Daily Times (Primos, PA)

New Zealand promises to do the ‘right thing’ with America’s Cup

- By Bernie Wilson

HAMILTON, BERMUDA » When the post-race formalitie­s ended, feisty Emirates Team New Zealand CEO Grant Dalton picked up the America’s Cup and carried it the few hundred yards to the team base.

Dalton, 59, seemed to struggle at first with the weight of the big silver trophy.

Perhaps it was a metaphor for what’s ahead for the scrappy Kiwis, who nearly folded after their nightmaris­h collapse in 2013 but rebounded to yank the oldest trophy in internatio­nal sports from tech tycoon Larry Ellison’s Oracle Team USA.

First, there was a blowout party at the team compound Monday evening.

In the next few weeks, Team New Zealand and the new Challenger of Record, Italy’s Luna Rossa Challenge, will start shaping the future of sailing’s marquee regatta.

“Rest assured, we’ll do the right thing,” Dalton said.

Other teams have said that before and then tried to twist the rules to hold onto the Auld Mug for as long as possible.

“To me, it is a privilege to hold the America’s Cup. It is not a right,” Dalton said.

“We will put in place rules and an organizati­on of our own in terms of Team New Zealand, that if we’re good enough, we’ll hold onto it. If we’re not good enough, we won’t. We will not try and impose our will on it to make sure we’ll hold onto it at all costs.”

The 36th America’s Cup will be held in Auckland, perhaps in 2021.

The biggest question is whether the Kiwis will stick with space-age catamarans that rise up on hydrofoils and speed across the tops of the waves with both hulls out of the water, or go back to monohulls.

Team New Zealand won this America’s Cup because it hit on a remarkably fast, innovative boat design on a budget of about $55 million. It was expertly crewed, led by Peter Burling, who at 26 became the youngest helmsman to win the America’s Cup, and skipper Glenn Ashby, an Australian who shaped the wingsail with an Xbox-like controller.

While many traditiona­lists would welcome a return to monohulls, foiling is the rage in sailing. The America’s Cup cats sail at nearly 50 mph. Burling is the world’s best apparent wind sailor who has won Olympic gold and silver medals in the 49er skiff class. Ashby, 39, is a multihull wiz.

In the last two America’s Cup matches, the races were shorter to fit into a TV window. The catamarans are hard to sail, requiring younger, more athletic sailors.

The Kiwis are known to want a much stricter nationalit­y rule, perhaps 80 percent.

In Monday’s Race 9 that sealed the resounding 7-1 victory, there were five Kiwis and Ashby aboard Team New Zealand’s catamaran. Oracle Team USA’s crew included no Americans. There were five Australian­s and one from Antigua.

New Zealand’s victory has already brought back Luna Rossa and is expected to bring back others who were at odds with Ellison.

Luna Rossa dropped out in 2015 after disagreein­g with a mid-course reduction in the size of the catamarans as a cost-cutting measure. Team New Zealand sided with the Italians, drawing the ire of organizers and casting it as a lone wolf, a role it embraced.

 ?? GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Emirates Team New Zealand Blair Tuke celebrates after defeating Oracle Team USA to win the America’s Cup Monday in Hamilton, Bermuda.
GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Emirates Team New Zealand Blair Tuke celebrates after defeating Oracle Team USA to win the America’s Cup Monday in Hamilton, Bermuda.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States