Sailing: America's Cup yachts close on speeds of 100 kph
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[March 09, 2021]
By Nick Mulvenney
(Reuters) - Peter Burling and Max
Sirena will be fierce rivals over the next week or so as they
compete for the "Auld Mug" but they are united in their admiration
for the AC75 class of boat that will be used for the first time in
the 36th America's Cup.
The state-of-the-art monohulls racing off Auckland this week are as
far removed from the schooners which first competed for the silver
trophy in the mid-19th century as a modern Formula One car is from a
Model T Ford.
The 75 foot (22.86m) keel-less yachts rise out of the water on
hydrofoils and glide across the surface to reach speeds in excess of
50 knots (93 kilometres per hour).
Challenger yacht Luna Rossa had maxed out at 53.4 knots (99 kph),
skipper Sirena said on Tuesday, and Team New Zealand's Te Rehutai is
rumoured to be even faster.
Despite that raw speed, TNZ helmsman Burling said, the handling was
similar to the much lighter 49er two-handed dinghy in which he won
Olympic gold for New Zealand with Blair Tuke in 2016.
"They are very dynamic, they're obviously very fast in straight line but
they also give you a good ability to do a lot of manoeuvres and to do
those manoeuvres at a relatively low cost," Burling told reporters on
Tuesday.
"It's more like a 49er ... a small boat. I think the incredible thing
about these AC75s is they're a massive boat but just how dynamic they
are to sail. The boat weighs over five tons but it feels really quick
with how it moves. "I think it's pretty incredible to see a boat of that
size being thrown around like all the teams are doing now, and doing the
speeds they are now."
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Emirates Team New Zealand
helmsman Peter Burling after win in race four against Oracle Team
USA in America's Cup Finals. REUTERS/Mike Segar
Having led Luna Rossa to victory in the challenger series, Sirena
has had more experience in race conditions with the AC75 and
believes the design has incredible potential.
"We've only raced this boat 16 times, which is nothing," he said.
"We are still at the beginning of this class and I really hope
whoever wins this race is going to continue with this class because
I think these are the most exciting boats I have sailed on board in
my life."
Delayed by four days because of a COVID-19 lockdown in Auckland, the
best-of-13 race match begins in the Hauraki Gulf on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney, editing by Peter Rutherford)
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