New Straits Times

KIWI PEDALLING WAY TO SUCCESS

Emirates Team New Zealand use ‘cyclors’ power in America’s Cup quest

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SAILING skill isn’t enough to win the new-age America’s Cup, and the crews dueling on Bermuda’s Great Sound are calling on exceptiona­l talents from a range of sports.

Strength, stamina and agility are vital for the six-man crews racing the spectacula­r America’s Cup catamarans.

The constant effort of the grinders — or in the case of Emirates Team New Zealand the “cyclors” — is all that powers the hydraulics necessary to control the craft.

The hydraulic pressure allows the constant adjustment­s to massive fixed-wing sail and to the foils that keep the twin hulls “flying” at maximum speed above the water.

With their innovative use of cycle-style pedals — rather than traditiona­l arm-power — New Zealand turned to Olympic cycling medalist Simon van Velthooven.

He has adapted from life in the velodrome, but says the experience is vastly different.

“There’s cranks, that’s about it really,” he says of the similariti­es between a bicycle and the onboard cycling stations.

“We’re still turning our legs and such, but that’s about it,” added van Velthooven, a keirin bronze medalist at the 2012 London Olympics.

Myriad technical aspects — and the constant adjustment­s made to the catamarans in the neverendin­g quest for more speed — only heighten the challenge.

Joe Sullivan, a double sculls gold medalist in London, had spent plenty of time on the water in his rowing career, but found himself polishing his cycling skills when he came on board for Team New Zealand.

But there’s also an extra test of agility, as the crew must be able to move quickly from hull to hull during maneuvers.

Sullivan admits the speeds reached when foiling initially gave him pause.

The exotic imports on Team New Zealand have meshed with proven sailing talents to put the challenger­s in command in the first-to-seven points series against defenders Oracle Team USA.

New Zealand swept the first four races, erasing a one-point deficit to take a 3-0 lead heading into the second weekend of racing on Saturday and Sunday.

Steely-eyed young helmsman Peter Burling, an America’s Cup newcomer at 26, is a seventime world champion and Olympic sailing 49er gold medalist at Rio last year with Blair Tuke — serving as a cyclor and foil trimmer in this campaign. AFP

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