BRITAIN’S hopes of winning the coveted America’s Cup for the first time in 173 years ended in Barcelona. The mighty Kiwis – dubbed the All Blacks of sailing – beat INEOS Britannia 7-2 in calm seas to retain the Auld Mug and become the first team in modern history to win three in a row. “We always knew it was going to be hard to beat them, but I think they will be scared of how much we have progressed through the America’s Cup” said Britain’s co-helmsman Dylan Fletcher.
It was the first time a British yacht had made the America’s Cup match in 60 years – and the first time a British crew had scored points in the match in 90 years. They were also the first-ever British team to win a challenger series.
“To be all those things shows the new standard for British sailing that this team has set,” said INEOS Chairman Sir Jim Ratcliffe.
The defenders, Emirates Team New Zealand, had started off like a rocket, winning the first four races in the best-of-13 series. The tide seemed to turn when INEOS Britannia – the official Challenger of Record – won back-to-back races to make it 4-2.
“It was a solid effort from the team to get two wins in those difficult conditions,” said skipper Sir Ben Ainslie.
In the first of those two races, the New Zealanders had dropped off their foils and then struggled to get up. Only a mistake by the British crew would have changed the outcome, but INEOS Britannia were sailing flawlessly, pulling off slick manoeuvres and maintaining flight. The British crossed the line one minute 18 seconds ahead of the Kiwis.
The second race was incredibly tense, but the British won the start and went on to cross the finish line seven seconds ahead of the Kiwis.
INEOS Britannia trimmer Leigh McMillan said after the race: “We are looking forward to getting back out there again and keeping the pressure on and momentum going.”
But sadly from then on, it was nothing but perfection from the Emirates Team New Zealand who won the following two races in favourable wind conditions to open up a 6-2 lead.
For the Kiwis, it was now match point. For the British, it was now do or die.
Georgie Ainslie urged husband Ben to channel memories of San Francisco 2013 when, as a tactician, he had helped Oracle Team USA overturn an 8-1 deficit to retain The America’s Cup. It was one of the greatest sporting comebacks ever. And it was against New Zealand.
But it was not to be.
Despite dominating the start, the Kiwis were soon back in control and 200 metres ahead by the time they reached the first turn. Ben had promised his team would not go down without a fight and on the third leg, INEOS Britannia had reduced the gap to just one metre. But they were just unable to get ahead and although they managed to stay close to the Kiwis, they couldn’t catch them.
“We had our moments in the finals, but at the end of the day the better team won,” he said.
At the prize-giving ceremony, Bernard Arnault, CEO of Louis Vuitton, said INEOS Britannia had put up a formidable challenge. “You have pushed boundaries, showed resilience and a relentless pursuit of victory, inspiring us all,” he said.
He described The America’s Cup, which was founded in the UK in 1851, as a symbol of human ingenuinty, teamwork and inspiration for future sailors. “It is more than just a race,” he said.