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Red Bull Sailing - Jimmy Spithill sets himself America’s Cup mission

by Red Bull Sailing on 30 Oct 2017
Jimmy Spithill - Oracle Team USA - Presentation - Day 5 - Race 9 - 35th America's Cup - Bermuda June 26, 2017 ACEA / Ricardo Pinto http://photo.americascup.com/
After holding on to the America’s Cup for years, Jimmy Spithill and Oracle Team USA lost their title to Emirates Team New Zealand in June 2017. He’s now on a mission to win it back.

One of the greatest sporting movie quotes of all time comes from the Sylvester Stallone’s Rocky Balboa; “It’s not how hard you hit, it’s about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward.” But how do you do that? How do you move forward from the hardest hit of your sporting career?


Rewind four years and Jimmy Spithill was the posterboy for ORACLE Team USA’s 2013 America’s Cup triumph – heralded as the greatest comeback in all of sport. He and his crew won nine consecutive races from the hitherto unstoppable Emirates Team New Zealand. Yet in Bermuda less than two months ago, he suffered the biggest loss of his career – watching the most treasured prize in all of sailing, the America’s Cup, foil away and back to New Zealand. For Jimmy, it meant not just a disappointment, but a paradigm shift; his America’s Cup bubble had burst, and the hunted now became the hunter.

We sat down with Jimmy to learn more about this shift and what it takes to over come one of the hardest moments in his career.

What is it like to lose an America’s Cup?

Losing the America's Cup is one of the toughest things I have ever experienced. It is hard to put it into words. It is a real empty feeling. For me, one of the worst things is letting people down, and that is how I left this America’s Cup. Feeling, that ultimately, I let all my team-mates down. I have got to embrace that. You have got to feel the pain somewhat and use that to motivate you and to learn the lessons.


What is it like getting outside of the America’s Cup bubble?


At the end of every America’s Cup campaign, regardless of whether you win or lose, there is always a period of somewhat depression. You go from having a routine: you get up, go to training, go out on the water, all your meals are planned, you get used to operating right on the edge; then at the end of the campaign, it stops. You wake up and you don’t know what to do with yourself. You think, ‘well what do I do now?’ It takes some time to be able to wind down and go back to normal family life.

How did you reflect on the loss?

After such a long campaign with so much on the line, when you’re on the losing end you have to make sure that you reflect on the experience. You want to learn from it and make sure you grow stronger from it so you can come back and have the chance to race again for it. I think what I have come back with is that [in our campaign] we were too conservative and I didn’t go with my instincts enough.

How has your role within the America’s Cup changed now?


Being the defender, you have a target on your back. Every single one of those teams wants to take you down. And now we find ourselves in the position where we are one of the teams now – we are chasing the defender.

Will you now be one of the hunters?

We will definitely be chasing this America’s Cup .

What is the future of Oracle Team USA?

Larry [Ellison] wants to wait until the rules and the protocol comes out. But we want to go and get that Cup back. When you’ve been involved with a great group of people, especially a successful team, it is addictive. It does become an obsession. Once you get the taste of it, you want to taste it again.


What role do you see women playing in the America’s Cup moving into the future?

I think the America’s Cup is so physical now, it’s right up there with a lot of mainstream sports. Having said that, you only have to look at the Red Bull Youth America’s Cup to see some of the teams sailing with women being successful. There are definitely roles onboard – certainly steering and skippering the boat – that don’t require such a big physical side, and it would not surprise me at all to see women in the America’s Cup in the future.

What is the best thing the sailing world can do in the next four years?

Think forwards. Think about the next generation. And the best way to do that is to speak to the next generation of sailors and see what they want to do. To look to the future, you need to speak to the future and that’s the kids.

For the full illustrated version of this story click here

Jimmy Spithill’s Chasing the Cup: My America’s Cup Journey is available now at retailers and online in hardcover and Kindle editions.

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