No Secrets Between America's Cup Challenger Finalists
No Secrets Between America's Cup Challenger Finalists
Britains INEOS Team UK and Italys Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli will have few secrets from each other when they meet from Saturday in the final of the Americas Cup challenger series.

WELLINGTON, New Zealand: Britains INEOS Team UK and Italys Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli will have few secrets from each other when they meet from Saturday in the final of the Americas Cup challenger series.

The two teams, competing for the right to race defender Team New Zealand in the 37th Cup match next month, have been closely watching each other over several months but more intensely in the weeks leading up to the Prada Cup final.

Any changes or improvements the teams have made to their boats, especially since the conclusion of the challenger series semifinal two weeks ago, will have been noted and carefully analyzed. Team UK beat Luna Rossa during the round-robin part of the challenger series but the Italians have made extensive changes to their boat since.

They made a noticeable leap ahead before the semifinals in which they beat U.S. challenger American Magic 4-0 and they are confident they have improved again to close the gap on the impressive British team which was unbeaten in the challenger round robin.

Since we raced Ineos Team UK last time we have new foils, a new modified mast, a new set of sails, a lot of development on the software system on the boat and a lot of improvements especially in the communications on board, Luna Rossa skipper Max Sirena said. We made a lot of mistakes when we raced against Team UK and we want to come out with one mistake less than them this time.

You are racing the Americas Cup, not the grandfathers Cup. We know what we did wrong against them. We worked really hard, we needed to be honest and perform to the maximum if you want to win.

In the past, Americas Cup teams fiercely guarded their technical secrets, even shrouding the keels of their yachts to keep them from the prying eyes of opponents. Spying was commonplace: in 1983 the Australian team caught a scuba diver near their dock in Newport, Rhode Island.

These days nothing is hidden but teams still closely measure others development and performance. During training sails, teams are stalked by rivals chase boats who report back on equipment tweaks and performance gains.

There is a lot of intense scrutiny of the opposition as you come down to a head-to-head as weve got now in the final, Team UK skipper Ben Ainslie said. Inevitably youre going to be observing that other team that much more closely and thats getting more and more intense as were getting closer to the races.

Thats one of the fascinating things about the Cup. In a technical sport like this theres trying to analyze your opposition but also make the most of the equipment that youve got.

Team UK hasnt raced since the end of the challenger round-robin, bypassing the semifinal, but Ainslie is confident his team has been able to make the necessary improvements to stay ahead of Luna Rossa.

In the past 2 1-2 weeks it has been all about making the marginal gains to continue improving our performance, he said. We are now in the stage of the cycle where it is all about fine-tuning performance, finding half of a percent here and there.”

Ainslie said the Prada Cup final, a best-of-13 series between two closely-matched teams, might produce some of the best racing the Americas Cup has seen.

I think its going to be a fantastic fight, he said. Thats why you compete, because you want to compete against the best and you want to test yourself in those situations.”

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