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Downloaded from
YTS.MX

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I've never met a world champion
that's a normal person.

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Official YIFY movies site:
YTS.MX

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You gotta be screwed up in some manner

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to get out of bed
to do extraordinary things.

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And I'm screwed up.

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[somber music plays]

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-[wave crashes]
-[seagulls squawking]

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[wave crashes]

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Underneath this veneer
of being a normal, nice guy,

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I have a huge ego.

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There's gotta be some motivation
to drive someone to extraordinary lengths.

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And the ego is part of my drive.

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[announcer] Good morning, the world.

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We're lining up now for the start

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of the seventh and vital race
in this America's Cup.

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Yachting's big event is more historic

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than the Kentucky Derby,
the World Series or the Super Bowl.

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And for the first time in 132 years,
America may lose the America's Cup.

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Now, the whole point of this
was to win the America's Cup,

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which no one had ever done before.

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It was the longest winning streak
in history of sport.

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The United States
having successfully defended the Cup

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for 132 years,
since before the US Civil War.

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[reporter] This country's domination
has outlasted the Confederacy,

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the Third Reich, and the St. Louis Browns.

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Now the Australians think
their time finally has come.

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Today they sail the winner-take-all,
do-or-die, there's-no-tomorrow race.

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Billed as the race of the century--

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The greatest yacht race of the century.

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[crowd cheering]

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The bottom line is the New York Yacht Club

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were not in the business
of losing the America's Cup.

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[tense music plays]

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[Bertrand] So we had no confusion.

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We were at war.

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The full-scale war is already underway.

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The Australians claim they're
the target of a dirty-tricks campaign

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involving espionage
and political backstabbing.

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We now have the FBI involved,
spies, armed guards.

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[man] The New York Yacht Club
are absolutely determined

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to do everything possible to ensure

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that the Cup stays here
in the United States.

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To take on the United States
was a huge psychological mountain.

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The most powerful nation technically
and economically in the world…

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-[camera shutter clicks]
-[Bertrand] …and a little country…

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with 27 million people called Australia…

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[crowd cheers]

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…had the audacity to think
that we could do it.

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["Your Sweet Love" by Lee Hazlewood plays]

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<i>♪ Stranger's arms ♪</i>

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<i>♪ Reach out to me ♪</i>

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<i>♪ 'Cause they know ♪</i>

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<i>♪ I'm so lonely ♪</i>

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<i>♪ Then my mind ♪</i>

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<i>♪ Goes back to you ♪</i>

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<i>♪ And your sweet love ♪</i>

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<i>♪ Sees me through ♪</i>

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-["Your Sweet Love" fades]
-[insects chirping]

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[person breathing deeply]

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The first America's Cup that I'd heard
was the 1962 America's Cup.

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Australia versus United States.

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How this country was tuned into this event
halfway around the world.

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[car honks]

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[news anchor] These races have captured
the imagination of millions.

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The President of the United States himself

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abandons the cares of Washington
to attend.

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The Australians, if they win,
see it as an opportunity

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to project their little-known country
onto the international stage.

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I can… I can still hear it.

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[reporter 1]
<i>Winds 20 to 25 knots and seas choppy…</i>

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[Bertrand] I was just a little boy
listening on the wireless.

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I was seven years old
listening to a small transistor radio,

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lying in bed in the middle of the night.

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A little tiny transistor radio.

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Like a little transistor radio.

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My mother said,
"You get a good night's sleep,"

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and I'm trying to listen to the radio.

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[reporter 2] <i>…all over</i>
<i>the eastern seaboard</i>

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<i>flock to the waters of Newport,</i>
<i>Rhode Island.</i>

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[Lissiman] Three in the morning,

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12 hours different time zone
in Newport, Rhode Island.

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[commentator]<i> This is Newport,</i>
<i>the home of the America's Cup yacht race.</i>

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<i>Since the turn of the century,</i>

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<i>it's been the holiday playground</i>
<i>of the nation's super rich.</i>

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As a little boy, I was infatuated
with the incredible history.

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All these incredible characters.

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[commentator]<i> And when the summer breezes</i>
<i>begin to roll in across the sound,</i>

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<i>their minds turn</i>
<i>to the only game in town, yacht racing.</i>

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[Bertrand]
For me to skipper an America's Cup boat,

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that set my imagination
into another direction.

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[projector whirring]

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It was like the door opening
to another world.

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["Why Can't I Touch It?"
by Buzzcocks plays]

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<i>♪ Well, it seems so real… ♪</i>

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There are some people at Internal Revenue

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who think yachting is not much more
than a dubious tax deduction.

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The America's Cup, however,
is something else again.

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[crowd cheering]

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<i>♪ And it seems so real I can taste it… ♪</i>

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The America's Cup's always been
the top echelon of the sport of sailing.

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<i>-♪ I can feel it ♪</i>
-[crowd screams]

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<i>♪ So why can't I touch it? ♪</i>

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[Bertrand] The America's Cup
is one boat versus one boat,

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one country versus one country.

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The best of seven races.

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First boat to win four races
wins the America's Cup.

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It's one-on-one.
It's like a duel to the death.

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[announcer]<i> Look at it go down!</i>
<i>This is yachting's answer to the Titanic.</i>

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[man] They basically have a desire
to beat each other's brains out,

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but it's a lot better than going to war
or shooting it out in the streets.

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[Bertrand]
The unique element of the America's Cup

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is you're given a shot every four years,
just like the Olympics.

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It's a huge commitment,
both physically and psychologically.

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[Longley] The rules were any country
could challenge for the America's Cup,

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but you had to design the boat
in the country you were challenging from.

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You had to build the boat
in that country as well.

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[Bertrand] So these projects need money.

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Lots of money.

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<i>♪ But then it looks so real… ♪</i>

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[reporter] The super-rich have brought
large bank accounts, millions of dollars.

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In the case of the America's Cup,

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we're talking high-cost,
high-tech yacht racing.

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[all cheering]

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[Bertrand] Unlike any other sport,

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the US had never lost.

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♪ <i>And it sounds so real…</i> ♪

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[Lissiman]
It was the longest winning streak

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in sporting history

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where the New York Yacht Club
had successfully defended the Cup

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in Newport, Rhode Island, for 132 years.

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[Bertrand] There was a sense of arrogance
by the New York Yacht Club.

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This is our patch.

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You can play with the patch
and then we'll bid you farewell.

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[reporter 1] The New York Yacht Club
have defended this Cup

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against all-comers from around the world

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with such complete sailing mastery

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that it's a wonder
anyone comes after it at all.

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-[crowd cheering]
-[cannon fires]

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[reporter 2] <i>The New York Yacht Club</i>
<i>on Manhattan's West 44th Street.</i>

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<i>With its windows carved in the manner</i>
<i>of a 17th century Dutch yacht,</i>

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<i>this is the center</i>
<i>of the yachting universe.</i>

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<i>The exclusive preserve</i>

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<i>of some of America's wealthiest</i>
<i>and most influential men.</i>

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[ominous music playing]

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[music builds]

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The New York Yacht club were
ferocious defenders of the America's Cup.

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[Lissiman]
They reeked of old American money,

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Vanderbilts and Roosevelts.

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So there was a huge amount of mystique.

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[Longley] And there was something
about the American boats.

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They had this aura about them.
They were immaculate.

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Their sails always looked like
they were carved out of alabaster.

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They oozed style, wealth.

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Oozed this unbeatableness.

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And one day, way back in 1970,

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we go into the New York Yacht Club.

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[Simmer] And there was a room,

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it was this kind of octagonal room
where the Cup was sitting.

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[Bertrand] We spoke to the curator,
and he said, "You realize, John,

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that that trophy had not been touched
by human flesh for a hundred years."

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I looked at this trophy and I thought,
"My God, John, this is it."

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Perfect, shiny silver.

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The Holy Grail.

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[up-tempo instrumental music plays]

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[reporter] This is the family jewel.

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Silver under glass.

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This is what the Americans are spending
$45 million on this year alone.

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Now, legend has it

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that the first American skipper
to end up losing this Cup

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will end up losing his head.

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[Bertrand]
There's no question the emerging force

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for the New York Yacht Club
was Dennis Conner.

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00:11:01,077 --> 00:11:04,580
A native of San Diego, California,
folks, please welcome Dennis Conner.

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00:11:04,664 --> 00:11:06,082
[audience applauds, cheers]

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He was the might and focus
of the New York Yacht Club.

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00:11:11,128 --> 00:11:13,130
And he took the America's Cup

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from an amateur world
to a professional world.

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Dennis changed the game.

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But isn't it true
that you've taken a sport

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that was, uh, previously considered
kind of what wealthy guys did on weekends,

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00:11:22,264 --> 00:11:24,934
and turned it into
more like stock car racing?

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Dennis was the best. He was the best.

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Ah, he's brilliant, absolutely brilliant.

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I think it's fair to say
Dennis was a different person.

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One of these skippers
who will do anything to win.

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[Conner]
If the most important thing in the world

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was winning the America's Cup
and sailing with Dennis Conner,

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over going to church,
over your job, over your wife, your kids…

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00:12:02,513 --> 00:12:05,349
"Oh, I gotta take off
for two weeks to go skiing."

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00:12:05,433 --> 00:12:08,561
Well, enjoy your skiing,
but don't bother coming back.

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[Bertrand]
The first time I raced against Dennis

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00:12:12,940 --> 00:12:14,942
was 1974, the America's Cup.

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00:12:17,653 --> 00:12:18,904
And we had no chance.

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00:12:21,407 --> 00:12:24,952
The Australians, they weren't
in the America's Cup business.

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00:12:25,035 --> 00:12:27,705
Psychologically, you have to perform
at a very high level.

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00:12:28,998 --> 00:12:30,708
You got down to the boat early

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00:12:30,791 --> 00:12:33,878
and checked the weather,
tide, current, sailing instructions,

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00:12:33,961 --> 00:12:36,630
got your boat in the water,
made sure it was smooth and clean,

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00:12:36,714 --> 00:12:38,549
getting out to the course
and checking the wind,

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00:12:38,632 --> 00:12:40,968
current, and the race committee
and getting instructions,

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00:12:41,051 --> 00:12:43,554
and checking the wind before the start,
which way it was shifting.

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00:12:43,637 --> 00:12:45,556
You had the right sails, the right mast.

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00:12:45,639 --> 00:12:48,100
You'd practiced.
Your crew weighed the right amount.

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00:12:48,184 --> 00:12:52,772
If you did all those things, every time,
you would then have no excuse to lose.

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00:12:55,149 --> 00:12:58,903
Lambs to the slaughter each time.
Hammered in '74.

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00:12:58,986 --> 00:13:02,364
[Tom Brokaw]<i> Dennis Conner came through</i>
<i>for America again today,</i>

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00:13:02,448 --> 00:13:05,201
<i>winning the race</i>
<i>by more than a minute and a half.</i>

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00:13:07,369 --> 00:13:09,205
Got hammered again in '77.

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00:13:09,288 --> 00:13:11,332
[reporter 1]
<i>The experts said it'd be 4 and 0,</i>

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00:13:11,415 --> 00:13:15,127
<i>and they've done in the Australians</i>
<i>four races to zero.</i>

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00:13:15,211 --> 00:13:17,463
Went back again in 1980, got beaten again.

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00:13:18,172 --> 00:13:20,299
[reporter 2]
<i>And Australia simply couldn't catch up</i>

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00:13:21,008 --> 00:13:24,178
<i>and has now failed in three attempts</i>
<i>to win the America's Cup.</i>

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00:13:25,095 --> 00:13:27,139
[Conner] I won 38 straight races.

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00:13:28,891 --> 00:13:30,643
I was the best sailor in the world.

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00:13:32,561 --> 00:13:33,896
I slaughtered them.

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00:13:36,857 --> 00:13:37,900
[theme music playing]

219
00:13:37,983 --> 00:13:39,902
Welcome back to <i>Turpie Tonight.</i>

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00:13:39,985 --> 00:13:40,945
[theme music stops]

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00:13:41,028 --> 00:13:42,571
Ah! What a cue!

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00:13:43,405 --> 00:13:45,533
I want you to listen carefully to this.

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00:13:45,616 --> 00:13:48,202
In September 1983,

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00:13:49,078 --> 00:13:52,790
someone will be challenging the Americans
for the America's Cup,

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00:13:53,415 --> 00:13:54,750
and this man will be skipper.

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00:13:54,834 --> 00:13:57,837
Ladies and gentlemen,
would you please welcome John Bertrand?

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00:13:57,920 --> 00:13:59,922
[audience applauding]

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00:14:00,714 --> 00:14:01,590
[Bertrand] Deep down,

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00:14:01,674 --> 00:14:05,427
I knew if there's anyone
that can actually take on Dennis Conner,

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00:14:06,720 --> 00:14:07,972
it was someone like myself.

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00:14:12,560 --> 00:14:14,478
[host] How long have you been sailing?

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00:14:15,020 --> 00:14:16,605
I started when I was 12 years old.

233
00:14:17,189 --> 00:14:19,900
-[host] What type or class of yacht?
-Little Sabots, little trainers.

234
00:14:20,025 --> 00:14:21,026
[host] Yeah?

235
00:14:21,110 --> 00:14:23,863
[Bertrand] My great-grandfather
was involved in the construction

236
00:14:23,946 --> 00:14:25,573
of three America's Cup boats.

237
00:14:26,907 --> 00:14:29,285
My grandfather was
a professional fisherman,

238
00:14:30,536 --> 00:14:34,206
and he'd teach me
when the sea breeze would come in.

239
00:14:35,124 --> 00:14:38,752
He'd have this intuitive sixth sense
that was passed on to myself.

240
00:14:39,962 --> 00:14:42,840
[host] No makeup. Is that what you get
from life on the ocean waves?

241
00:14:42,923 --> 00:14:44,300
It's hours in the sun, Ian.

242
00:14:44,383 --> 00:14:45,634
Hours and hours.

243
00:14:46,135 --> 00:14:47,303
Is this a hard life?

244
00:14:48,387 --> 00:14:51,599
[Bertrand] But when I was 15,
there was a shock to our family.

245
00:14:52,975 --> 00:14:54,435
My father died,

246
00:14:54,518 --> 00:14:56,103
my grandfather died,

247
00:14:56,186 --> 00:14:59,481
and then my great-grandfather died,
in sequence.

248
00:15:00,733 --> 00:15:02,151
So we lost all the men.

249
00:15:02,651 --> 00:15:05,529
[inhales deeply, exhales]

250
00:15:06,488 --> 00:15:07,323
[chuckles]

251
00:15:08,324 --> 00:15:09,158
Um…

252
00:15:09,742 --> 00:15:13,871
[woman] When John's father passed away,
there was a call in him.

253
00:15:16,874 --> 00:15:20,085
It, in fact, was
what has always driven him.

254
00:15:22,379 --> 00:15:29,345
But what I really understood about John
was his ability to really focus.

255
00:15:29,428 --> 00:15:31,972
He could totally shut off.

256
00:15:33,182 --> 00:15:35,935
I was infatuated
with winning the America's Cup

257
00:15:36,852 --> 00:15:38,354
and what was required.

258
00:15:38,437 --> 00:15:42,316
Hopefully, you'll be the one to challenge
whatever yacht the Americans put up.

259
00:15:42,399 --> 00:15:45,986
That's right. Dennis Conner is
the skipper of the one boat,

260
00:15:46,070 --> 00:15:48,155
which he successfully defended last time.

261
00:15:48,238 --> 00:15:49,490
-[man] Boo!
-[both laugh]

262
00:15:49,573 --> 00:15:51,367
-Didn't like him much.
-[audience laughs]

263
00:15:51,450 --> 00:15:53,661
[Bertrand] Every year losing to Dennis,

264
00:15:54,161 --> 00:15:57,706
I concluded that
I wasn't mentally tough enough.

265
00:16:01,001 --> 00:16:03,545
And unless you understood
your competition,

266
00:16:03,629 --> 00:16:05,965
unless you understood the enemy,

267
00:16:06,048 --> 00:16:08,342
you could never actually take it
to another level.

268
00:16:11,553 --> 00:16:14,181
So I got a scholarship to MIT in Boston

269
00:16:14,264 --> 00:16:19,395
in the Department of Ocean Engineering
to become part of the US system.

270
00:16:20,604 --> 00:16:21,981
[man]<i> During this program,</i>

271
00:16:22,064 --> 00:16:24,358
<i>you'll be training</i>
<i>for careers in marine engineering.</i>

272
00:16:24,441 --> 00:16:28,779
<i>There will be lab work, sea projects,</i>
<i>and plenty of difficult classwork.</i>

273
00:16:29,571 --> 00:16:32,491
[Rasa] When he told me
the name of his thesis,

274
00:16:32,992 --> 00:16:35,577
I think, by then, I really understood

275
00:16:36,662 --> 00:16:39,957
how important sailing was to him.

276
00:16:40,040 --> 00:16:43,377
Optimum Angle of Attack
of America's Cup Sails.

277
00:16:43,460 --> 00:16:45,004
[electronic beat plays]

278
00:16:45,838 --> 00:16:47,047
[Bertrand laughs]

279
00:16:49,383 --> 00:16:52,761
Using lifting-line theory,
aerospace engineering,

280
00:16:53,846 --> 00:16:56,140
highly technical control systems,

281
00:16:56,849 --> 00:16:58,434
basically torpedoes.

282
00:17:01,395 --> 00:17:03,522
I was behind enemy lines for months…

283
00:17:05,232 --> 00:17:07,776
learning about secrets.

284
00:17:07,860 --> 00:17:10,612
That was very applicable
to the America's Cup challenge.

285
00:17:12,781 --> 00:17:15,409
So, after MIT, I knew enough

286
00:17:15,492 --> 00:17:19,121
that we could go head-to-head,
toe-to-toe with the best in the world.

287
00:17:19,621 --> 00:17:21,623
["Independent" by Brocker Way plays]

288
00:17:24,334 --> 00:17:25,335
[man] Come on, Kyle.

289
00:17:30,507 --> 00:17:32,342
[Conner] To compete,
you have to have the money.

290
00:17:32,426 --> 00:17:33,343
I just said,

291
00:17:33,844 --> 00:17:38,474
"When you want to race the America's Cup,
show me the money."

292
00:17:40,267 --> 00:17:42,686
I guess it's fair to say that estimates
about how much money

293
00:17:42,770 --> 00:17:44,354
has been spent to win this baby

294
00:17:44,438 --> 00:17:47,816
are anywhere between 60
and maybe 100 million dollars.

295
00:17:48,942 --> 00:17:50,152
[Conner] I was lucky.

296
00:17:50,235 --> 00:17:52,863
I had the backing
of the New York Yacht Club.

297
00:17:54,364 --> 00:17:56,158
I loved them like Mom and Dad.

298
00:17:56,950 --> 00:18:01,205
So you get the money,
then you can start to put a team together.

299
00:18:01,288 --> 00:18:04,166
[reporter]<i> Conner is putting his troops</i>
<i>through a training program</i>

300
00:18:04,249 --> 00:18:07,586
<i>as tough as any yet devised</i>
<i>for an America's Cup campaign.</i>

301
00:18:07,669 --> 00:18:10,839
[Conner] It's important that the crew
be able to perform at their best,

302
00:18:10,923 --> 00:18:13,634
and to do so,
they have to have a full commitment,

303
00:18:13,717 --> 00:18:18,680
working 5:00 in the morning till 9:00
at night, six days a week for 17 months.

304
00:18:18,764 --> 00:18:22,518
So the more money,
you can start to invest in technology.

305
00:18:24,311 --> 00:18:26,146
Then you can start thinking about,

306
00:18:26,230 --> 00:18:28,690
"What kind of a designer
are we going to have?"

307
00:18:29,191 --> 00:18:32,486
"Who's gonna build the boat?
Who's gonna make the sails?"

308
00:18:35,239 --> 00:18:39,034
[host] The New York Yacht Club
calls to order the first meeting…

309
00:18:39,118 --> 00:18:41,286
[Bertrand]
Studying the New York Yacht Club,

310
00:18:41,370 --> 00:18:43,997
I realize if we're ever to win this thing,

311
00:18:44,623 --> 00:18:48,710
we would need money, lots of money.

312
00:18:49,711 --> 00:18:51,922
["No Answer" by Ikebe Shakedown plays]

313
00:18:56,051 --> 00:18:58,303
[reporter]
The story of the America's challenge

314
00:18:58,387 --> 00:19:01,348
is the story
of the whole Bond financial saga.

315
00:19:02,015 --> 00:19:04,101
Bondy has always been a gambler,

316
00:19:04,935 --> 00:19:07,813
and that's what this is all about, money.

317
00:19:09,064 --> 00:19:11,817
[Bertrand] Alan was the syndicate chairman
for Australia.

318
00:19:11,900 --> 00:19:12,901
He took a gamble.

319
00:19:14,069 --> 00:19:15,696
It was his money.

320
00:19:15,779 --> 00:19:17,322
It was his project.

321
00:19:18,699 --> 00:19:22,202
[Simmer] Bondy was a big risk-taker.
Larger than life.

322
00:19:22,953 --> 00:19:25,664
He'd made a lot of money
in a short amount of time,

323
00:19:26,415 --> 00:19:28,542
largely through property deals.

324
00:19:29,459 --> 00:19:30,961
And he bought Swan Brewery.

325
00:19:32,087 --> 00:19:36,550
But from the New York Yacht Club's
point of view, he wasn't real wealth.

326
00:19:38,886 --> 00:19:40,762
[Bertrand] Alan intuitively knew

327
00:19:40,846 --> 00:19:45,058
to win could take him
from a local trader to a global trader.

328
00:19:45,684 --> 00:19:49,271
It was power and influence,
and that was his motivation.

329
00:19:49,354 --> 00:19:51,273
-[music stops]
-[seagulls squawking]

330
00:19:55,861 --> 00:19:57,112
[Bertrand] So, I said to Alan,

331
00:19:57,196 --> 00:19:59,907
"There's basically
three elements in this competition."

332
00:20:00,782 --> 00:20:03,327
"You gotta have
world-class administration."

333
00:20:03,410 --> 00:20:05,787
"You gotta have world-class technology,

334
00:20:05,871 --> 00:20:09,166
and, ultimately,
the team has to be world-class."

335
00:20:11,210 --> 00:20:15,339
We needed to get brilliant,
highly sophisticated minds.

336
00:20:16,840 --> 00:20:18,550
Invite the best of the best.

337
00:20:21,386 --> 00:20:23,096
So I called Huey.

338
00:20:24,848 --> 00:20:27,559
[Treharne] Got an apprenticeship
and I left school as a sailmaker.

339
00:20:29,186 --> 00:20:35,567
I can see wind shifts and wind pressure.
Just could almost smell the wind.

340
00:20:36,652 --> 00:20:38,737
[reporter]
<i>…and outstanding tactician Hugh Treharne</i>

341
00:20:38,820 --> 00:20:41,406
<i>join other senior members</i>
<i>of the Australian team.</i>

342
00:20:42,157 --> 00:20:44,368
<i>Is this the year of the impossible?</i>

343
00:20:44,451 --> 00:20:47,955
I was working as an engineer
on a uranium mine.

344
00:20:48,038 --> 00:20:49,831
I was actually a school teacher
at the time.

345
00:20:49,915 --> 00:20:51,792
I was working as an electrical engineer.

346
00:20:51,875 --> 00:20:54,962
And I get a phone call
out of the blue saying,

347
00:20:55,045 --> 00:20:57,256
"I'd like you to be the navigator

348
00:20:57,339 --> 00:21:00,342
on this 12 Metre we're gonna build
for the next America's Cup."

349
00:21:00,425 --> 00:21:03,303
I hadn't been a navigator on any boat.

350
00:21:04,221 --> 00:21:07,057
He said, "You're an engineer.
You go and figure it out."

351
00:21:07,808 --> 00:21:10,852
[Lissiman]
John Bertrand very carefully worked out

352
00:21:10,936 --> 00:21:14,022
the people with the right mental capacity,

353
00:21:14,106 --> 00:21:16,817
who could outsmart
the New York Yacht Club.

354
00:21:18,277 --> 00:21:21,196
[Bertrand] To take on the power
of the American psyche,

355
00:21:21,697 --> 00:21:23,782
with their immense confidence,

356
00:21:23,865 --> 00:21:27,077
you need a strong ego
to be able to play that game,

357
00:21:27,160 --> 00:21:29,121
and that was a major hurdle.

358
00:21:29,204 --> 00:21:30,747
[jaunty jazz music plays]

359
00:21:30,831 --> 00:21:32,457
[Bertrand] In our country, in Australia,

360
00:21:32,541 --> 00:21:34,584
we have this thing
called the Tall Poppy Syndrome,

361
00:21:35,585 --> 00:21:40,007
where people start to show a sense
of confidence, and they cut you down.

362
00:21:41,883 --> 00:21:44,594
So, if I could get
the mental side tough enough,

363
00:21:45,512 --> 00:21:47,973
then perhaps I could put
the whole thing together.

364
00:21:49,433 --> 00:21:51,893
[Lissiman]
Bertrand sent this psych test out

365
00:21:51,977 --> 00:21:54,604
to all of the potential crew members.

366
00:21:54,688 --> 00:21:58,317
And I can remember
getting this 14-page psych test

367
00:21:58,400 --> 00:22:00,444
and thinking, "What is this crap?"

368
00:22:00,527 --> 00:22:03,405
Yeah. I did the personality test. [laughs]

369
00:22:04,614 --> 00:22:07,367
The assessment was
that I could have more confidence.

370
00:22:07,451 --> 00:22:11,121
That was the assessment, yeah,
that I could have more confidence.

371
00:22:11,955 --> 00:22:17,794
So for us, we had to believe ourselves
that we belong on the world stage.

372
00:22:18,462 --> 00:22:20,672
That's the power of visualization.

373
00:22:21,340 --> 00:22:24,843
See the sails, see fellow crew members,

374
00:22:25,677 --> 00:22:28,722
realize the trust, faith, and respect
you have for them.

375
00:22:28,805 --> 00:22:32,809
You're visualizing the environment
even before you've gone into battle.

376
00:22:34,561 --> 00:22:40,192
Ultimately, training the mind
not to be intimidated in that environment.

377
00:22:42,152 --> 00:22:44,154
[somber music plays]

378
00:22:47,991 --> 00:22:49,993
[man]<i> Listen to the helicopters above.</i>

379
00:22:50,077 --> 00:22:53,121
-[helicopter blades whirring]
-[man] <i>You see the US Coast Guard.</i>

380
00:22:54,581 --> 00:22:58,043
<i>We're all working</i>
<i>hand in hand together as a team.</i>

381
00:22:59,419 --> 00:23:00,962
<i>And then you see Dennis Conner…</i>

382
00:23:03,298 --> 00:23:05,675
<i>and his American boat, Liberty.</i>

383
00:23:06,593 --> 00:23:08,053
[Bertrand] And finally,

384
00:23:08,136 --> 00:23:12,724
the last thing we had to have
was the high-tech, world-class boat.

385
00:23:13,392 --> 00:23:17,687
But the American sailing technology
was at a much higher level

386
00:23:17,771 --> 00:23:20,148
than anything we had in Australia.

387
00:23:21,483 --> 00:23:24,152
[reporter]<i> The battle of the Cup</i>
<i>has become a war of technology,</i>

388
00:23:24,903 --> 00:23:27,697
<i>and Conner had wanted to build himself</i>
<i>a fearsome weapon.</i>

389
00:23:28,824 --> 00:23:32,577
<i>So he went to the heavily-guarded</i>
<i>US Government weapons research center.</i>

390
00:23:32,661 --> 00:23:35,539
[Conner] Right now we have
naval architects involved.

391
00:23:36,039 --> 00:23:39,000
As a matter of fact, we have,
at the hub of our campaign,

392
00:23:39,084 --> 00:23:42,546
basically a subcontractor
from the Department of Defense.

393
00:23:43,880 --> 00:23:46,800
Dennis had US Navy
and aerospace technology.

394
00:23:47,551 --> 00:23:51,221
[Simmer] And he had big design teams,
like nearly 30 guys,

395
00:23:52,389 --> 00:23:55,308
but those days we just had Benny.

396
00:23:55,392 --> 00:23:57,310
We had Benny. That was it.

397
00:23:58,061 --> 00:24:01,398
[reporter]<i> Seen here</i>
<i>is the barefoot Australian, Ben Lexcen.</i>

398
00:24:01,481 --> 00:24:05,152
<i>He's Alan Bond's unlikely choice</i>
<i>to design his yacht</i>

399
00:24:05,235 --> 00:24:08,071
<i>for the upcoming 1983 America's Cup.</i>

400
00:24:08,780 --> 00:24:12,826
<i>But where many designers live</i>
<i>in a world full of calculus and geometry,</i>

401
00:24:13,618 --> 00:24:16,204
<i>Ben Lexcen lives in a world of art.</i>

402
00:24:17,372 --> 00:24:19,291
[Lexcen] Yacht design is still an art.

403
00:24:19,875 --> 00:24:23,795
It's probably one of the only arts left
where the artist has to prove his work

404
00:24:23,879 --> 00:24:25,714
by actual performance.

405
00:24:25,797 --> 00:24:27,132
Benny was different.

406
00:24:27,632 --> 00:24:29,759
He was not constrained in a box.

407
00:24:31,094 --> 00:24:34,306
Brilliant and dangerous in so many ways.

408
00:24:36,850 --> 00:24:39,394
He was the Leonardo da Vinci of Australia.

409
00:24:43,565 --> 00:24:48,278
Only three years of formal education,
nine years old to twelve years old.

410
00:24:49,779 --> 00:24:52,115
So he wasn't restricted in his thinking.

411
00:24:54,659 --> 00:24:56,786
That was his strength, as it turns out.

412
00:24:57,787 --> 00:25:00,874
[Longley] Ben's one
of these really unique people in the world

413
00:25:00,957 --> 00:25:05,629
who comes from an incredible background
of hardly any formal schooling at all.

414
00:25:07,297 --> 00:25:10,884
He was almost a street person in a way.

415
00:25:13,136 --> 00:25:14,346
[Rasa] Benny would just arrive

416
00:25:14,429 --> 00:25:18,767
and stay with us
for two nights, two weeks,

417
00:25:19,559 --> 00:25:22,354
and he was physically very awkward.

418
00:25:22,437 --> 00:25:27,651
He had a very severe tic,
but he was curious.

419
00:25:27,734 --> 00:25:30,779
He was a passionately curious man.

420
00:25:31,738 --> 00:25:36,868
And we've moved the rig slightly, so, uh…
The boat feels really nice.

421
00:25:36,952 --> 00:25:41,581
[Longley] His genius was
to be able to absorb information.

422
00:25:42,874 --> 00:25:44,459
He's like a honeyeater.

423
00:25:44,543 --> 00:25:47,712
He'd just pick, pick, pick, pick, pick,
pick, pick, pick and bring all this in.

424
00:25:48,922 --> 00:25:51,841
[Bertrand]
So when Benny started to design the yacht,

425
00:25:51,925 --> 00:25:56,096
I was sitting on the dock,
and he said, "John, look at the seagulls."

426
00:25:57,097 --> 00:26:00,517
He said, "Every feather,
there's a flight control system."

427
00:26:01,268 --> 00:26:03,770
He said, "There must be
a thousand control systems

428
00:26:03,853 --> 00:26:05,772
in one wing of that bird."

429
00:26:07,148 --> 00:26:10,819
He said, "Look at how they take off.
It's just one flip and they're gone."

430
00:26:12,320 --> 00:26:13,446
"It's beautiful."

431
00:26:15,490 --> 00:26:17,492
He was a student of nature.

432
00:26:19,160 --> 00:26:22,247
And I had very little understanding
of where it could lead,

433
00:26:22,956 --> 00:26:24,499
but the door was opened.

434
00:26:25,875 --> 00:26:28,169
[up-tempo music plays]

435
00:26:28,253 --> 00:26:32,632
[Longley] Benny had gone across to Holland
to try and design a 12 Metre

436
00:26:32,716 --> 00:26:35,302
that was gonna be better
than the 12 Metre that we had in 1980.

437
00:26:36,678 --> 00:26:39,973
[Bertrand] Benny was at one of the biggest
towing tank facilities in the world

438
00:26:40,056 --> 00:26:43,059
trying to get another one hundredth
of one knot out of the boat.

439
00:26:44,603 --> 00:26:48,315
He was tearing his hair out trying to find
an improvement, and he just couldn't.

440
00:26:49,107 --> 00:26:51,151
[Longley] He was enormously frustrated,

441
00:26:52,777 --> 00:26:56,239
and suddenly
we started getting these telexes…

442
00:26:59,367 --> 00:27:02,370
where he said,
"Hang on. We're onto something here."

443
00:27:05,582 --> 00:27:08,835
Every day we'd get back to the office
and there'd be another telex

444
00:27:08,918 --> 00:27:11,588
with him getting more and more excited.

445
00:27:13,048 --> 00:27:17,886
He said, "I'm developing a keel here
that could potentially be a breakthrough."

446
00:27:21,097 --> 00:27:22,807
But he didn't actually tell us
what it was.

447
00:27:24,225 --> 00:27:26,936
[reporter] <i>Lexcen's seven models</i>
<i>underwent test trials</i>

448
00:27:27,020 --> 00:27:30,357
<i>in minute detail in at least 200 runs,</i>

449
00:27:30,440 --> 00:27:34,194
<i>which allowed the designer to make</i>
<i>constant refinements to his secret keel.</i>

450
00:27:35,737 --> 00:27:39,199
[Bertrand] So the call came through
to come across to see this model

451
00:27:39,282 --> 00:27:41,451
that he created
with this funny-looking keel.

452
00:27:43,912 --> 00:27:47,415
[Simmer] So, I knew there was
something special going on with the keel.

453
00:27:47,499 --> 00:27:51,294
Benny said, "Okay, you can come over,
but you can't tell anyone."

454
00:27:51,378 --> 00:27:55,173
It was under covers, and John Bertrand
took me in to have a look.

455
00:27:55,674 --> 00:27:59,469
There, sitting in the foundry
on the sand, was this thing.

456
00:28:02,639 --> 00:28:04,516
[Brown] And I think I was speechless.

457
00:28:05,725 --> 00:28:07,310
Just trying to take it all in.

458
00:28:07,394 --> 00:28:10,855
I'm looking at this thing going,
"You can't be serious."

459
00:28:10,939 --> 00:28:15,527
I didn't know what to think
because it looked a bit weird.

460
00:28:17,070 --> 00:28:20,156
[Longley] People have been designing
12 Metres since 1905.

461
00:28:21,491 --> 00:28:22,701
This is so different.

462
00:28:24,119 --> 00:28:25,495
How can it be right?

463
00:28:25,578 --> 00:28:28,248
I knew that the keel was inverted.

464
00:28:28,331 --> 00:28:29,749
It was upside down.

465
00:28:29,833 --> 00:28:30,959
[laughing]

466
00:28:42,262 --> 00:28:46,015
It was like someone designed a new car.
Looked like it's got wheels on the roof.

467
00:28:49,269 --> 00:28:53,857
It became clear
Benny had been playing around with wings.

468
00:28:53,940 --> 00:28:56,860
It's like a bird with wings on it. Okay?

469
00:28:57,610 --> 00:28:58,653
[laughs]

470
00:28:59,487 --> 00:29:01,990
And that became
the outrageous winged keel.

471
00:29:04,325 --> 00:29:06,411
[Simmer] We knew the boat was high risk.

472
00:29:07,537 --> 00:29:11,708
And John, who's technically
one of the great sailors,

473
00:29:11,791 --> 00:29:13,209
was a little nervous about it.

474
00:29:13,293 --> 00:29:14,711
The last thing I wanted to do

475
00:29:14,794 --> 00:29:17,672
is to spend a huge amount
of my time, effort, and emotion

476
00:29:17,756 --> 00:29:20,425
on something where the equipment
was never gonna cut it.

477
00:29:20,925 --> 00:29:22,886
We didn't even know
it was gonna sail like a yacht.

478
00:29:24,387 --> 00:29:29,058
When I showed our boat,
they all thought I'd gone off my rocker.

479
00:29:29,142 --> 00:29:32,562
So we decided we were going to have
a big meeting with Alan Bond.

480
00:29:34,189 --> 00:29:38,985
"So, Alan, Benny's come up
with a boat that is very, very different."

481
00:29:39,068 --> 00:29:43,615
"But the tank says it's 20 minutes faster
around the track than this one."

482
00:29:43,698 --> 00:29:46,868
"What are we going to do?"
And Alan said, "Right."

483
00:29:47,619 --> 00:29:50,830
"Well, we're gonna build that one.
Otherwise, you're all fired."

484
00:29:50,914 --> 00:29:53,625
So we just went ahead and built that boat.

485
00:29:53,708 --> 00:29:56,419
[up-tempo instrumental music plays]

486
00:30:03,218 --> 00:30:06,095
This is where
Ben Lexcen's latest winged wonder

487
00:30:06,179 --> 00:30:11,100
will have its fiery birth in a vat
of molten lead in North Fremantle.

488
00:30:12,685 --> 00:30:15,396
[Simmer] So many years
of getting hammered by the Americans.

489
00:30:15,480 --> 00:30:18,775
It was time
that we had to do something radical.

490
00:30:24,280 --> 00:30:26,574
Skippy and I were involved
in building the boat.

491
00:30:27,158 --> 00:30:28,868
You know, literally hands-on.

492
00:30:28,952 --> 00:30:30,578
[music continues]

493
00:30:34,165 --> 00:30:38,211
Everyone was covered in gray
from grinding and cutting aluminum.

494
00:30:44,092 --> 00:30:47,178
[Longley] Benny Lexcen and I
designed the deck layout together.

495
00:30:48,513 --> 00:30:51,099
And I was in charge of everything
from the deck up.

496
00:30:52,433 --> 00:30:56,479
We actually threw the rule book out
in terms of how sails will be made.

497
00:30:58,064 --> 00:31:01,901
And we developed the software
to design the sails.

498
00:31:04,737 --> 00:31:06,114
Totally revolutionary.

499
00:31:07,615 --> 00:31:10,285
[Simmer] We would take risks
and broke a lot of stuff

500
00:31:10,368 --> 00:31:13,663
because Benny was experimenting
as he was building stuff.

501
00:31:13,746 --> 00:31:15,373
That's how he was, you know.

502
00:31:16,207 --> 00:31:18,334
[Bertrand]
You'd say, "Well, that guy's crazy."

503
00:31:18,418 --> 00:31:22,422
Well, yes, he was, but we're all crazy.
It's all part of the deal.

504
00:31:22,505 --> 00:31:25,300
[reporter 1]
<i>We sat down with designer Ben Lexcen</i>

505
00:31:25,383 --> 00:31:28,761
<i>and talked about his partnership</i>
<i>with team owner Alan Bond.</i>

506
00:31:28,845 --> 00:31:32,599
[Lexcen] I'm not under any pressure
of time or money,

507
00:31:32,682 --> 00:31:35,852
and he appreciates my style of thinking,

508
00:31:35,935 --> 00:31:39,689
and he more or less lets me
just wander along like I'm an inventor.

509
00:31:43,902 --> 00:31:47,113
Alan Bond's new 12 Metre
was officially named in the ceremony

510
00:31:47,196 --> 00:31:49,741
before thousands of spectators
in Perth today.

511
00:31:50,366 --> 00:31:52,368
[reporter 2]
<i>A supremely confident Alan Bond</i>

512
00:31:52,452 --> 00:31:53,536
<i>told a news conference today</i>

513
00:31:53,620 --> 00:31:55,955
<i>that Australia II would win</i>
<i>the America's Cup.</i>

514
00:31:57,123 --> 00:32:02,587
The construction of this yacht
first began with Ben Lexcen, the designer.

515
00:32:03,546 --> 00:32:08,426
We've worked over two years
on a truly Australian effort.

516
00:32:08,509 --> 00:32:10,094
For the first time,

517
00:32:10,178 --> 00:32:15,016
we have been able to develop
equal to anything else the world will see.

518
00:32:16,976 --> 00:32:18,978
[crowd applauding and cheering]

519
00:32:22,315 --> 00:32:24,734
[man] Three cheers… Hip-hip hooray!

520
00:32:26,152 --> 00:32:28,154
[helicopter blades whirring]

521
00:32:32,241 --> 00:32:36,996
[singers on radio] ♪ <i>1540 WADK, Newport ♪</i>

522
00:32:37,580 --> 00:32:40,375
Four minutes before 3:00
on Newport Radio WADK,

523
00:32:40,458 --> 00:32:44,003
the official radio station
of the 1983 America's Cup.

524
00:32:44,087 --> 00:32:45,380
Speaking of which,

525
00:32:45,463 --> 00:32:47,298
the successful 1980 defender,
Dennis Conner,

526
00:32:47,382 --> 00:32:48,883
and Liberty, a brand-new 12,

527
00:32:48,967 --> 00:32:51,594
has made her arrival
in Newport Harbor today.

528
00:32:54,263 --> 00:32:57,433
[reporter]<i> Dennis Conner,</i>
<i>the incumbent America's Cup defender,</i>

529
00:32:57,517 --> 00:33:02,188
<i>a solitary man with a single focus,</i>
<i>to win again in 1983.</i>

530
00:33:03,773 --> 00:33:06,651
On behalf of AT&T,
we're proud to, uh, be a sponsor

531
00:33:06,734 --> 00:33:08,194
in defense of the America's Cup.

532
00:33:08,277 --> 00:33:11,030
And let me just add one other thing.
Go get 'em, Dennis!

533
00:33:11,114 --> 00:33:12,782
-[Conner] All right!
-[man] Tomorrow!

534
00:33:13,449 --> 00:33:16,077
This Tuesday,
they will begin running the competition

535
00:33:16,160 --> 00:33:19,414
for the most coveted sailing prize,
the America's Cup.

536
00:33:20,957 --> 00:33:24,085
[Lissiman] Now, the America's Cup
is a Challenger Series,

537
00:33:25,086 --> 00:33:27,588
52 races against all the other countries,

538
00:33:28,297 --> 00:33:30,299
four-and-a-half months in Newport,

539
00:33:31,467 --> 00:33:34,846
for the right to race
against the Americans in September.

540
00:33:37,765 --> 00:33:39,392
[man] There was a time here in New England

541
00:33:39,475 --> 00:33:42,478
when the words "The British are coming"
rang out loud and clear.

542
00:33:42,562 --> 00:33:45,815
But during this summer of 1983
here in Newport,

543
00:33:45,898 --> 00:33:47,608
it's not only the British who are coming,

544
00:33:47,692 --> 00:33:51,320
but it's also the French,
the Canadians, the Italians,

545
00:33:51,404 --> 00:33:52,655
and the Australians.

546
00:33:56,534 --> 00:33:59,704
[Longley] When we first got to Newport
for the Challenger Races,

547
00:34:00,413 --> 00:34:01,664
we talked about the keel.

548
00:34:02,623 --> 00:34:04,959
And we decided we'd hide it completely.

549
00:34:07,462 --> 00:34:10,923
[Lissiman] The last thing we want to do
is show the keel to the world,

550
00:34:11,007 --> 00:34:13,634
so that someone else could copy it,
and put it on their boat,

551
00:34:13,718 --> 00:34:15,636
and be as competitive as what we were.

552
00:34:16,929 --> 00:34:18,890
So, we kept it hidden.

553
00:34:20,308 --> 00:34:22,977
[Longley] And I remember
there was a local newspaper.

554
00:34:23,061 --> 00:34:26,731
It said, "The Australians have come
with some bizarre, stupid keel."

555
00:34:27,482 --> 00:34:29,567
"These guys have finally lost it."

556
00:34:29,650 --> 00:34:31,861
"They've lost three times,
and they're getting desperate."

557
00:34:31,944 --> 00:34:33,237
That was the attitude of it.

558
00:34:37,575 --> 00:34:40,369
Starting leg of the America's Cup course
is into the wind,

559
00:34:40,453 --> 00:34:45,374
four-and-a-half miles long to this mark,
followed by two reaching legs.

560
00:34:45,458 --> 00:34:48,169
Then the yachts turn
one more time to the port,

561
00:34:48,252 --> 00:34:50,880
finishing once more into the wind.

562
00:34:50,963 --> 00:34:52,548
So we entered the first races

563
00:34:52,632 --> 00:34:55,468
of the elimination series
against the Italians,

564
00:34:55,551 --> 00:34:59,222
with the unknown
of just how competitive our package was.

565
00:35:00,223 --> 00:35:01,849
[Simmer] This radical boat,

566
00:35:01,933 --> 00:35:04,352
you're either gonna hit a home run
or you're not.

567
00:35:04,435 --> 00:35:07,522
We were either going to be
heroes or idiots.

568
00:35:07,605 --> 00:35:13,694
-[official]<i> Five, four, three, two, one</i>.
-[gun fires]

569
00:35:13,778 --> 00:35:15,321
[helicopter blades whirring]

570
00:35:15,822 --> 00:35:17,740
[announcer 1]
<i>Australia has turned the mark</i>

571
00:35:17,824 --> 00:35:20,159
<i>and is absolutely flying downwind.</i>

572
00:35:20,243 --> 00:35:22,328
[Bertrand]
All the work that we had done in Australia

573
00:35:22,411 --> 00:35:24,122
had paid huge dividends.

574
00:35:24,205 --> 00:35:26,415
[announcer 2]<i> Australia II has won.</i>

575
00:35:26,499 --> 00:35:29,794
[announcer 3] <i>You can see Australia II.</i>
<i>She's just crossed the finishing line.</i>

576
00:35:29,877 --> 00:35:31,921
And we came out all guns blazing.

577
00:35:33,464 --> 00:35:36,467
[Longley]
We were no longer overawed by Newport.

578
00:35:36,551 --> 00:35:39,846
We were just angry.
We were there for one reason, to win.

579
00:35:40,513 --> 00:35:43,182
The time is 6:30 a.m. on a Sunday morning,

580
00:35:43,266 --> 00:35:45,935
and the Australia II crew
is already hard at work.

581
00:35:48,938 --> 00:35:51,983
[Longley] We would run,
we'd do weights, we'd do aerobics.

582
00:35:52,066 --> 00:35:55,736
It was not only
a part of getting fit and getting strong.

583
00:35:55,820 --> 00:35:58,114
It was also about sending a message.

584
00:35:58,197 --> 00:36:00,616
[all] Good morning, Australia!

585
00:36:01,534 --> 00:36:04,453
[Bertrand] Now it was only until
we started to win races

586
00:36:05,037 --> 00:36:06,622
that our credibility increased.

587
00:36:07,957 --> 00:36:09,917
[news anchor 1]
In the America's Cup preliminaries,

588
00:36:10,001 --> 00:36:12,461
all signs are pointing
to Alan Bond's Australia II

589
00:36:12,545 --> 00:36:13,838
as the boat to beat.

590
00:36:14,547 --> 00:36:17,508
[Bertrand] We beat the Italians,
crushed the Canadians.

591
00:36:17,592 --> 00:36:18,676
-[gun fires]
-[crowd cheers]

592
00:36:18,759 --> 00:36:20,136
[news anchor 2] After today's race,

593
00:36:20,219 --> 00:36:23,639
it seems nothing can tack faster
or point higher into the wind

594
00:36:23,723 --> 00:36:25,766
than Ben Lexcen's radical 12 Metre.

595
00:36:25,850 --> 00:36:28,811
While few people
have actually seen this mysterious keel,

596
00:36:28,895 --> 00:36:32,315
almost everyone here
has seen the boat racing and winning.

597
00:36:32,398 --> 00:36:34,442
[announcer]<i> Australia II, by some…</i>

598
00:36:34,525 --> 00:36:38,321
Then, suddenly,
"Why are they so competitive?"

599
00:36:40,364 --> 00:36:43,993
[reporter 1] <i>What is that beneath the hull</i>
<i>of the Australia II?</i>

600
00:36:44,076 --> 00:36:46,996
<i>A keel, but what kind of a keel?</i>

601
00:36:47,079 --> 00:36:49,832
<i>It's this summer's mystery at Newport.</i>

602
00:36:50,374 --> 00:36:53,044
[Bertrand] The boat was covered.
It was always secret.

603
00:36:53,544 --> 00:36:57,548
And that started to drive
some of the observers crazy.

604
00:36:57,632 --> 00:37:00,051
The big question here, Bryant,
this morning, is

605
00:37:00,134 --> 00:37:01,719
what do the Aussies have on their bottom?

606
00:37:01,802 --> 00:37:04,472
[interviewer] Between us, can you tell me
what that keel is?

607
00:37:04,555 --> 00:37:07,433
Between us, Mort, I can't tell you, no.
-[both laugh]

608
00:37:08,017 --> 00:37:10,770
[reporter 2] <i>Armed guards</i>
<i>patrol this place around the clock.</i>

609
00:37:10,853 --> 00:37:13,105
<i>Their job is to protect Australia II,</i>

610
00:37:13,189 --> 00:37:16,609
<i>the yacht that may very well succeed</i>
<i>in making sporting history.</i>

611
00:37:18,361 --> 00:37:20,404
[reporter 3]
<i>Australia's designer, Ben Lexcen,</i>

612
00:37:20,488 --> 00:37:23,282
<i>he's something</i>
<i>of a reluctant superstar here,</i>

613
00:37:23,950 --> 00:37:26,244
<i>but they all want to know about his keel.</i>

614
00:37:26,327 --> 00:37:28,871
-[crowd] Let's see the keel!
-[reporter 4] Where's the keel, Benny?

615
00:37:28,955 --> 00:37:32,792
Ben Lexcen decided that he'd draw up
a sketch of the winged keel,

616
00:37:33,376 --> 00:37:36,462
and he made it totally different
than what it really was.

617
00:37:36,963 --> 00:37:40,258
The office at Newport Offshore
had a photocopier,

618
00:37:40,341 --> 00:37:44,262
so Ben went over with this sheet of paper
and put it on their photocopier.

619
00:37:45,930 --> 00:37:49,976
Comes flying back into the office
ten minutes later and says, "Guys!"

620
00:37:50,059 --> 00:37:53,771
"I've left… I've left a drawing of my keel
in your photocopier.<i>"</i>

621
00:37:53,854 --> 00:37:58,818
By that afternoon, there were copies
all over Newport of our fake keel.

622
00:38:00,778 --> 00:38:04,782
Then opposition boats put winglets
on the bottom of their keels.

623
00:38:04,865 --> 00:38:07,451
[reporter 5]
<i>Australia's keel has so impressed everyone</i>

624
00:38:07,535 --> 00:38:10,413
<i>that the British have put wings</i>
<i>on the keel of Victory.</i>

625
00:38:10,496 --> 00:38:14,208
We'd go around and check them and say,
"No, it's little a bit different to that."

626
00:38:14,292 --> 00:38:17,044
"You gotta try and do it this way."
You know? [laughs]

627
00:38:18,462 --> 00:38:21,799
[man] One of the Americans drew that
and says there's their design.

628
00:38:21,882 --> 00:38:23,134
That's their secret keel.

629
00:38:23,217 --> 00:38:25,553
Is that it? What do you think? Is that…

630
00:38:26,429 --> 00:38:27,722
Could be. Could be.

631
00:38:29,181 --> 00:38:31,100
[announcer]<i> Australia II has won!</i>

632
00:38:31,183 --> 00:38:36,147
The West Australians now have
an incredible 45 wins from 51 starts,

633
00:38:36,230 --> 00:38:39,942
and that just happens to be
the best record in 12 Metre history.

634
00:38:41,777 --> 00:38:44,572
And in the end,
we won the Challenger Series.

635
00:38:44,655 --> 00:38:45,781
We won by a lot.

636
00:38:46,657 --> 00:38:49,994
And so that's the boat race
and the Challenge Series.

637
00:38:50,077 --> 00:38:54,206
Australia goes on to race Liberty
for the America's Cup.

638
00:38:54,290 --> 00:38:55,416
[horn blasting]

639
00:38:56,500 --> 00:38:57,793
[cheering]

640
00:39:03,841 --> 00:39:05,301
[crowd cheering, applauding]

641
00:39:06,594 --> 00:39:09,138
The Australians are
the official 25th challengers

642
00:39:09,221 --> 00:39:10,723
for the America's Cup,

643
00:39:10,806 --> 00:39:12,600
and their incredible winning record

644
00:39:12,683 --> 00:39:15,061
really has
the New York Yacht Club worried.

645
00:39:16,771 --> 00:39:18,689
[reporter] <i>The man</i>
<i>who won the Cup last time</i>

646
00:39:18,773 --> 00:39:20,733
<i>for the United States is jittery.</i>

647
00:39:21,275 --> 00:39:24,653
We don't know much about their boat.
It's obviously a different, uh, type

648
00:39:24,737 --> 00:39:27,865
of, uh, characteristics
than a standard 12 Metre.

649
00:39:27,948 --> 00:39:30,826
It tacks differently,
and it, uh, accelerates differently,

650
00:39:30,910 --> 00:39:33,412
and it maneuvers differently
at the starts.

651
00:39:35,247 --> 00:39:39,251
The New York Yacht Club saw
that our race record was really strong.

652
00:39:39,335 --> 00:39:40,753
-Hi.
-[reporter] Two minutes for a--

653
00:39:40,836 --> 00:39:43,005
-No. Sorry.
-[reporter] Not even two minutes?

654
00:39:43,089 --> 00:39:46,008
We're late for a meeting here,
so we gotta move on.

655
00:39:46,092 --> 00:39:47,093
Thank you anyway.

656
00:39:48,052 --> 00:39:49,887
[Bertrand]
And if these Aussies are beating up

657
00:39:49,970 --> 00:39:51,889
on the foreign challengers so easily,

658
00:39:51,972 --> 00:39:54,558
47 wins out of 55 races,

659
00:39:54,642 --> 00:39:56,435
then that starts to cut deep.

660
00:39:57,478 --> 00:39:59,939
That sent shock waves
through the New York Yacht Club.

661
00:40:00,564 --> 00:40:02,691
Clearly shock waves through Newport.

662
00:40:03,526 --> 00:40:05,569
[reporter 1]
There's a serious side to this.

663
00:40:05,653 --> 00:40:08,072
Obviously there's more
than just a yachting race at stake.

664
00:40:08,155 --> 00:40:09,532
There's also a lot of money.

665
00:40:09,615 --> 00:40:13,744
It's estimated that £100 million are spent
in and around Newport

666
00:40:13,828 --> 00:40:15,204
during the America's Cup.

667
00:40:15,287 --> 00:40:18,916
It was a sudden realization
that they could lose this golden goose.

668
00:40:18,999 --> 00:40:20,501
It could really happen.

669
00:40:20,584 --> 00:40:22,878
[man] People in Newport
and Rhode Island knew all the time,

670
00:40:22,962 --> 00:40:24,880
but kept it a very closely guarded secret

671
00:40:24,964 --> 00:40:27,133
that the prize
isn't so much a sailboat race.

672
00:40:27,216 --> 00:40:30,386
It's about a billion-dollar industry
that goes along with the Cup.

673
00:40:31,387 --> 00:40:33,222
[reporter 2]<i> So if the Americans lose,</i>

674
00:40:33,305 --> 00:40:37,268
<i>then a substantial amount of that</i>
<i>might be spent in Western Australia.</i>

675
00:40:38,519 --> 00:40:40,438
[Bertrand]
So, for the New York Yacht Club,

676
00:40:40,938 --> 00:40:42,648
the consequences of losing

677
00:40:43,774 --> 00:40:44,984
are enormous.

678
00:40:48,237 --> 00:40:51,490
[announcer]<i> An ABC News Brief</i>
<i>brought to you by Apple Computer.</i>

679
00:40:51,574 --> 00:40:54,160
<i>Now from Los Angeles,</i>
<i>here's Peter Jennings.</i>

680
00:40:54,243 --> 00:40:57,371
The America's Cup competition
is set to get underway this Thursday.

681
00:40:57,455 --> 00:40:58,706
There is now a dispute, however,

682
00:40:58,789 --> 00:41:01,333
between the New York Yacht Club
and the Australians.

683
00:41:01,417 --> 00:41:04,336
It seems the Americans are upset
with something the Aussies have done

684
00:41:04,420 --> 00:41:06,297
with the underside of their boat,

685
00:41:06,380 --> 00:41:09,800
something the Americans feel
will give the Aussies an unfair advantage.

686
00:41:09,884 --> 00:41:11,760
The New York Yacht Club alleges

687
00:41:11,844 --> 00:41:14,430
that Australia II's winged keel
is illegal.

688
00:41:15,139 --> 00:41:16,765
This four-million-dollar challenge,

689
00:41:16,849 --> 00:41:18,767
the closest ever
in the history of the Cup,

690
00:41:18,851 --> 00:41:19,685
could be scuttled.

691
00:41:20,352 --> 00:41:22,855
[Longley] The New York Yacht Club,
they wanted to ban us.

692
00:41:23,355 --> 00:41:26,025
They said there is no way
that Benny could've come up with this.

693
00:41:26,108 --> 00:41:28,861
It had to have been designed
by other people.

694
00:41:30,488 --> 00:41:34,658
People couldn't believe
that he could do it,

695
00:41:34,742 --> 00:41:37,036
given his education and his background.

696
00:41:37,119 --> 00:41:39,622
[reporter 1]
<i>At the center of all the fuss this year</i>

697
00:41:39,705 --> 00:41:41,290
<i>has been barefoot Ben Lexcen.</i>

698
00:41:41,790 --> 00:41:43,459
<i>With three years' schooling,</i>

699
00:41:43,542 --> 00:41:47,796
<i>he's the man who has designed,</i>
<i>arguably, the fastest 12 Metre ever.</i>

700
00:41:49,507 --> 00:41:51,258
[Conner]
I didn't know much about Ben Lexcen.

701
00:41:52,593 --> 00:41:53,677
But people talk.

702
00:41:54,303 --> 00:41:55,888
You hear through the grapevine.

703
00:41:56,430 --> 00:42:00,100
Who's to say these wings,
whose idea these really were?

704
00:42:00,184 --> 00:42:04,897
[reporter 2]<i> The Americans try and confirm</i>
<i>that Lexcen was helped by Dutch designers.</i>

705
00:42:05,898 --> 00:42:09,026
[Conner] We believe Lexcen used the idea
from Amsterdam,

706
00:42:09,652 --> 00:42:14,323
but the rules are it had to be designed
by the country of the challenge.

707
00:42:14,406 --> 00:42:16,992
The New York Yacht Club
believe they have grounds to say

708
00:42:17,076 --> 00:42:19,662
that I didn't design the boat
totally by myself.

709
00:42:19,745 --> 00:42:23,832
They go behind your back
and try and get evidence in dubious ways.

710
00:42:25,918 --> 00:42:27,878
[reporter 3]
This afternoon, Ben was suffering

711
00:42:27,962 --> 00:42:30,506
what friends said
were a couple of dizzy spells.

712
00:42:31,257 --> 00:42:33,968
Doctors immediately put him
into intensive care.

713
00:42:35,135 --> 00:42:37,555
His friends say
it's the attacks against his name

714
00:42:37,638 --> 00:42:38,973
that helped put him there.

715
00:42:40,683 --> 00:42:42,643
[Bertrand]
The New York Yacht Club were endeavoring

716
00:42:42,726 --> 00:42:44,728
to get the design assistants in Holland

717
00:42:45,396 --> 00:42:48,983
to say that they designed the keel
and not Ben Lexcen.

718
00:42:49,066 --> 00:42:52,111
The Dutch had designed the keel
and not Ben Lexcen.

719
00:42:52,194 --> 00:42:54,863
We felt responsible to go over,

720
00:42:54,947 --> 00:42:57,408
to send someone to Holland
to really investigate it.

721
00:42:58,450 --> 00:43:01,328
[reporter]<i> The director of the Netherlands</i>
<i>Ship Model Basin has charged</i>

722
00:43:01,412 --> 00:43:05,791
<i>that members of the New York Yacht Club</i>
<i>tried to get him to sign a false affidavit</i>

723
00:43:05,874 --> 00:43:08,544
<i>stating Ben Lexcen was not the designer.</i>

724
00:43:09,378 --> 00:43:12,131
[Van Oossanen]<i> I was very surprised</i>
<i>to come face-to-face with two people</i>

725
00:43:12,214 --> 00:43:14,466
<i>who wanted me to sign a document</i>

726
00:43:14,550 --> 00:43:18,387
<i>which said that I was the designer</i>
<i>of Australia II rather than Ben Lexcen,</i>

727
00:43:18,470 --> 00:43:21,348
<i>which is almost too ridiculous</i>
<i>to even think of.</i>

728
00:43:22,850 --> 00:43:26,395
The keel cup committee said,
"We've been over to Holland,

729
00:43:27,229 --> 00:43:30,899
and there was no substance
to their complaint."

730
00:43:31,483 --> 00:43:33,611
"This boat is fair and legal."

731
00:43:34,278 --> 00:43:36,780
And that was the thing
that finally busted their case apart.

732
00:43:37,406 --> 00:43:40,492
The New York Yacht Club
today withdrew its objections

733
00:43:40,576 --> 00:43:43,495
to the mysterious winged keel
on Australia II

734
00:43:43,579 --> 00:43:46,790
and said, "May the better yacht
win the America's Cup."

735
00:43:46,874 --> 00:43:51,712
[Bond] It has been 56 races
and nearly two and a half years of effort

736
00:43:51,795 --> 00:43:54,798
been put in to reach where we are today.

737
00:43:54,882 --> 00:44:00,137
Let the best yacht and crew decide
by the gun at the end of each race.

738
00:44:06,310 --> 00:44:07,728
[helicopter blades whirring]

739
00:44:07,811 --> 00:44:11,523
[man]<i> We're about to go live by satellite</i>
<i>to Newport. Rob Mundle, are you there?</i>

740
00:44:11,607 --> 00:44:13,233
[Mundle] Certainly. Good morning, Harry.

741
00:44:13,317 --> 00:44:15,152
We have a great battle coming up.

742
00:44:15,235 --> 00:44:19,198
The showdown, 132 years
of sporting history at stake here.

743
00:44:19,281 --> 00:44:21,867
We're looking at Dennis Conner
on the screen right there.

744
00:44:22,368 --> 00:44:23,494
[Conner] I was uneasy.

745
00:44:24,244 --> 00:44:27,414
Bertrand, he was at the top of his game.

746
00:44:28,248 --> 00:44:30,042
He was a tough competitor,

747
00:44:30,125 --> 00:44:32,378
and he had a very good boat
and a good crew.

748
00:44:32,461 --> 00:44:34,630
He was dangerous, and he scared me.

749
00:44:36,382 --> 00:44:38,884
[reporter] Liberty and Australia II
have entered the race course.

750
00:44:38,967 --> 00:44:41,762
According to my watch,
nine minutes and 30 seconds from now,

751
00:44:41,845 --> 00:44:43,555
they will cross the starting line.

752
00:44:44,056 --> 00:44:47,017
[Lissiman] Ten minutes
before the start of the race gun,

753
00:44:47,101 --> 00:44:48,852
that's when the two boats would meet,

754
00:44:49,728 --> 00:44:51,313
positioning yourself,

755
00:44:51,397 --> 00:44:54,066
and that's when it'd be on.
The gloves would come off.

756
00:44:55,275 --> 00:44:58,946
The yacht that had got
to the first mark of the first race

757
00:44:59,029 --> 00:45:00,989
had always won the America's Cup.

758
00:45:03,450 --> 00:45:05,369
-[gun fires]
-[tense music plays]

759
00:45:05,869 --> 00:45:08,580
[reporter] Australia over the line first
by three seconds.

760
00:45:09,206 --> 00:45:11,542
And I look behind,
and Dennis is right on our hammer,

761
00:45:11,625 --> 00:45:12,835
right on our hammer.

762
00:45:16,130 --> 00:45:18,757
[commentator]<i> The two yachts</i>
<i>are now approaching the first marker,</i>

763
00:45:18,841 --> 00:45:20,801
<i>and it's good news for Australia.</i>

764
00:45:21,468 --> 00:45:23,887
[Longley] We just beat them
by a couple of boat lengths.

765
00:45:23,971 --> 00:45:25,431
One to us. [chuckles]

766
00:45:25,514 --> 00:45:28,142
[reporter]
Australia has just made history.

767
00:45:28,225 --> 00:45:31,186
The foreign challenger
has never reached the first mark

768
00:45:31,270 --> 00:45:34,940
ahead of the American boat
in the first race.

769
00:45:35,023 --> 00:45:37,192
Australia has just done it.

770
00:45:38,193 --> 00:45:40,946
[Bertrand] After the start,
we sailed away from Liberty.

771
00:45:42,990 --> 00:45:46,034
Then all of a sudden,
it was like an explosion.

772
00:45:46,118 --> 00:45:47,202
[music stops]

773
00:45:53,167 --> 00:45:55,002
[Bertrand] We had no control at all.

774
00:45:55,627 --> 00:45:59,089
The wheel just went light.
No steering. Just rudderless.

775
00:46:03,719 --> 00:46:07,514
[Simmer] It was weird. We just had
a fitting pull off the side of the boat

776
00:46:07,598 --> 00:46:10,100
that had been there forever, you know.

777
00:46:10,893 --> 00:46:13,312
And Dennis passed around us.

778
00:46:14,605 --> 00:46:15,814
The race was over.

779
00:46:17,483 --> 00:46:19,109
[Tom Brokaw]<i> Liberty wins.</i>

780
00:46:19,193 --> 00:46:22,362
<i>Sounds like a World War I poster,</i>
<i>but it is instead the headline</i>

781
00:46:22,446 --> 00:46:24,865
<i>out of today's opening round</i>
<i>of the America's Cup.</i>

782
00:46:26,450 --> 00:46:29,453
We went across his stern,
and the damn rudder broke.

783
00:46:32,998 --> 00:46:35,250
[Longley] And then, of course,
start of the second race,

784
00:46:35,334 --> 00:46:39,546
bang, one of the tangs holding
the headboard of the mainsail breaks.

785
00:46:40,339 --> 00:46:42,382
[reporter] All summer their boat
broke down just once,

786
00:46:42,466 --> 00:46:45,677
and now in the finals,
two races and two breakdowns.

787
00:46:45,761 --> 00:46:48,430
This has meant a lot to the Liberty crew,
giving them momentum

788
00:46:48,514 --> 00:46:51,225
and an awful lot of confidence
heading into race three.

789
00:46:52,059 --> 00:46:55,479
[journalist] Commodore McCullough,
what would you say the odds are right now?

790
00:46:55,562 --> 00:46:59,817
I think we'll win it 4-0, but I'll take
four-to-one as a safety factor. [laughs]

791
00:46:59,900 --> 00:47:01,026
[audience laughs]

792
00:47:01,109 --> 00:47:02,444
[man] Any further questions?

793
00:47:02,528 --> 00:47:05,614
For something like that to happen
two races in a row,

794
00:47:06,156 --> 00:47:07,991
it's just unforgivable.

795
00:47:08,075 --> 00:47:09,451
Benny, give me a break,

796
00:47:09,535 --> 00:47:12,621
just give me something
that'll allow us to play the game here.

797
00:47:13,789 --> 00:47:15,249
[Lissiman] When we had that breakage,

798
00:47:15,332 --> 00:47:18,377
there was some tension
with John Bertrand and Ben Lexcen.

799
00:47:18,460 --> 00:47:20,838
And I remember John saying to him,

800
00:47:20,921 --> 00:47:24,925
"Go through the boat from head to toe
and just check everything."

801
00:47:25,008 --> 00:47:26,760
[helicopter blades whirring]

802
00:47:26,844 --> 00:47:28,512
[reporter]
They have now gone over the yacht

803
00:47:28,595 --> 00:47:31,348
from bow to stern,
from masthead to keel bolt,

804
00:47:31,431 --> 00:47:34,142
checking every sail,
every piece of equipment.

805
00:47:36,436 --> 00:47:39,606
Race three, Benny didn't attend
the launching of the boat.

806
00:47:39,690 --> 00:47:41,775
He was actually on a hill with binoculars

807
00:47:43,026 --> 00:47:44,570
under intense pressure.

808
00:47:44,653 --> 00:47:48,323
With just about seven minutes to go now
to get this race underway.

809
00:47:49,283 --> 00:47:51,034
[announcer 1]
<i>You are watching Australia II,</i>

810
00:47:51,118 --> 00:47:54,204
<i>the 12 Metre that has set</i>
<i>the yachting world on its ear.</i>

811
00:47:54,955 --> 00:47:57,249
[race official]<i> Three, two, one.</i>

812
00:47:57,833 --> 00:47:59,418
-[gun fires]
-[crowd cheering]

813
00:48:03,297 --> 00:48:05,757
[announcer 2]
<i>Australia II has just passed Liberty</i>

814
00:48:05,841 --> 00:48:08,427
<i>and is taking off down the course.</i>

815
00:48:09,011 --> 00:48:14,224
But as it turns out,
it was Benny's dream in its finest hour.

816
00:48:19,021 --> 00:48:22,024
[announcer 3]<i> We have just reached</i>
<i>the three-hour mark of this race,</i>

817
00:48:22,107 --> 00:48:24,985
<i>and the winds here in Newport</i>
<i>are starting to pick up.</i>

818
00:48:26,320 --> 00:48:30,490
[Lissiman] Quite often in Newport,
the wind speed was very strong,

819
00:48:31,074 --> 00:48:35,621
and the winged keel effectively lowered
the center of gravity of the yacht

820
00:48:35,704 --> 00:48:39,041
and made Australia II competitive
in stronger breezes.

821
00:48:39,750 --> 00:48:42,377
This concept, upwind,
the boat was a rocket ship.

822
00:48:42,461 --> 00:48:44,546
She was seriously fast.

823
00:48:48,550 --> 00:48:50,177
[reporter]
<i>Australia sailed across the line</i>

824
00:48:50,260 --> 00:48:53,555
<i>to win the third race</i>
<i>by three minutes and 14 seconds.</i>

825
00:48:54,306 --> 00:48:57,309
<i>Since 12 Metre started racing</i>
<i>for the America's Cup,</i>

826
00:48:57,392 --> 00:49:00,354
<i>that's the biggest margin</i>
<i>ever recorded by a challenger.</i>

827
00:49:01,605 --> 00:49:03,899
[commentator]
<i>Australia II is exceptionally fast.</i>

828
00:49:03,982 --> 00:49:06,944
<i>This is what the New York Yacht Club</i>
<i>is afraid of.</i>

829
00:49:08,403 --> 00:49:11,657
[Conner] The New York Yacht Club
certainly didn't have any enthusiasm

830
00:49:11,740 --> 00:49:13,116
from my performance.

831
00:49:14,034 --> 00:49:16,745
[interviewer] Is the New York Yacht Club
at all embarrassed about this?

832
00:49:16,828 --> 00:49:18,664
[Commodore]
We keep the pressure on the skippers

833
00:49:18,747 --> 00:49:22,084
because we say their head replaces
the Cup in the New York Yacht Club,

834
00:49:22,167 --> 00:49:25,128
so we keep pressure
on them all the time. [laughs]

835
00:49:26,213 --> 00:49:28,757
[Conner] But I came in
after losing that race,

836
00:49:28,840 --> 00:49:31,385
I wasn't ready
just to lay down and quit. No.

837
00:49:31,885 --> 00:49:36,098
The biggest thing to me was the attitude.
Attitude, attitude, attitude.

838
00:49:37,265 --> 00:49:38,600
Tired of the bullshit.

839
00:49:44,064 --> 00:49:46,692
Tired of wasting four hours
every morning fucking around

840
00:49:46,775 --> 00:49:49,069
for something
that's not gonna help us win the Cup.

841
00:49:49,695 --> 00:49:52,906
All I was focused on
was being the best I could be.

842
00:49:52,990 --> 00:49:54,658
No excuse to lose.

843
00:49:57,077 --> 00:49:58,078
[announcer] <i>Look at this.</i>

844
00:49:58,161 --> 00:50:00,288
<i>The boat at the top</i>
<i>of the screen is Liberty.</i>

845
00:50:00,372 --> 00:50:02,916
<i>Six seconds ahead of Australia</i>
<i>when the gun fired.</i>

846
00:50:04,418 --> 00:50:06,336
[commentator 1]
<i>Liberty went around the first mark</i>

847
00:50:06,420 --> 00:50:07,879
<i>36 seconds ahead.</i>

848
00:50:09,089 --> 00:50:11,299
[Bertrand] Dennis Conner was unstoppable.

849
00:50:13,260 --> 00:50:16,304
[Simmer] He was the most cunning
and clever on the water

850
00:50:16,388 --> 00:50:18,890
and strategically made good moves.

851
00:50:18,974 --> 00:50:21,184
[commentator 2]
<i>We get into a classic tacking duel.</i>

852
00:50:21,268 --> 00:50:25,564
He was impossible to go around,
always covering tack for tack.

853
00:50:27,899 --> 00:50:30,986
And he was hitting the wind shifts
at the right time,

854
00:50:31,778 --> 00:50:32,988
massive wind shifts.

855
00:50:34,156 --> 00:50:38,118
[commentator 3]<i> Liberty led Australia</i>
<i>across the finish line by 43 seconds.</i>

856
00:50:38,201 --> 00:50:39,411
[commentator 4]<i> There she goes.</i>

857
00:50:39,494 --> 00:50:42,622
<i>She's shooting it.</i>
<i>There's the gun. This race is over.</i>

858
00:50:42,706 --> 00:50:44,624
<i>The Americans lead three to one.</i>

859
00:50:45,459 --> 00:50:46,376
I kicked butt.

860
00:50:48,253 --> 00:50:51,214
The American yacht Liberty
tonight is just one victory away

861
00:50:51,298 --> 00:50:53,717
from keeping the America's Cup
in the United States.

862
00:50:53,800 --> 00:50:55,469
Three to one in the America's Cup series.

863
00:50:55,552 --> 00:50:57,054
One more win for Liberty,

864
00:50:57,137 --> 00:51:01,266
and the America's Cup will stay
bolted down at the New York Yacht Club.

865
00:51:03,810 --> 00:51:06,229
[reporter]<i> The despondent Australians</i>
<i>return to their dock,</i>

866
00:51:06,313 --> 00:51:07,814
<i>knowing they're down 3-1.</i>

867
00:51:07,898 --> 00:51:10,400
<i>They cannot afford</i>
<i>to make any more errors.</i>

868
00:51:12,027 --> 00:51:16,114
[Bertrand] At 3-1 in Newport,
the champagne was on ice,

869
00:51:16,698 --> 00:51:19,409
the banners were ready to go up.

870
00:51:19,493 --> 00:51:21,244
"Congratulations, Dennis and team."

871
00:51:25,040 --> 00:51:27,417
And Newport was about to celebrate.

872
00:51:30,378 --> 00:51:33,507
[Longley]
It's all over. Absolutely. It's all over.

873
00:51:34,007 --> 00:51:35,550
Newport was rocking.

874
00:51:35,634 --> 00:51:40,222
They just couldn't have been happier
to have another thrashing.

875
00:51:43,058 --> 00:51:45,769
It was just demoralizing.

876
00:51:46,770 --> 00:51:47,854
[cutlery clanking]

877
00:51:48,980 --> 00:51:53,693
[Bertrand] On the morning of the race,
I remember the breakfast was subdued.

878
00:51:55,862 --> 00:51:58,365
I had a hard time
even smelling the bacon and eggs,

879
00:51:58,448 --> 00:51:59,449
let alone eating anything.

880
00:52:02,285 --> 00:52:05,372
But then, on the television,
we received a note

881
00:52:05,455 --> 00:52:07,582
from the Prime Minister of Australia,
Bob Hawke.

882
00:52:07,666 --> 00:52:11,253
<i>Congratulations, you've done</i>
<i>a magnificent job to this point.</i>

883
00:52:11,336 --> 00:52:15,090
<i>What you've shown in relation</i>
<i>to our technological capacity,</i>

884
00:52:15,173 --> 00:52:18,093
<i>our determination as individuals…</i>

885
00:52:18,176 --> 00:52:21,179
<i>You've got</i>
<i>the entire support of Australia.</i>

886
00:52:21,263 --> 00:52:23,181
<i>We'll all be looking forward</i>
<i>to your return</i>

887
00:52:23,265 --> 00:52:26,184
<i>when we will do you as proud</i>
<i>as you have done us.</i>

888
00:52:28,019 --> 00:52:30,605
[Simmer]
Bob Hawke, Prime Minister of Australia,

889
00:52:30,689 --> 00:52:32,107
shit, that's a big deal.

890
00:52:33,275 --> 00:52:36,820
[Bertrand] Here we were being recognized
by the prime minister of our nation.

891
00:52:37,737 --> 00:52:39,573
It was a total game changer.

892
00:52:44,911 --> 00:52:49,958
Armies over the last thousand years
have gone to war with symbols and music.

893
00:52:52,252 --> 00:52:55,088
So, the boxing kangaroo flag was raised.

894
00:52:56,464 --> 00:52:59,885
And we chose a battle hymn,
Men at Work, "Down Under."

895
00:53:00,635 --> 00:53:02,846
And the team spirit came alive.

896
00:53:02,929 --> 00:53:04,681
["Down Under" by Men at Work plays]

897
00:53:05,182 --> 00:53:06,391
[crowd cheering]

898
00:53:13,023 --> 00:53:17,027
[announcer]<i> And so almost unbelievably,</i>
<i>that's Australia ahead at the first mark.</i>

899
00:53:18,987 --> 00:53:22,115
Off the coast of Rhode Island,
it was Australia's day.

900
00:53:22,199 --> 00:53:25,410
<i>♪ I met a strange lady,</i>
<i>She made me nervous… ♪</i>

901
00:53:26,119 --> 00:53:29,664
And Australia II still is alive
and in the America's Cup yacht race.

902
00:53:29,748 --> 00:53:30,790
<i>♪ And she said ♪</i>

903
00:53:30,874 --> 00:53:33,084
<i>♪ Do you come from a land down under? ♪</i>

904
00:53:35,253 --> 00:53:37,422
<i>♪ Where women glow and men plunder… ♪</i>

905
00:53:39,216 --> 00:53:40,926
[all cheering]

906
00:53:41,009 --> 00:53:44,763
We're just gonna get out there and do it
twice more, get this Cup for Australia.

907
00:53:44,846 --> 00:53:46,848
<i>♪ You better take cover ♪</i>

908
00:53:48,934 --> 00:53:51,645
[Bertrand] At three to two,
the tables were turning.

909
00:53:51,728 --> 00:53:54,689
Television crews were coming in
from all around the world.

910
00:53:55,190 --> 00:53:57,525
Australians were flying in to Newport.

911
00:53:57,609 --> 00:54:00,153
<i>♪ Buying bread from a man in Brussels… ♪</i>

912
00:54:00,654 --> 00:54:03,740
Tonight, that quaint coastal resort
of Newport, Rhode Island,

913
00:54:03,823 --> 00:54:06,701
is under the constant barrage
of Australia II.

914
00:54:06,785 --> 00:54:08,912
<i>♪ I said, do you speak my language… ♪</i>

915
00:54:08,995 --> 00:54:12,165
The whole of Newport knew
that the Australians were in town.

916
00:54:12,249 --> 00:54:15,252
We tore the place apart. [chuckles]

917
00:54:15,335 --> 00:54:16,503
[both yelling]

918
00:54:18,463 --> 00:54:22,717
[man]<i> The Aussies certainly have joined</i>
<i>the hype and hoopla here with gusto,</i>

919
00:54:22,801 --> 00:54:25,637
<i>promoting their souvenirs</i>
<i>and image aggressively.</i>

920
00:54:25,720 --> 00:54:27,597
<i>♪ Can't you hear the thunder? ♪</i>

921
00:54:28,848 --> 00:54:31,643
<i>♪ You better run, you better take cover ♪</i>

922
00:54:33,770 --> 00:54:35,730
The barbarians are at the gate.

923
00:54:36,314 --> 00:54:39,025
The Australians have come
for the sacred Cup,

924
00:54:39,109 --> 00:54:40,443
and they're howling.

925
00:54:41,569 --> 00:54:47,075
What Australians really like
is upsetting the upper echelon.

926
00:54:47,701 --> 00:54:49,202
["Land Down Under" continues]

927
00:54:59,504 --> 00:55:02,048
In race six, we were sailing the boat
extremely well.

928
00:55:02,132 --> 00:55:03,383
The boat was a rocket ship.

929
00:55:04,884 --> 00:55:10,682
It's Australia II with a very big lead
here by some two minutes, it seems.

930
00:55:11,266 --> 00:55:14,060
[Longley] And we won that race
by three and a half minutes.

931
00:55:14,144 --> 00:55:15,562
It was the greatest win

932
00:55:15,645 --> 00:55:18,440
by a challenging yacht
in the 12 Metre era.

933
00:55:19,357 --> 00:55:21,234
-[gun fires]
-[crowd cheers]

934
00:55:21,318 --> 00:55:24,863
[Jennings] In 132 years, no challenger
has ever driven the races

935
00:55:24,946 --> 00:55:26,448
to the full best-of-seven series.

936
00:55:28,241 --> 00:55:32,120
The Australians, dare we say it,
humiliated the Americans.

937
00:55:32,203 --> 00:55:36,541
So now it's three apiece.
One race to go, a true world series.

938
00:55:36,624 --> 00:55:39,419
-We can do it, Jim. We can do it.
-Oh yeah.

939
00:55:39,502 --> 00:55:43,006
[Bertrand]
The score went from 3-1 to 3-2 to 3-3.

940
00:55:44,257 --> 00:55:46,718
The Aussies had arrived.

941
00:55:47,427 --> 00:55:52,807
[man] How does it feel being the first
in 132 years, which is a very long time,

942
00:55:52,891 --> 00:55:54,476
to be in this situation of three-all?

943
00:55:54,559 --> 00:55:56,936
I mean, it must concern you.

944
00:55:58,063 --> 00:56:01,733
It's gonna be very exciting
to be involved in the race of the century.

945
00:56:01,816 --> 00:56:05,028
We're hoping that, uh, we can find
a way to prevail

946
00:56:05,111 --> 00:56:07,489
like we have in, over the last 132 years.

947
00:56:07,572 --> 00:56:10,533
I think we have
an awful lot of tradition going for us,

948
00:56:10,617 --> 00:56:14,662
and, uh, somehow,
I think we'll pull it out on Saturday.

949
00:56:14,746 --> 00:56:16,122
[audience applauding]

950
00:56:17,290 --> 00:56:19,292
[tense music plays]

951
00:56:23,129 --> 00:56:27,008
[Bertrand] Dennis was in
a super high-pressure environment.

952
00:56:29,844 --> 00:56:32,555
And the bottom line is
the New York Yacht Club

953
00:56:33,056 --> 00:56:37,435
were never in the business of losing,
literally, by any means.

954
00:56:37,519 --> 00:56:40,980
Panic, pure and simple,
has gripped the American camp.

955
00:56:41,064 --> 00:56:43,650
Shaken by Australia II's
effortless win in the sixth race,

956
00:56:43,733 --> 00:56:47,070
the Liberty syndicate
are resorting to truly desperate measures.

957
00:56:47,654 --> 00:56:51,866
Today the New York Yacht Club
just couldn't resist firing one more shot.

958
00:56:53,535 --> 00:56:57,497
[Bertrand] Dennis and the team found
a loophole in the rule on the 11th hour

959
00:56:58,164 --> 00:57:00,166
and made major changes in Liberty.

960
00:57:00,750 --> 00:57:02,585
[reporter]
<i>The red defender was towed up river</i>

961
00:57:02,669 --> 00:57:06,047
<i>so that 1,000 pounds of her ballast</i>
<i>could be removed.</i>

962
00:57:06,131 --> 00:57:08,049
[Simmer] It had never happened before.

963
00:57:08,675 --> 00:57:11,636
But the New York Yacht Club
allowed them to do it.

964
00:57:12,137 --> 00:57:15,557
Would never have happened
if we wanted to reconfigure our boat.

965
00:57:16,891 --> 00:57:19,269
[Conner]
Like NASCAR, there are rules in NASCAR,

966
00:57:19,352 --> 00:57:22,439
but there's--
Rules are broken, and they win the race.

967
00:57:22,522 --> 00:57:24,107
You use the rules to your advantage

968
00:57:24,190 --> 00:57:26,234
to take advantage
of the other competition.

969
00:57:26,734 --> 00:57:28,236
No excuse to lose.

970
00:57:29,154 --> 00:57:30,738
[audience cheering]

971
00:57:31,614 --> 00:57:36,953
Alan and the crew, the exercise
in which you're about to engage

972
00:57:37,036 --> 00:57:41,791
is certainly one of the historic moments
in Australian sporting history.

973
00:57:41,875 --> 00:57:44,294
You have all our best wishes with you.

974
00:57:44,377 --> 00:57:46,171
If it gets tight, let us know,

975
00:57:46,254 --> 00:57:48,965
and we'll all turn towards Newport
and blow to get you home.

976
00:57:49,048 --> 00:57:51,301
We're with you.
The very, very best of luck.

977
00:57:52,719 --> 00:57:55,513
No one had ever won it from the Americans.

978
00:57:55,597 --> 00:57:59,017
So here was history,
absolute history in the making.

979
00:57:59,934 --> 00:58:01,978
Always good to beat the Americans.

980
00:58:02,687 --> 00:58:03,980
At anything. [chuckles]

981
00:58:04,063 --> 00:58:07,901
[man over PA]
<i>We're with you, Australia II!</i>

982
00:58:08,943 --> 00:58:12,947
<i>We're with you, Australia II!</i>

983
00:58:13,490 --> 00:58:15,200
<i>We're with you…</i>

984
00:58:17,327 --> 00:58:19,871
[announcer]<i> It's the premier sailing event</i>
<i>in the world.</i>

985
00:58:19,954 --> 00:58:22,248
<i>It's the cup that's never been lost.</i>

986
00:58:22,332 --> 00:58:24,959
<i>It's the race that may end</i>
<i>the longest winning tradition</i>

987
00:58:25,043 --> 00:58:26,794
<i>in international sports history.</i>

988
00:58:27,420 --> 00:58:30,590
<i>Live from Newport,</i>
<i>this is the 25th defense,</i>

989
00:58:30,673 --> 00:58:32,842
<i>the final race for the America's Cup.</i>

990
00:58:35,094 --> 00:58:36,721
[up-tempo electronic music plays]

991
00:58:37,514 --> 00:58:38,806
[Mundle] Good morning, the world.

992
00:58:38,890 --> 00:58:41,267
Once again, another live telecast

993
00:58:41,351 --> 00:58:45,313
to Australia, New Zealand,
Hong Kong, America and Europe.

994
00:58:46,189 --> 00:58:49,442
At the moment,
we have about 30 million people watching.

995
00:58:52,779 --> 00:58:55,323
[reporter]<i> It's an emotional morning</i>
<i>for Mrs. Beryl Bertrand,</i>

996
00:58:55,406 --> 00:59:00,370
<i>as her son, John, takes Australia II</i>
<i>into the grand final of the America's Cup.</i>

997
00:59:01,746 --> 00:59:05,583
Today they sail the winner-take-all,
do-or-die, there's-no-tomorrow race.

998
00:59:05,667 --> 00:59:07,168
[helicopter blades whirring]

999
00:59:10,296 --> 00:59:12,006
[crowd applauding and cheering]

1000
00:59:14,676 --> 00:59:18,012
[Bertrand] Being towed out,
I remember it was like a zoo.

1001
00:59:18,096 --> 00:59:22,183
The envelope of people around us
was like a pressure cooker.

1002
00:59:25,144 --> 00:59:26,229
[horns blasting]

1003
00:59:29,566 --> 00:59:33,570
We're lining up now for the start
of the seventh and vital race

1004
00:59:33,653 --> 00:59:35,405
in this America's Cup.

1005
00:59:36,072 --> 00:59:38,241
[Bertrand]
This is thousands of hours of preparation,

1006
00:59:38,324 --> 00:59:40,243
a lifetime of preparation.

1007
00:59:40,326 --> 00:59:43,871
And I'd visualized this space.
I'd visualized this time.

1008
00:59:46,666 --> 00:59:47,875
I said to the team,

1009
00:59:48,543 --> 00:59:52,422
"Visualize you're on the back of an eagle,
a thousand feet in the air."

1010
00:59:58,553 --> 01:00:00,972
"And you see the boat
going through the water."

1011
01:00:02,390 --> 01:00:06,436
So I said, "Reach down with big scissors
and cut the distractions,

1012
01:00:06,519 --> 01:00:09,272
release the boat, release ourselves."

1013
01:00:14,193 --> 01:00:16,487
"There's no tomorrow,
there's no yesterday,

1014
01:00:16,571 --> 01:00:18,031
and there's no future."

1015
01:00:18,990 --> 01:00:20,700
It was just today.

1016
01:00:20,783 --> 01:00:22,744
[commentator 1]
<i>Five seconds away from the start.</i>

1017
01:00:24,495 --> 01:00:26,706
-[gun fires]
-[commentator 1] <i>There's the starting gun.</i>

1018
01:00:26,789 --> 01:00:30,335
When the gun went off,
the two boats charged at each other.

1019
01:00:30,418 --> 01:00:32,378
Here we go, you know. This is gonna be on.

1020
01:00:33,463 --> 01:00:35,715
[commentator 2]
<i>They are neck-and-neck at the moment.</i>

1021
01:00:35,798 --> 01:00:38,176
<i>John Bertrand has now turned</i>
<i>towards Liberty.</i>

1022
01:00:38,259 --> 01:00:41,721
We actually had a good start,
and when we tacked, we were in front.

1023
01:00:41,804 --> 01:00:44,057
[commentator 3] <i>Australia's gone</i>
<i>right on top of Liberty</i>

1024
01:00:44,140 --> 01:00:45,141
<i>by about two boat lengths.</i>

1025
01:00:45,224 --> 01:00:46,684
<i>Both boats on starboard tack.</i>

1026
01:00:47,435 --> 01:00:50,229
[commentator 4] <i>Uh-oh! It looks like</i>
<i>John Bertrand has decided</i>

1027
01:00:50,313 --> 01:00:51,689
<i>not to cover Dennis Conner.</i>

1028
01:00:51,773 --> 01:00:53,566
[Longley] But Dennis gets in front

1029
01:00:54,359 --> 01:00:57,403
and, quite frankly,
starts to sail away from us.

1030
01:01:01,491 --> 01:01:06,371
It became clear that Liberty was actually
a faster boat than what we'd seen before.

1031
01:01:06,954 --> 01:01:08,122
The boat had been revved up.

1032
01:01:08,748 --> 01:01:11,250
[Mundle] <i>The boat is gaining maximum speed</i>

1033
01:01:11,334 --> 01:01:13,544
<i>moving very nicely</i>
<i>through the water there.</i>

1034
01:01:13,628 --> 01:01:15,797
[commentator 5]
<i>She certainly looks like a different boat</i>

1035
01:01:15,880 --> 01:01:18,049
<i>and obviously she's sailing</i>
<i>like a different boat today.</i>

1036
01:01:19,008 --> 01:01:22,178
[commentator 6] <i>You can see the two yachts</i>
<i>are now approaching the first marker,</i>

1037
01:01:22,261 --> 01:01:24,472
<i>and it's not good news for Australia.</i>

1038
01:01:24,555 --> 01:01:28,434
[Mundle] <i>Liberty is leading by 29 seconds</i>
<i>at the first mark.</i>

1039
01:01:29,143 --> 01:01:31,562
[commentator 6]<i> That failure</i>
<i>by John Bertrand to recover</i>

1040
01:01:31,646 --> 01:01:32,563
<i>could be tragic.</i>

1041
01:01:32,647 --> 01:01:33,898
[crowd cheering]

1042
01:01:34,774 --> 01:01:38,069
We did everything we could,
but they just went faster.

1043
01:01:38,945 --> 01:01:41,739
[news anchor] If you're just joining us,
it has been Liberty all the way.

1044
01:01:41,823 --> 01:01:46,119
At the second mark, it was Liberty by 45.
At the third mark, Liberty by 23.

1045
01:01:48,246 --> 01:01:52,125
[Bertrand] They just swept away from us.
Close to a minute in front of us.

1046
01:01:52,208 --> 01:01:53,918
We just couldn't believe it.

1047
01:01:54,711 --> 01:01:56,087
[Mundle]<i> We're just watching</i>

1048
01:01:56,170 --> 01:01:59,340
<i>Liberty having rounded the fourth mark</i>
<i>on the course,</i>

1049
01:01:59,424 --> 01:02:01,843
<i>the margin around 55 seconds, Bob.</i>

1050
01:02:02,427 --> 01:02:04,429
<i>The Cup is as good as lost.</i>

1051
01:02:04,512 --> 01:02:07,265
It seems that Bertrand's errors
early in the race

1052
01:02:07,348 --> 01:02:10,101
may have cost Australia II
the America's Cup.

1053
01:02:10,184 --> 01:02:12,437
To get 58 seconds ahead, that…

1054
01:02:13,438 --> 01:02:14,731
that's a long way.

1055
01:02:16,983 --> 01:02:19,026
Four thousand people gathered outside

1056
01:02:19,110 --> 01:02:21,362
the Royal Perth Yacht Club
in Western Australia,

1057
01:02:21,446 --> 01:02:25,742
watching our live pictures
and, uh, similar scenes over in Sydney.

1058
01:02:26,701 --> 01:02:29,954
[announcer]<i> It appears</i>
<i>Liberty has a healthy lead at this point.</i>

1059
01:02:30,037 --> 01:02:32,373
<i>It's a race Dennis Conner cannot lose.</i>

1060
01:02:33,750 --> 01:02:36,544
[reporter]<i> The tension mounts</i>
<i>at the Bertrand household.</i>

1061
01:02:36,627 --> 01:02:38,755
<i>Mrs. Bertrand experiences the agony</i>

1062
01:02:38,838 --> 01:02:43,384
<i>of watching The Wonder from Down Under</i>
<i>fall behind the American yacht, Liberty.</i>

1063
01:02:44,260 --> 01:02:48,347
And, gentlemen, this downwind run
is possibly our last hope.

1064
01:02:50,558 --> 01:02:52,393
[Bertrand] They were basically gone.

1065
01:02:53,936 --> 01:02:55,354
But the bottom line is,

1066
01:02:55,438 --> 01:02:58,024
if the opposition
start to believe that the competition

1067
01:02:58,107 --> 01:03:00,443
and the equipment
that they're using is superior,

1068
01:03:01,152 --> 01:03:04,447
and you can't do anything about it
'cause it's secret,

1069
01:03:04,530 --> 01:03:07,617
that becomes, psychologically,
a big hurdle to overcome.

1070
01:03:09,118 --> 01:03:11,370
And ultimately, Dennis made a decision

1071
01:03:12,371 --> 01:03:13,414
that was a mistake.

1072
01:03:13,498 --> 01:03:16,334
[Mundle] <i>Dennis Conner's come</i>
<i>to the right-hand side of the course,</i>

1073
01:03:16,417 --> 01:03:19,545
<i>looking for a big wind shift</i>
<i>which he hopes will be over here.</i>

1074
01:03:19,629 --> 01:03:23,174
We get to the top marker<i>,</i>
and Dennis, he tacks way out.

1075
01:03:24,091 --> 01:03:25,885
[commentator] <i>This is an unusual move.</i>

1076
01:03:25,968 --> 01:03:28,679
<i>Dennis has decided</i>
<i>not to cover John Bertrand.</i>

1077
01:03:28,763 --> 01:03:31,516
[Treharne] He went to the right-hand side
of the course,

1078
01:03:32,350 --> 01:03:33,810
and that surprised me.

1079
01:03:36,604 --> 01:03:39,273
And I remember
just looking at the clouds evolving.

1080
01:03:40,066 --> 01:03:42,151
I could start to see the wind on water.

1081
01:03:43,319 --> 01:03:44,445
[seagulls squawking]

1082
01:03:45,196 --> 01:03:48,574
Darker patches and lighter patches.
I could see the direction of the wind.

1083
01:03:51,619 --> 01:03:52,954
And then, eventually,

1084
01:03:53,037 --> 01:03:56,332
you start to get a sixth sense
of what the wind is gonna do.

1085
01:03:56,415 --> 01:03:59,919
Not now, but within
the next 10, 15 and 20 seconds,

1086
01:04:00,795 --> 01:04:01,879
which is the game.

1087
01:04:02,505 --> 01:04:03,339
Trim.

1088
01:04:04,924 --> 01:04:09,220
And as we keep going to the left,
the breeze starts going left.

1089
01:04:12,223 --> 01:04:13,099
Here we go.

1090
01:04:16,561 --> 01:04:20,022
And we started to make gains on Liberty,
with extra wind.

1091
01:04:21,357 --> 01:04:22,608
[Mundle]<i> As they head off there,</i>

1092
01:04:22,692 --> 01:04:25,278
<i>you can see crewmen winding</i>
<i>those coffee grinder winches,</i>

1093
01:04:25,361 --> 01:04:27,446
<i>trying to keep the yacht at maximum speed.</i>

1094
01:04:27,530 --> 01:04:30,116
[man] <i>It's going to be a mammoth effort</i>
<i>if she should do it.</i>

1095
01:04:30,616 --> 01:04:33,035
It was meter by meter.
It was yard by yard.

1096
01:04:33,119 --> 01:04:34,829
It was wind shift by wind shift.

1097
01:04:37,665 --> 01:04:39,876
[Mundle] <i>There you see</i>
<i>Australia II coming back</i>

1098
01:04:39,959 --> 01:04:41,752
<i>right now towards Liberty.</i>

1099
01:04:42,253 --> 01:04:44,005
<i>This race is a hot one.</i>

1100
01:04:44,964 --> 01:04:49,093
<i>Only a matter of minutes ago,</i>
<i>the America's Cup was as good as lost.</i>

1101
01:04:49,176 --> 01:04:50,595
Gentlemen, it's neck and neck,

1102
01:04:50,678 --> 01:04:53,639
but perhaps Liberty
just fractionally in front.

1103
01:04:53,723 --> 01:04:56,475
[Mundle]
<i>So Australia II is back in the race.</i>

1104
01:04:58,144 --> 01:05:00,688
[Longley] And then, of course,
they jibed and came across.

1105
01:05:00,771 --> 01:05:03,941
The whole of the world,
who's watching this,

1106
01:05:04,025 --> 01:05:05,026
is holding their breath.

1107
01:05:05,109 --> 01:05:09,071
[Mundle]<i> The tension at the moment</i>
<i>is absolutely electric out there.</i>

1108
01:05:09,155 --> 01:05:11,866
<i>Australia II's decided</i>
<i>to come back and attack.</i>

1109
01:05:12,366 --> 01:05:15,036
[Longley] It's not easy,
particularly from a helicopter shot,

1110
01:05:15,119 --> 01:05:16,746
to see who's in front.

1111
01:05:17,705 --> 01:05:18,956
What'll happen with the cross?

1112
01:05:19,040 --> 01:05:23,127
And we went from 57 seconds behind
to bow on bow.

1113
01:05:28,758 --> 01:05:33,054
I made the decision to jibe
on top of them, which was high risk.

1114
01:05:33,763 --> 01:05:35,389
[Mundle] <i>A collision course at the moment.</i>

1115
01:05:35,973 --> 01:05:38,768
<i>-Looks like Australia II will go across.</i>
[man] <i>A gutsy move.</i>

1116
01:05:38,851 --> 01:05:41,604
[Mundle]<i> An unbelievable move</i>
<i>to come across there now.</i>

1117
01:05:44,440 --> 01:05:47,193
We went across their bow,
and we're in front.

1118
01:05:47,777 --> 01:05:49,987
[Mundle]<i> It looks like</i>
<i>Australia II is back in front.</i>

1119
01:05:50,071 --> 01:05:52,448
<i>-Absolutely incredible.</i>
-[crowd cheering]

1120
01:05:52,531 --> 01:05:56,035
[reporter] There's about 2,000 people here
packing Royal Perth Yacht Club,

1121
01:05:56,118 --> 01:05:59,330
and they are absolutely rooting
for Australia II.

1122
01:05:59,413 --> 01:06:02,708
I've never ever seen anything like this.

1123
01:06:02,792 --> 01:06:05,378
There was mass disappointment here before.

1124
01:06:05,461 --> 01:06:09,382
In the past leg,
it's been absolute mayhem in here.

1125
01:06:10,299 --> 01:06:13,302
[all chanting] Australia II! Australia II!

1126
01:06:16,305 --> 01:06:18,099
[Mundle]<i> And now it's all on.</i>

1127
01:06:18,182 --> 01:06:21,185
<i>An absolute drag race to the finish.</i>
<i>Do you believe this, Bob Lobel?</i>

1128
01:06:21,894 --> 01:06:24,730
[Lobel]<i> I've seen a lot of things,</i>
<i>but never anything like this.</i>

1129
01:06:25,398 --> 01:06:26,482
Go, go, go!

1130
01:06:26,565 --> 01:06:28,067
[triumphant music plays]

1131
01:06:32,655 --> 01:06:34,490
[Bertrand]
On that particular leg of the course,

1132
01:06:34,573 --> 01:06:36,575
we probably sailed the boat
as best we'd ever sailed.

1133
01:06:36,659 --> 01:06:40,746
We were closer to perfection
than any time I'd ever been.

1134
01:06:44,250 --> 01:06:47,169
This group became so close and so tight.

1135
01:06:47,253 --> 01:06:50,256
It was basically almost on autopilot.

1136
01:06:51,382 --> 01:06:53,217
We were sailing into history.

1137
01:07:03,019 --> 01:07:05,146
[Mundle]
<i>We're looking for the smoke at any moment.</i>

1138
01:07:05,229 --> 01:07:08,399
<i>They're about to do it.</i>
<i>They're about to cross the line.</i>

1139
01:07:08,482 --> 01:07:10,818
<i>They make a final move. It's over!</i>

1140
01:07:10,901 --> 01:07:12,903
-[horn blasting]
-[crowd cheering]

1141
01:07:13,988 --> 01:07:15,114
-[gun fires]
-[crowd cheers]

1142
01:07:15,197 --> 01:07:16,824
[Mundle]<i> Australia II has done it!</i>

1143
01:07:17,575 --> 01:07:20,119
<i>They have won the America's Cup!</i>

1144
01:07:20,202 --> 01:07:24,165
<i>Will you stand up, Australia?</i>
<i>Will you stand up and cheer?</i>

1145
01:07:24,248 --> 01:07:29,128
<i>Because this is the finest day</i>
<i>in the history of Australian sport.</i>

1146
01:07:29,211 --> 01:07:30,796
<i>John Bertrand, the skipper,</i>

1147
01:07:30,880 --> 01:07:33,924
<i>and all of those men</i>
<i>out there on that boat,</i>

1148
01:07:34,008 --> 01:07:37,678
<i>they have written their name large</i>
<i>in Australian history.</i>

1149
01:07:38,387 --> 01:07:40,598
<i>They have won the America's Cup.</i>

1150
01:07:43,017 --> 01:07:45,144
[Bob Hawke] While I was Prime Minister,

1151
01:07:45,227 --> 01:07:48,314
I said some very wise
and important things,

1152
01:07:48,397 --> 01:07:50,816
but I don't think anything I've ever said

1153
01:07:51,358 --> 01:07:54,153
is as well remembered as when I said…

1154
01:07:54,236 --> 01:07:58,657
I tell you what, any boss who sacks anyone
for not turning up today is a bum!

1155
01:07:58,741 --> 01:07:59,658
[laughs]

1156
01:08:00,159 --> 01:08:01,035
[crowd cheering]

1157
01:08:01,994 --> 01:08:02,828
Here we go!

1158
01:08:03,329 --> 01:08:04,997
Across Australia, people are doing this,

1159
01:08:05,081 --> 01:08:07,166
saluting the men of Australia II
with champagne.

1160
01:08:07,249 --> 01:08:08,876
And boys, they really deserve it.

1161
01:08:12,713 --> 01:08:16,342
[Simmer] I remember just going, "Shit,"
that it had happened.

1162
01:08:17,384 --> 01:08:22,306
Really remember John just kind
of literally slumped over the wheel.

1163
01:08:23,307 --> 01:08:26,477
Just like everything
just draining out of him.

1164
01:08:27,937 --> 01:08:32,233
It was this relief to actually win it
on behalf of your country.

1165
01:08:34,193 --> 01:08:35,736
That's, uh, that's huge.

1166
01:08:45,704 --> 01:08:46,789
So… [clears throat]

1167
01:08:47,540 --> 01:08:48,999
…how do you rationalize that?

1168
01:08:51,377 --> 01:08:53,170
[Treharne] It was quite something

1169
01:08:54,088 --> 01:08:56,632
that I never thought
could happen or would happen.

1170
01:08:58,342 --> 01:08:59,260
But it did.

1171
01:09:00,845 --> 01:09:04,557
It's a pretty powerful thing for me
to be feeling like I do now. [chuckles]

1172
01:09:09,478 --> 01:09:10,688
So long ago.

1173
01:09:13,315 --> 01:09:16,527
Must have affected me
more than I thought it did. [sniffles]

1174
01:09:18,737 --> 01:09:19,822
Anyway. [coughs]

1175
01:09:22,616 --> 01:09:23,450
[sniffles]

1176
01:09:24,743 --> 01:09:26,287
Everyone went nuts. [chuckles]

1177
01:09:27,580 --> 01:09:29,582
-[horns blasting]
-[crowd cheering]

1178
01:09:38,632 --> 01:09:40,217
[Longley] We lifted our heads up,

1179
01:09:40,301 --> 01:09:42,887
and there are boats
coming from everywhere.

1180
01:09:42,970 --> 01:09:45,514
Boats all around us, you know?

1181
01:09:45,598 --> 01:09:48,893
And this cacophony of noise.

1182
01:09:48,976 --> 01:09:50,811
-[horns blasting]
-[crowd cheering]

1183
01:09:50,895 --> 01:09:52,313
[triumphant music playing]

1184
01:10:10,581 --> 01:10:14,668
[announcer]
Ah! This is the greatest moment ever!

1185
01:10:16,003 --> 01:10:17,004
Ah!

1186
01:10:17,546 --> 01:10:22,426
I thought we were history,
history the beginning of the week.

1187
01:10:22,509 --> 01:10:25,304
From the jaws of death. [laughs]

1188
01:10:27,223 --> 01:10:28,724
[Brown] When we were getting towed in,

1189
01:10:28,807 --> 01:10:31,143
we hoisted the Australian flag,

1190
01:10:31,894 --> 01:10:36,565
and that was a really proud moment,
that we'd done something pretty special.

1191
01:10:37,524 --> 01:10:40,611
[commentator] <i>And this is just</i>
<i>such a tremendously festive scene,</i>

1192
01:10:40,694 --> 01:10:43,113
<i>the sun now perched on the horizon</i>

1193
01:10:43,197 --> 01:10:46,742
<i>as Australia II makes her way</i>
<i>back into Newport Harbor,</i>

1194
01:10:46,825 --> 01:10:50,454
<i>the first challenger</i>
<i>ever to win the America's Cup.</i>

1195
01:10:51,121 --> 01:10:53,123
[horns blasting]

1196
01:10:54,667 --> 01:10:58,545
<i>It is a mob scene here</i>
<i>on the dock of Australia II.</i>

1197
01:10:59,755 --> 01:11:02,299
<i>The Australians have finally done it.</i>

1198
01:11:02,383 --> 01:11:03,550
[crowd cheering]

1199
01:11:05,803 --> 01:11:06,845
[horn blasts]

1200
01:11:12,768 --> 01:11:15,729
And I remember
pulling the boat out of the water,

1201
01:11:15,813 --> 01:11:18,565
and Bondy like a conductor.

1202
01:11:18,649 --> 01:11:25,364
[all chanting] Let's see the keel!

1203
01:11:26,156 --> 01:11:28,284
[reporter 1]
<i>There's a very happy Alan Bond.</i>

1204
01:11:28,367 --> 01:11:30,619
<i>He's gonna take it up</i>
<i>without the curtains.</i>

1205
01:11:30,703 --> 01:11:32,371
<i>The keel is gonna be seen.</i>

1206
01:11:33,289 --> 01:11:36,458
Get her up, Australia II,
and the skirt comes off.

1207
01:11:36,542 --> 01:11:38,669
Everyone saw the winged keel
for the first time.

1208
01:11:38,752 --> 01:11:40,379
[crowd cheering and applauding]

1209
01:11:44,258 --> 01:11:47,511
[reporter 2]<i> It's a brilliant piece</i>
<i>of engineering design work,</i>

1210
01:11:47,594 --> 01:11:48,887
<i>extremely creative.</i>

1211
01:11:49,805 --> 01:11:51,807
[Mundle] <i>Ben Lexcen,</i>
<i>designer of Australia II,</i>

1212
01:11:51,890 --> 01:11:52,725
<i>the man who did it.</i>

1213
01:11:52,808 --> 01:11:55,311
<i>He has achieved his life's ambition.</i>

1214
01:11:55,978 --> 01:11:57,563
<i>There, believe it or not,</i>

1215
01:11:57,646 --> 01:12:00,566
<i>Dennis Conner wearing</i>
<i>his New York Yacht Club hat.</i>

1216
01:12:01,066 --> 01:12:02,651
[Bertrand] Dennis congratulated me.

1217
01:12:02,735 --> 01:12:05,821
Not a lot of words said,
but it was warrior to warrior.

1218
01:12:05,904 --> 01:12:07,072
There's no question about it.

1219
01:12:08,032 --> 01:12:11,201
[Mundle]<i> I think Dennis does look</i>
<i>a little bit stunned there, David.</i>

1220
01:12:13,078 --> 01:12:14,872
[Simmer]
I remember shaking hands with him,

1221
01:12:14,955 --> 01:12:16,540
and he had tears in his eyes.

1222
01:12:17,207 --> 01:12:20,586
Yeah, he took it hard, hard, really hard.

1223
01:12:22,796 --> 01:12:23,672
Yeah.

1224
01:12:24,423 --> 01:12:25,966
[melancholic music plays]

1225
01:12:29,595 --> 01:12:34,058
It was a totally devastating… loss.

1226
01:12:43,233 --> 01:12:46,612
When I came in after losing the Cup,
they have a press conference,

1227
01:12:46,695 --> 01:12:50,282
and nobody from the New York Yacht Club
shows up to sit with you,

1228
01:12:50,366 --> 01:12:53,285
you got the idea
they don't like you very much anymore.

1229
01:12:58,082 --> 01:13:01,085
I'm sure they were
understandably disappointed.

1230
01:13:01,710 --> 01:13:05,839
You know, they were just
as devastated as I was in losing the Cup.

1231
01:13:05,923 --> 01:13:09,593
Today, Australia II
was just a better boat,

1232
01:13:11,595 --> 01:13:14,515
and they beat us, and we have no excuses.

1233
01:13:16,392 --> 01:13:22,314
So I'd like to, uh, at this point,
congratulate Alan Bond and Australia II.

1234
01:13:23,399 --> 01:13:26,193
They proved that they were
an outstanding boat.

1235
01:13:28,904 --> 01:13:30,364
And today was their day.

1236
01:13:30,989 --> 01:13:32,074
[audience applauds]

1237
01:13:33,283 --> 01:13:35,369
[reporter]
<i>It was Dennis Conner's last appearance</i>

1238
01:13:35,452 --> 01:13:36,995
<i>as America's Cup skipper,</i>

1239
01:13:37,079 --> 01:13:41,417
<i>a great performer bowing out a loser</i>
<i>with tears in his eyes</i>

1240
01:13:41,500 --> 01:13:42,918
<i>and a whirl of his hat.</i>

1241
01:13:45,462 --> 01:13:48,006
John Bertrand and his crew
have done a fine job today,

1242
01:13:48,090 --> 01:13:53,387
and I'm so pleased
that we can say not goodbye to Newport,

1243
01:13:54,012 --> 01:13:56,723
but an open invitation
to the people of Newport

1244
01:13:56,807 --> 01:14:01,103
and the people of America
to come to Perth in Western Australia

1245
01:14:01,186 --> 01:14:02,646
and try and win it back.

1246
01:14:02,729 --> 01:14:03,856
We welcome you.

1247
01:14:09,528 --> 01:14:12,239
[Bertrand] When we actually were presented
with the America's Cup…

1248
01:14:14,074 --> 01:14:16,493
when I lifted the trophy above my head,

1249
01:14:17,870 --> 01:14:21,623
it was a boyhood dream becoming reality.

1250
01:14:21,707 --> 01:14:23,625
[audience applauding and cheering]

1251
01:14:28,755 --> 01:14:31,175
It was a big deal to beat America
at something

1252
01:14:31,258 --> 01:14:33,010
that America had been so dominant.

1253
01:14:33,594 --> 01:14:38,182
So this little country,
suddenly it was on the world stage.

1254
01:14:38,807 --> 01:14:42,227
[Ronald Reagan] Skipper John Bertrand,
you and the crew of the Australia II

1255
01:14:42,311 --> 01:14:44,980
have shown us the stuff
of which Australians are made.

1256
01:14:45,731 --> 01:14:49,776
I know your countrymen are proud of you,
and I want you to take this message back,

1257
01:14:49,860 --> 01:14:51,487
that Americans are proud too.

1258
01:14:52,070 --> 01:14:55,032
We're proud to have Australians
as our very dear friends.

1259
01:14:59,036 --> 01:15:00,746
[Longley] When we got back to Australia,

1260
01:15:01,330 --> 01:15:07,252
they'd said we're gonna do a street parade
from Fremantle to Perth, which is--

1261
01:15:07,336 --> 01:15:10,172
-Twenty-two kilometers.
-Twenty-two kilometers to be precise.

1262
01:15:10,255 --> 01:15:13,800
I said, "We're gonna look like idiots
driving down Stirling Highway

1263
01:15:13,884 --> 01:15:16,553
with three people and a dog waving at ya."

1264
01:15:17,262 --> 01:15:23,685
Well, the street was lined
the whole 22 kilometers.

1265
01:15:23,769 --> 01:15:24,728
[crowd cheering]

1266
01:15:24,811 --> 01:15:27,356
["I Still Call Australia Home"
by Peter Allen plays]

1267
01:15:27,439 --> 01:15:29,983
<i>♪ I've been to cities ♪</i>

1268
01:15:30,734 --> 01:15:33,195
<i>♪ That never close down ♪</i>

1269
01:15:34,530 --> 01:15:36,114
<i>♪ Like Newport… ♪</i>

1270
01:15:36,198 --> 01:15:37,824
[Longley] When we got to Perth,

1271
01:15:37,908 --> 01:15:42,204
there were 250,000 people there
to welcome us.

1272
01:15:42,287 --> 01:15:44,456
<i>♪ But no matter how far ♪</i>

1273
01:15:45,457 --> 01:15:49,586
<i>♪ Or how wide I roam ♪</i>

1274
01:15:50,546 --> 01:15:55,926
<i>♪ I still call Australia home ♪</i>

1275
01:16:01,890 --> 01:16:04,184
<i>♪ I'm always travelling… ♪</i>

1276
01:16:05,269 --> 01:16:10,023
We're such a small nation
going against such large odds.

1277
01:16:10,107 --> 01:16:13,193
But it was that terrific determination

1278
01:16:13,277 --> 01:16:16,613
of the people of Australia
and all the guys.

1279
01:16:18,031 --> 01:16:19,950
<i>♪ My heart's here waitin'… ♪</i>

1280
01:16:20,033 --> 01:16:22,995
[Conner] After losing the Cup,
I had no money.

1281
01:16:23,745 --> 01:16:24,955
I was a carpet salesman.

1282
01:16:25,914 --> 01:16:27,499
<i>♪ I still call Australia… ♪</i>

1283
01:16:27,583 --> 01:16:29,376
[Conner] I was certainly depressed.

1284
01:16:29,918 --> 01:16:34,256
But when I saw 21 different countries
challenging for the Cup in Perth,

1285
01:16:34,923 --> 01:16:37,968
maybe I should quit
feeling sorry for myself

1286
01:16:38,051 --> 01:16:40,387
and see what I could do
about winning it back.

1287
01:16:41,096 --> 01:16:43,098
[reporter]
<i>Today, in San Diego, California,</i>

1288
01:16:43,181 --> 01:16:47,477
<i>Dennis Conner announced his comeback</i>
<i>for the 1987 America's Cup.</i>

1289
01:16:49,021 --> 01:16:53,984
<i>However, he will not be facing the skipper</i>
<i>who wrenched away the trophy in 1983.</i>

1290
01:16:54,901 --> 01:16:57,154
[man] Why aren't you in it this year?

1291
01:16:57,237 --> 01:16:58,697
The fire's out of my belly,

1292
01:16:58,780 --> 01:17:01,033
and content people
don't become world champions.

1293
01:17:01,116 --> 01:17:02,826
I'm content in that part of my life,

1294
01:17:02,909 --> 01:17:05,954
and I'm really keen and excited
to move out into new directions.

1295
01:17:06,038 --> 01:17:07,122
That's what I'm doing.

1296
01:17:07,914 --> 01:17:10,375
[Bertrand] But for Dennis and coming back,

1297
01:17:10,459 --> 01:17:12,502
it was an opportunity
to resurrect himself.

1298
01:17:12,586 --> 01:17:14,588
<i>♪ Come back to the shore ♪</i>

1299
01:17:16,214 --> 01:17:18,675
<i>♪ I realize something… ♪</i>

1300
01:17:19,801 --> 01:17:20,886
[gun fires]

1301
01:17:20,969 --> 01:17:23,305
[announcer 1]<i> There's the gun.</i>
<i>Stars & Stripes has done it.</i>

1302
01:17:23,388 --> 01:17:25,307
<i>They've won the America's Cup.</i>

1303
01:17:26,266 --> 01:17:28,393
[announcer 2]
<i>He has climbed yachting's Mount Everest,</i>

1304
01:17:28,477 --> 01:17:31,521
<i>and he has captured, once again,</i>
<i>yachting's holy grail.</i>

1305
01:17:32,481 --> 01:17:34,483
[announcer 1] <i>Revenge for Dennis Conner.</i>

1306
01:17:34,566 --> 01:17:36,985
["I Still Call Australia Home" continues]

1307
01:17:44,660 --> 01:17:47,120
[Bertrand]
I remember sitting in the ceremony

1308
01:17:47,204 --> 01:17:48,789
handing over the America's Cup,

1309
01:17:49,623 --> 01:17:53,335
and this lovely lady with a big hat said,
"Hello, Mr. Bertrand."

1310
01:17:53,418 --> 01:17:56,713
"What a beautiful day it is.
What a day of celebration."

1311
01:17:56,797 --> 01:18:00,133
And I looked at her and I said,
"Madam, you have no idea…

1312
01:18:03,387 --> 01:18:07,891
how easy it was to lose
and how hard it was to win."

1313
01:18:07,974 --> 01:18:08,809
[chuckles]

1314
01:18:12,062 --> 01:18:15,941
<i>♪ But no matter how far ♪</i>

1315
01:18:16,566 --> 01:18:20,529
<i>♪ Or how wide I roam ♪</i>

1316
01:18:20,612 --> 01:18:24,408
<i>♪ I still call Australia… ♪</i>

1317
01:18:24,491 --> 01:18:26,159
[reporter]
<i>Bond's property interests stretch</i>

1318
01:18:26,243 --> 01:18:28,787
<i>from Sydney to America</i>
<i>to London and Hong Kong.</i>

1319
01:18:28,870 --> 01:18:32,499
<i>It is an empire worth $10,000 million.</i>

1320
01:18:34,584 --> 01:18:37,796
[Peter Allen] <i>We want all the crew</i>
<i>to come back out. Sing it for them.</i>

1321
01:18:38,588 --> 01:18:41,842
[people singing] <i>♪ But no matter how far ♪</i>

1322
01:18:41,925 --> 01:18:45,971
<i>♪ Or how wide I roam ♪</i>

1323
01:18:46,054 --> 01:18:46,930
<i>♪ I still call… ♪</i>

1324
01:18:47,013 --> 01:18:49,474
[man] <i>Probably the greatest</i>
<i>Prime Minister of Australia.</i>

1325
01:18:49,558 --> 01:18:51,810
<i>He relates to the people.</i>
<i>The public love him.</i>

1326
01:18:51,893 --> 01:18:54,104
<i>What does one of our</i>
<i>greatest prime ministers do?</i>

1327
01:18:54,187 --> 01:18:57,190
<i>He sculled it. Listen to them.</i>
<i>They're going, "Scull, scull, scull!"</i>

1328
01:18:57,274 --> 01:18:59,484
<i>And the great man, Bobby Hawke, nailed it.</i>

1329
01:18:59,568 --> 01:19:02,237
<i>He said, "Thank you very much, boys.</i>
<i>Cheers."</i>

1330
01:19:04,364 --> 01:19:07,159
<i>♪ I still call Australia… ♪</i>

1331
01:19:07,242 --> 01:19:11,663
[man]<i> Ben Lexcen, designer, perfectionist,</i>
<i>and his Toyota Tarago,</i>

1332
01:19:11,747 --> 01:19:14,040
<i>a design that pleases even Ben Lexcen.</i>

1333
01:19:14,124 --> 01:19:16,501
Somebody did it right again.

1334
01:19:25,302 --> 01:19:26,136
[song ends]

1335
01:19:26,219 --> 01:19:29,139
[commentator]<i> And at mark number four,</i>
<i>it's American Magic.</i>

1336
01:19:29,222 --> 01:19:32,517
<i>She turns toward home</i>
<i>at 50 knots per hour.</i>

1337
01:19:32,601 --> 01:19:33,685
<i>This is it!</i>

1338
01:19:33,769 --> 01:19:37,481
<i>Welcome to the 2021 America's Cup.</i>

1339
01:19:39,858 --> 01:19:44,446
<i>Allegations against one basketball ref</i>
<i>of betting the outcomes of games</i>

1340
01:19:44,529 --> 01:19:45,947
<i>is rocking the NBA.</i>

1341
01:19:46,907 --> 01:19:49,618
[man 1]<i> Man, did I fuck my life up.</i>

1342
01:19:51,244 --> 01:19:55,999
Just like the feel-good hit of the summer,
the Manti Te'o story isn't real.

1343
01:19:56,625 --> 01:19:58,251
[man 2]<i> Cruel, twisted hoax.</i>

1344
01:19:59,669 --> 01:20:02,839
It was the longest winning streak
in the history of sport.

1345
01:20:02,923 --> 01:20:07,552
[man 3]<i> This is the finest day</i>
<i>in the history of Australian sports.</i>

1346
01:20:07,636 --> 01:20:10,806
[man 4]
AND1 was making millions of dollars,

1347
01:20:10,889 --> 01:20:12,474
but did they respect us?

1348
01:20:13,058 --> 01:20:15,894
[man 4]<i> AND1 basketball, baby!</i>

1349
01:20:15,977 --> 01:20:18,814
[man 5] Shut your fuckin' mouth,
keep it between us.

1350
01:20:19,564 --> 01:20:21,483
Stick to the fuckin' story.

1351
01:20:22,108 --> 01:20:24,236
[woman] <i>It does not get any stranger</i>
<i>than this one.</i>

1352
01:20:24,319 --> 01:20:26,029
[reporter 1]
<i>Donaghy is under investigation…</i>

1353
01:20:26,112 --> 01:20:28,448
[reporter 2]
<i>It's front-page news all over town.</i>

1354
01:20:29,366 --> 01:20:31,660
[man 6] She physically did not exist

1355
01:20:31,743 --> 01:20:34,287
outside of being
Manti Te'o's dead girlfriend.

1356
01:20:34,913 --> 01:20:36,122
[tense music plays]

1357
01:20:36,206 --> 01:20:41,378
And I was like, "Boy, that would be
fuckin' crazy if it were true." [laughs]

1358
01:20:41,461 --> 01:20:45,090
[tense music ends]



