Hawke's Bay Today

Let’s make it New Zealand’s Cup — again

- Matthew Hooton Matthew Hooton

On whether Te Rehutai will prevail in the America’s Cup, I defer to the Herald’s sailing expert, AUT professor Mark Orams. He says Te Rehutai is the favourite.

That means the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron (RNZYS) may be just a fortnight away from confrontin­g whether it is an institutio­n worthy of that name, or a mere fig-leaf for foreign commercial interests.

In Wellington, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, Finance and Sports Minister Grant Robertson and Economic Developmen­t Minister Stuart Nash also have a fortnight to resolve whether to embrace the Cup specifical­ly, and sailing generally, as essential to New Zealand’s economic, technologi­cal and cultural story, or dismiss it as an idle indulgence for the rich.

Around 1.67 million New

Zealanders participat­e in marine sports and more watch Team New Zealand on TV than the All Blacks.

The country’s relationsh­ip with the America’s Cup goes back to the KZ7 summer of 1986/87. That laid the foundation for a succession of New Zealand yachting triumphs and built a New Zealand marine industry capable of humbling the United States and marketing its high-value products.

New Zealand’s financial and emotional investment in the Cup lie behind the shock when the Herald revealed that Team New Zealand management has been shopping the next event to overseas venues.

The assumed rule was that to host the America’s Cup you had to build a boat and win it. Like the Ranfurly Shield, hosting was the real prize.

Ardern, Robertson, Nash and the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment had no idea of this foreign pitch, despite taxpayers putting in $136 million for Cup-related infrastruc­ture costs for the 2020/21 event.

Similarly, Phil Goff’s Auckland Council wasn’t asked to participat­e, despite investing $113m of ratepayers’ money into infrastruc­ture and other costs for 2020/21.

Ardern, Robertson, Nash and Goff may be tempted to speculate whether Team NZ’s Grant Dalton is using foreign bids to pressure them for more cash, or if his vision really is to take the Cup offshore for the $80m hosting fee allegedly previously offered by

Abu Dhabi and Sochi.

Dalton rightly argues that we risk repeating 2000, when foreign billionair­es offered victorious Team New Zealand members money they couldn’t refuse.

But even if another venue is really offering an $80m hosting fee during a global pandemic, Team New Zealand couldn’t access it for at least three months anyway — the time it is contractua­lly obliged to first negotiate in good faith with Ardern’s Government.

It also means, for at least three months, that the only large chequebook Dalton can realistica­lly access is Robertson’s. The sports-mad Finance Minister is almost certain to follow Bill English and Steven Joyce and offer an immediate $5m to retain talent, or perhaps a little more — but with conditions, including around location.

The precise legal relationsh­ips between RNZYS, Team New Zealand and America’s Cup Events are opaque, but one thing is indisputab­le. The controllin­g authority for the America’s Cup is the New York Supreme Court, and the only rules it cares about are the 1857 Deed of Gift.

The deed is unambiguou­s: “It is distinctly understood that the Cup is to be the property of the Club, subject to the provisions of this deed, and not the property of the owner or owners of any vessel winning a match.”

Were RNZYS and Team New Zealand ever to clash in the New York courts, both sides know the squadron would win. If the RNZYS, which holds the Cup, gets close to the Government, Dalton has nowhere to go.

Beyond the defending club, the only party the deed recognises is the yacht club from another country that first lodges a valid challenge.

Having fallen out with the Italians, Team New Zealand management is apparently talking to the UK’s Royal Yacht Squadron. But there is no reason under the deed that the RNZYS couldn’t arrange for, say, the Royal Perth Yacht Club to hand its commodore the paperwork the instant Te Rehutai crosses the line. All decisions about the next regatta would then be negotiated between RNZYS and Royal Perth.

None of this should be necessary. Hopefully, Dalton knows his destiny is not to be the villain who sold New Zealand’s Cup for 30 pieces of silver. Instead, he deserves to be the hero who brought the Cup home in 2017, retained it in 2021, worked with the Government and RNZYS to keep

Team New Zealand together, found new sponsors to replace Emirates, passed the structure to the next generation of Kiwi sailors, and celebrated with all of us when Te Rehutai 2 successful­ly defends the cup in Auckland in 2023.

is an Aucklandba­sed PR consultant

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