Weekend Herald

Is Oracle adding another string to their bow?

Wily Spithill hints at second boat with bits of Japan’s catamaran

- Dana Johannsen travelled to Bermuda thanks to Emirates Airline.

Oracle Team USA have ramped up the psychologi­cal warfare ahead of tomorrow’s opening races in the America’s Cup match.

After a fairly quiet build- up to their grudge match with Emirates Team New Zealand, which pits the victors and the vanquished from San Francisco against one another once more, Oracle stepped up the mind games in Bermuda yesterday.

Two shiny red bows were seen being carried across the courtyard from Oracle’s base to Team Japan’s neighbouri­ng boat shed, suggesting the Cup defenders may be working on a second boat.

Under the Cup rules, Oracle are allowed to build two boats, but up until this point there has been no sign of a second America’s Cup Class catamaran.

They have instead effectivel­y been running a two- boat testing programme through their close working relationsh­ip with Dean Barker’s Japanese syndicate. Yesterday’s developmen­ts suggest Oracle may cannibalis­e the Team Japan boat, by taking its hulls and fitting it with new bows to meet the ( very loose) constructe­d in country of origin rule. It’s unclear if this will serve as a back- up boat if USA- 17 sustains damage during the Cup match, or if it is a move- on from their first boat.

Equally, it could be Oracle throwing out a red herring to mess with the Kiwi camp on the eve of the big showdown.

Regardless of whether they are genuinely building a second boat to race in the Cup match, the decision to transport the hulls between bases in plain sight of the Team NZ compound was a calculated one designed to rattle the challenger.

There could be more antics to come in the traditiona­l preAmerica’s Cup press conference when Oracle skipper and renowned Kiwi- baiter Jimmy Spithill takes to the podium. The t wo- time America’s Cup- winning skipper set the tone in his appearance­s early on in the regatta, firing a few shots across the bows of Team NZ manage- ment and listing the litany of errors the Kiwi crew made during their two losses to Oracle in the round- robin.

Team NZ cyclor Andy Maloney said the crew aren’t too bothered by what Spithill has to say for the cameras. “They’re always going to try to play mind games with us. They can say what they want — we just think it’s pretty funny to be honest. It doesn’t really get to us young guys on the boat,” said Maloney, one of the four core members on board the New Zealand boat. “He’s a bit of a joker and he puts on a tough act, but when you meet him outside of competitio­n, that’s not actually really who he is – it’s just an act he puts on for the cameras.”

Some members of the two crews have been involved in some lightheart­ed social media banter during the week, after Spithill posted a cartoon depicting an American bald eagle swooping in and seizing upon a helpless kiwi.

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Emirates Team New Zealand’s sail is mirrored in a puddle as the team hauls out the boat in the Great Sound, in Hamilton, Bermuda.
Picture / AP Emirates Team New Zealand’s sail is mirrored in a puddle as the team hauls out the boat in the Great Sound, in Hamilton, Bermuda.
 ?? Picture / Team NZ ?? Oracle crew carry sections of their boat’s bows openly across the compound to Team Japan’s boatshed.
Picture / Team NZ Oracle crew carry sections of their boat’s bows openly across the compound to Team Japan’s boatshed.
 ??  ?? DanaJohann­sen at the 35th America’s Cup
DanaJohann­sen at the 35th America’s Cup
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