The Calm Before The Storm
The Calm Before The Storm
With the final pre-race press
conference concluded the talking has stopped, the phoney war
is over and the real battle is about to begin on the
water.
For Emirates Team New Zealand it’s the
culmination of a long and difficult journey along which
they’ve had to overcome all manner of obstacles.
As
Peter Burling told the world’s media: “It’s taken a
massive effort to get this far. We’ve faced a lot of
adversity over the last couple of weeks with things like the
capsize, but our shore crew really dug deep to get us a boat
that is fully back to 100 per cent and we are just really
excited to get into it.”
The 26 year old helmsman,
paid tribute to the support the team has been getting from
New Zealand: “Having the Kiwi fans back home supporting us
and getting behind us is something we really appreciate and
it really inspires us to keep fighting hard and keep pushing
forward, and I am sure it is going to be one hell of a
battle out there on the water.”
And thanks to the level
of competition through the Louis Vuitton Challenger Series,
the team is feeling battle-hardened: “We feel we are a
much harder team after the racing we’ve had and it’s
full credit to the challengers for the way they pushed us in
the series. And we definitely feel that we are a lot tougher
than we were a few weeks ago.”
Burling also
touched on the disappointment of four years ago in San
Francisco and alluded to the fact that only one sailor from
the 34th America’s Cup is still on the boat…skipper
Glenn Ashby…and the other five first-choice crew are all
under 30 years of age: "We all remember San Francisco and
how close we did get,” he said. “And we definitely
learned a lot of lessons and we are a lot stronger and
different team now than we were back then.”
Asked about
going into the match already a point down to Oracle, Burling
again looked to history to make his case, referring to the
American team going into the last Cup with a deficit: “It
didn’t seem to matter too much who went into the last Cup
a couple of points down, so I don’t imagine it will matter
much this time.
“For ourselves the America’s Cup is
one of the unique sporting trophies where it’s all about
who wins the last race not the first and that’s what
we’ve been set up to do.”
Earlier the crew took
Aotearoa out onto the Great Sound for some final tests
before the sailors left early to go home and rest up.
It’s quiet on the Emirates Team New Zealand base, the
calm before the storm in
Bermuda.