The Timaru Herald

Team NZ made Spithill sick

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Jimmy Spithill admits his first experience on a simulator made him sick with envy at Team New Zealand.

Spithill says Team New Zealand’s use of the artificial racing tool was a key to their America’s Cup win in Bermuda in 2017 where they trounced his Oracle Team USA in the Cup match.

Now with Italian syndicate Luna Rossa, Spithill has been maximising the use of their simulator, realising what he missed out on at the last Cup.

The Italian simulator has been constructe­d with the help of some of the engineers who were in the Team New Zealand camp last time and Spithill admitted to American publicatio­n Sailing World the first time he used it he left feeling sick.

That had nothing to do with motion sickness it was because he ‘‘realised how far behind the rest of us were by not having this tool last campaign, and instantly regretted not pushing harder to develop one then’’.

Team New Zealand was the only syndicate to use a simulator last time, now all their major rivals have them.

‘‘There’s a tremendous efficiency to the simulator as well,’’ Spithill said.

‘‘In the past, you look at just how much time, money and effort goes into getting on the water and sailing in the America’s Cup. It’s no different this time; we need a crane, a heap of people, chase boats. It’s a huge operation, and by the time you get out there, you may get only a few hours of quality sailing.

‘‘In the simulator, we go until we’re braindead. If you make a mistake on the water, you lose so much, but on the simulator, we can just stop and do it again, setting up different scenarios.’’

Spithill said the Bermuda loss still burns at him after he helped Oracle win the 2010 and 2013 editions. ‘‘I don’t ever let any loss go,’’ he told Sailing World.

‘‘Defeat is nothing but education. We were too conservati­ve [in Bermuda]. Sometimes success can do that to a team.’’

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