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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Alinghi sails off with America's Cup trophy

Photo galleryPhoto gallery: America's Cup

By Doug Mellgren
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Alinghi owner Ernesto Bertarelli kisses the Auld Mug.

FERNANDO BUSTAMANTE | Associated Press

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Switzerland's Alinghi team celebrates after beating Emirates Team New Zealand to win the 32nd America's Cup off the coast of Valencia, Spain.

ROB GRIFFITH | Associated Press

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VALENCIA, Spain — The landlocked Swiss are masters of the ocean.

Once again.

The Alinghi team from Switzerland — a country more often associated with Alpine skiing and winter snowscapes — successfully defended the coveted America's Cup yesterday, beating Emirates Team New Zealand, 5-2, to win the best-of-nine series.

Swiss President Micheline Calmy-Rey congratulated the team, sending a telegram that read: "We Swiss find our way at sea, not just in the mountains."

The finish in the seventh race of the 32nd America's Cup was so close that fans on both sides were beside themselves with joy, each believing their team had won.

Alinghi won by one second, allowing the Swiss to beat New Zealand in a rematch that was four years in the making.

"Aside from the birth of my children, (today) is the best day of my life," Alinghi owner Ernesto Bertarelli said.

Alinghi took the Auld Mug trophy away from the sailing-proud Kiwis by beating them 5-0 off Auckland in 2003, and brought it to Europe for the first time in its more than 150-year history.

Bertarelli was the only Swiss aboard the winning boat. Born in Italy, the biotech billionaire with an MBA from Harvard put together a winning team made up of six New Zealanders, three Americans, two Italians, and one each from Canada, the Netherlands, Australia, and Spain.

Bertarelli's formula was to set up a smooth, corporate-style team drawing on the world's best talent. Bertarelli even compared the team to the nation of Switzerland, in the center of Europe.

"We had to be open to other cultures," he said. "We grow bigger through diversity."

That diversity upset a lot of New Zealand fans because many of Alinghi's sailors came from there.

Alinghi hired six of the key sailors in New Zealand's 2000 defense of the cup, including Russell Coutts, who left in 2004, and current skipper Brad Butterworth.

New Zealand fans were outraged, sending hate mail and death threats to Alinghi, and even setting up a group called BlackHeart to jeer New Zealanders who sailed for the "enemy."

The team from the Alps also attracted gentler teasing.

"People were laughing at us with our leather shorts, edelweiss, cheese, chocolate and cuckoo clocks," Bertarelli said about the early days.

Bertarelli said he hopes to turn sailing into a sport that can be self-sustaining through sponsorship, rather than remaining the domain of rich enthusiasts.

It seemed Alinghi's boat, SUI100, was in danger of sinking when it arrived at the victory dock with at least three times its normal crew of 17 aboard.

The 80-foot carbon fiber yacht glided through a red carpet-like belt of red confetti to reach the prize podium.

Bertarelli was carried to the podium by his crew, where he hoisted the coveted cup over his head and kissed it. That was only after Butterworth, now a four-time cup winner, put an Alinghi baseball cap on top of the 156-year-old trophy.

After 5-0 sweeps in the previous three finals, the races this year was close throughout.

Alinghi sailed past the first mark with a seven-second lead yesterday. The Swiss stayed ahead by 14 seconds around the second buoy, while the Kiwis gained two seconds to make it a 12-second lead by Alinghi going into the final leg.

After incurring a right-of-way penalty trying to cross behind the Swiss before the third buoy, the Kiwis rallied and appeared to take a brief lead. At the end, though, Alinghi barely won out.

"Just not enough has been the theme," said Terry Hutchinson, tactician aboard the Kiwi boat.