15 Oct 2015

Team New Zealand gets first sail in Bermuda

12:29 pm on 15 October 2015

Team New Zealand are preparing for the first sail on the Bermuda waters which will host the 2017 America's Cup.

This week the fleet of America's Cup challengers get a taste of what is to come as they resume racing in the Louis Vuitton America's Cup World Series, which Emirates Team New Zealand currently lead by seven points.

Emirates Team New Zealand are the only team to finish inside the top three positions in every race so far in the series and this is the obvious key to keeping at the top end of the leaderboard and being given every opportunity to be on the podium in here in Bermuda.

"I have heard quite a few of the other teams have been reviewing how we have been sailing the boat particularly in Gothenburg, its nice that the other teams are looking at us so we must be doing something right particularly as we are leading the series." said skipper Glenn Ashby.

Glenn Ashby skipper of Emirates Team NZ.

Glenn Ashby skipper of Emirates Team NZ. Photo: Getty Images

"It's been a great couple of regattas in Portsmouth and Gothenburg, so hopefully in Bermuda it will be a good opportunity to get out there do some more racing as we are still pretty short of practice as a group, really we are still in our infancy of what we can achieve as a sailing team, so we are really looking forward to getting back out onto the race track and testing ourselves against the other teams."

As a sailing location Bermuda is unique and the challenges of sailing here are well known to Ashby.

"One of the dynamic things about being here in Bermuda is that you are in the middle of nowhere, in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. There is no land effect of the weather systems, they come in straight across the ocean so what you get is what you get."

Looking ahead at the forecast for the weekend it is anybody's guess only two days out from the regatta start.

"At the moment we could have anything between light and heavy conditions, all the meteorologists are unsure of what we are going to get depending on a small system spinning off the coast of Bermuda. So we just need to be prepared for whatever comes."

"If the wind is light and from the west we can sail right in front of the city front- very tight course should make for challenging racing and great for the spectators."

Aside from all of the challenges during the two days of racing for the Louis Vuitton America's Cup World Series Bermuda, Ashby says it important they simply get time and experience of the conditions.

"Being able to get out here on the water of the Great Sound is very special and, where hopefully, in a couple of years time we will have some fantastic success. So it's great to put your toe in the water so to speak at this early stage."