close to their chests so far — but if six challenger­s sign up, that will be the most since the 11 at Valencia in 2007 when Alinghi were holders.

Six will also trigger the Government’s commitment to build an extra team base on Hobson wharf (there are five on Wynyard Point). If they get seven, a base will have to be found for that challenger somewhere else in Auckland.

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 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Iain Percy sailed for Artemis in 2013 and 2017, and may be part of the Malta Altus challenge in 2021.
Photo / Photosport Iain Percy sailed for Artemis in 2013 and 2017, and may be part of the Malta Altus challenge in 2021.
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