Dalton: Three properly-funded Cup challenges
Grant Dalton has all but confirmed there will be just three seriouslyfunded challengers for the 2021 America’s Cup in Auckland.
Challenger of record Luna Rossa, Ben Ainslie’s Ineos Team UK and the New York Yacht club are the big players confirmed for the monohull event.
There are enough bases for three more challengers at the Auckland waterfront but they are unlikely to be filled.
With the other challenger prospect also coming from America, the regatta may feature teams from just four countries. This compares unfavourably, so far, with last year’s multihull regatta in Bermuda, which featured holders Oracle Team USA and challengers from five other countries.
After yesterday’s broadcasting rights announcement, Emirates Team New Zealand boss Dalton tried to blame previous Cup organisers for allowing the prestige of the event to decline. In particular, he said using subscriber services to cover the Cup had shrunk the world audience.
“The other teams which come in will be slightly smaller,” Dalton said.
“We’ve proved it is not an impediment to winning.
“We’ve always been a small team. I know who they are — if they get the right people they will be a threat as well.”
“One of the things I’m finding is there is a lot of damage in the cup, more than I expected. We’ve got a bit of rebuilding to do.”
A second American challenger named Team USA21 is reportedly trying to get its entry in by June, to avoid the US$1 million fee for giving later notice. Team USA21 is selfdescribed as a “start-up”, and still can’t announce where its home base would be until backers are found. In the interviews with the Radio
Sport Breakfast and Newstalk ZB’s Mike Hosking, Dalton was unable to give any definitive statement on further entries, but said it was up to teams to make their own announcements.
“Three of those [prospective teams he knows of], I would rate as possibly real,” said Dalton, before suggesting that could be an overly-optimistic assessment.
Dalton talked up the challenge from Ainslie — he said the famous Brit failed in last year’s Bermuda America’s Cup because he did not have the “right people” on board and had since rectified that.