Team NZ one win away from America's Cup

By News / Wire

Team New Zealand are one win away from claiming the 34th America’s Cup after winning race 11 by 15 seconds on San Francisco Bay to take a 8-1 lead over Oracle.

The challengers could wrest the cup from holders Oracle in race 12 due to be staged later on Thursday.

Skipper Dean Barker set up Team NZ to dominate the race after out-foxing opposite James Spithill in the pre-race phase.

They crossed the start line well ahead of Oracle and at better speed, allowing them to open up a 3sec lead at the first mark and they were never headed.

The margin was 5sec at the second mark and 17sec after the long third leg upwind.

Oracle made gains on the fourth leg but a slow rounding of the fourth mark meant they were still 18sec down, allowing Team NZ to coast home.

The American defenders must win the next eight races if they are to prevent Team NZ from winning the Auld Mug for the first time since it lost to Swiss syndicate Alinghi in 2003.

The Crowd Says:

2013-09-21T03:55:49+00:00

Kiwi bob

Guest


yet another race abandon. This is the 3rd time in last few days where TNZ were leading the race then to have it called off. Today the margin was that big, Oracle should of just gave up and started fishing in the middle of the bay. Mother nature is definitely saving team US from a heavy defeat in this series.

2013-09-20T05:08:51+00:00

Dsat24

Guest


matty its been 10 years so another day or two shouldn't hurt. And then there's at least 3 years of holding it.

2013-09-20T02:56:50+00:00

matty

Guest


frustrating seeing the races post;ones yet again

2013-09-19T21:50:31+00:00

AWCMIONREF

Guest


Waahooo GO THE SAILING ALLBLACKS!!!!!!

2013-09-19T12:07:51+00:00

Seb Vettel

Guest


they won three... deducted two for cheating... therefore have to win 11 races.

2013-09-19T10:49:56+00:00

dsat24


but its nice on the bay this time of year. let em sail

2013-09-19T08:36:10+00:00

Statler and Waldorf

Roar Guru


best of 17 series? that's a lot of racing - especially when you only win one of them

Read more at The Roar