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Luna Rossa show predictions count for little on race day, taking the second victory. Photo: Reuters

America’s Cup day one ends with even scores as Luna Rossa show Team New Zealand nothing can be taken for granted

  • The Italian team are widely written off before they win the second race of day one, shocking the Kiwis
  • The first team to win seven races takes the America’s Cup home
Water sports

Italy’s Luna Rossa showed defending champions Team New Zealand that predictions of an America’s Cup walkover were premature on Wednesday, as the opening day of racing ended with honours even.

Team New Zealand easily won the first of two races contested in Auckland on day one of the regatta, only for Luna Rossa, widely written off in the lead-up, to bounce back and claim the second.

Team New Zealand cruised to victory in the first race by 31 seconds before Luna Rossa held off a late charge to snatch the second by seven seconds.

The Italian syndicate’s co-helmsman Jimmy Spithill was jubilant at the 1-1 scoreline in the best-of-13 competition and eager for racing to resume on Friday.

James Spithill is jubilant after recording his team’s first victory of the America’s Cup. Photo: AFP

“We followed our plan, kept it calm and the boat did the rest of the work,” the Australian said.

“It’s great to be competitive. I can’t wait mate, bring it on.”

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Team New Zealand’s helmsman Peter Burling, who steered the New Zealanders to victory in the last regatta in the Bahamas in 2017, blamed a lack of practice for the host’s poor start in the second race.

“We definitely looked a little bit rusty on that last on. It’s no secret we haven’t raced for a little while,” he said.

“One mistake and your life’s pretty hard for the rest of the race.”

The Kiwi syndicate entered as the short-priced favourites with bookmakers and some pundits predicting a 7-0 whitewash in their favour, even though they had not raced competitively since warm-up events in late December.

Luna Rossa were match-hardened after brushing aside rival challengers American Magic and Ineos Team UK for the right to race Team New Zealand for yachting’s most prestigious trophy.

In the first race, Team New Zealand gained an edge during the pre-start after aggressive manoeuvring from Burling, sparking cheers from spectators watching on the Auckland waterfront.

Peter Burling says his team are ‘rusty’ after a lack of racing. Photo: AFP

The New Zealanders went around the first mark 14 seconds ahead of Luna Rossa, and extended their advantage to 31 seconds by the finish in a convincing display.

Luna Rossa co-helmsman Francesco Bruni said the Italians did not perform well enough at the start, but they made amends in the second race, taking a 13-second lead on the first leg.

They appeared to take control of the race after a poorly executed tack by Team NZ but the Kiwis stormed back.

They slashed Luna Rossa’s lead from 12 seconds to five but the Italians desperately held on.

Far from the one-sided affair tipped by the experts, Bruni said the regatta was poised to be a closely contested battle.

“The performance of the boats seems to be pretty close, so there are exciting times ahead,” he said.

“They’re not going to just stand back and watch, they’ll fight hard and we’ll fight hard – it’s going to be a great America’s Cup.”

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