BARCELONA, Spain — Emirates Team New Zealand avoided a crash and nailed INEOS Britannia with a penalty as it opened up a 3-0 lead in the first-to-seven wins finals of the America's Cup on Sunday.
Britain was hit with a 75-meter penalty for not keeping clear when the two boats came feet from colliding in the pre-start jockeying for position in Race 3. The Kiwis' Taihoro foiling yacht cruised through the six laps and won by 52 seconds.
Now the challenger that is backed by billionaire Jim Ratcliffe and the design expertise of the Mercedes Formula 1 team must rebound big if it wants to win Britain's first ever America's Cup in its 173-year history.
For the Kiwis, they are four wins away.
''We're only three races into it but we are obviously happy to be on this side of the scorecard. I think tomorrow (Race 4) will be a pretty important day,'' New Zealand helmsman Nathan Outteridge said. ''Once you nudge that one forward and get over the halfway stage to seven, maybe the momentum goes a bit that way.''
New Zealand skipper Peter Burling said that they had planned to steer aggressively in the pre-start, and it paid off. They had the right of way being the windward boat when they bore down on the Brits before turning late, and the Britannia was a tad slow to react as their foils almost touched.
''We tried it yesterday but they just got past us. It was a little bit uncomfortable to be honest with how close the boats got,'' Burling said about the maneuver. "But the umpire obviously thought we were pretty clear there, so it was great to get the penalty and control the race from there.''
Britannia was more than 600 meters behind when the lead boat crossed the finish line off the Barcelona beachfront.