Gulf News

New Zealand celebrates ‘underdog’ victory over billionair­es

Prime Minister English leads the chorus in his pyjamas

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Two and half hours before dawn broke in the southern hemisphere, thousands of New Zealanders crawled from their warm beds to cheer for a team of youthful underdogs who have remained stoic and inscrutabl­e throughout an America’s Cup regatta that has featured a dramatic capsize, constant sledging and a team budget that looks like pocket money to their competitor­s.

After the devastatin­g 2013 defeat to Oracle in San Francisco the home crowds kept their hopes for victory in check, and right up until the end were careful with their tenses. There was no when we win the cup. Only if, if, if. “The loss in San Francisco was horrific for the whole country and no one was going to celebrate till they crossed that line,” said Nick Wrinch, the commodore of the Tauranga Yacht and Power Boat Club, where New Zealand helmsman Peter Burling — the youngest ever to win an America’s Cup — learnt to sail as a kid.

“The team didn’t have much money and that was almost an advantage because it made them think, it forced them to get creative on a small budget. And I think that was a huge part of their success.”

At the Yacht Research Unit at Auckland University, absenteeis­m by a few bleary-eyed mechanical engineerin­g academics would be overlooked today, said associate professor Peter Richards. Like New Zealand Prime Minister Bill English, who posted a video of himself celebratin­g victory in his pyjamas, Richards got up to watch the watched the final hurdle on his lounge-room telly.

“On a good day there can be thousands of boats on Auckland harbour, from tiny one-maners to the mega yachts,” said Richards, who hoped Burling might return to his mechanical engineerin­g degree at university, but since the win today, realised this may be a rather unlikely prospect for the celebrated sportsman. “It is something that is a very real part of New Zealand’s identity, and this team were willing to take risks, they had nothing to lose.”

A 10-minute walk down the hill on the shore of the Waitemata harbour, hundreds of people gasped and groaned their way through the earlymorni­ng race event at the New Zealand Maritime Museum, clutching hot drinks in the dark and waiting for the moment of release when coffee could be substitute­d for champagne.

“It got really wild here, it was quite incredible and very special,” says Samantha Alexander of the maritime museum, who watched the final race surrounded by Kiwi maritime history.

 ?? AFP ?? Emirates Team New Zealand helmsman Peter Burling (left) and skipper Glenn Ashby hoist the Americas Cup trophy after defeating Oracle Team USA in the Great Sound in Hamilton, Bermuda on Monday.
AFP Emirates Team New Zealand helmsman Peter Burling (left) and skipper Glenn Ashby hoist the Americas Cup trophy after defeating Oracle Team USA in the Great Sound in Hamilton, Bermuda on Monday.
 ?? AP ?? Emirates Team New Zealand celebrate their victory in the Americas Cup on Monday.
AP Emirates Team New Zealand celebrate their victory in the Americas Cup on Monday.

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