1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:07,924 --> 00:00:11,094 I've never met a world champion that's a normal person. 3 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 4 00:00:11,594 --> 00:00:14,097 You gotta be screwed up in some manner 5 00:00:14,180 --> 00:00:16,891 to get out of bed to do extraordinary things. 6 00:00:18,059 --> 00:00:19,144 And I'm screwed up. 7 00:00:19,227 --> 00:00:22,147 [somber music plays] 8 00:00:22,230 --> 00:00:24,357 -[wave crashes] -[seagulls squawking] 9 00:00:26,901 --> 00:00:27,736 [wave crashes] 10 00:00:29,571 --> 00:00:34,534 Underneath this veneer of being a normal, nice guy, 11 00:00:35,452 --> 00:00:36,995 I have a huge ego. 12 00:00:38,997 --> 00:00:42,876 There's gotta be some motivation to drive someone to extraordinary lengths. 13 00:00:46,379 --> 00:00:49,883 And the ego is part of my drive. 14 00:00:50,592 --> 00:00:52,010 [announcer] Good morning, the world. 15 00:00:52,093 --> 00:00:53,762 We're lining up now for the start 16 00:00:53,845 --> 00:00:57,682 of the seventh and vital race in this America's Cup. 17 00:00:57,766 --> 00:00:59,559 Yachting's big event is more historic 18 00:00:59,642 --> 00:01:02,187 than the Kentucky Derby, the World Series or the Super Bowl. 19 00:01:02,270 --> 00:01:07,650 And for the first time in 132 years, America may lose the America's Cup. 20 00:01:11,821 --> 00:01:15,116 Now, the whole point of this was to win the America's Cup, 21 00:01:16,201 --> 00:01:18,328 which no one had ever done before. 22 00:01:20,371 --> 00:01:23,458 It was the longest winning streak in history of sport. 23 00:01:23,541 --> 00:01:27,253 The United States having successfully defended the Cup 24 00:01:27,837 --> 00:01:31,716 for 132 years, since before the US Civil War. 25 00:01:32,801 --> 00:01:36,346 [reporter] This country's domination has outlasted the Confederacy, 26 00:01:36,429 --> 00:01:38,848 the Third Reich, and the St. Louis Browns. 27 00:01:39,641 --> 00:01:42,393 Now the Australians think their time finally has come. 28 00:01:45,355 --> 00:01:49,859 Today they sail the winner-take-all, do-or-die, there's-no-tomorrow race. 29 00:01:49,943 --> 00:01:51,569 Billed as the race of the century-- 30 00:01:51,653 --> 00:01:54,280 The greatest yacht race of the century. 31 00:01:56,574 --> 00:01:58,118 [crowd cheering] 32 00:01:58,201 --> 00:02:00,370 The bottom line is the New York Yacht Club 33 00:02:00,453 --> 00:02:03,081 were not in the business of losing the America's Cup. 34 00:02:03,164 --> 00:02:04,666 [tense music plays] 35 00:02:04,749 --> 00:02:07,085 [Bertrand] So we had no confusion. 36 00:02:07,627 --> 00:02:08,878 We were at war. 37 00:02:09,462 --> 00:02:12,257 The full-scale war is already underway. 38 00:02:12,340 --> 00:02:15,468 The Australians claim they're the target of a dirty-tricks campaign 39 00:02:15,552 --> 00:02:18,304 involving espionage and political backstabbing. 40 00:02:18,388 --> 00:02:22,392 We now have the FBI involved, spies, armed guards. 41 00:02:23,143 --> 00:02:26,187 [man] The New York Yacht Club are absolutely determined 42 00:02:26,271 --> 00:02:28,106 to do everything possible to ensure 43 00:02:28,189 --> 00:02:31,151 that the Cup stays here in the United States. 44 00:02:31,860 --> 00:02:37,282 To take on the United States was a huge psychological mountain. 45 00:02:38,741 --> 00:02:42,579 The most powerful nation technically and economically in the world… 46 00:02:42,662 --> 00:02:45,415 -[camera shutter clicks] -[Bertrand] …and a little country… 47 00:02:47,333 --> 00:02:50,420 with 27 million people called Australia… 48 00:02:50,503 --> 00:02:53,423 [crowd cheers] 49 00:02:54,257 --> 00:02:56,676 …had the audacity to think that we could do it. 50 00:02:59,095 --> 00:03:01,723 ["Your Sweet Love" by Lee Hazlewood plays] 51 00:03:14,694 --> 00:03:18,781 ♪ Stranger's arms ♪ 52 00:03:18,865 --> 00:03:22,994 ♪ Reach out to me ♪ 53 00:03:24,454 --> 00:03:28,416 ♪ 'Cause they know ♪ 54 00:03:28,499 --> 00:03:32,462 ♪ I'm so lonely ♪ 55 00:03:34,339 --> 00:03:38,218 ♪ Then my mind ♪ 56 00:03:38,301 --> 00:03:42,889 ♪ Goes back to you ♪ 57 00:03:44,098 --> 00:03:47,727 ♪ And your sweet love ♪ 58 00:03:48,811 --> 00:03:52,148 ♪ Sees me through ♪ 59 00:03:55,860 --> 00:03:58,154 -["Your Sweet Love" fades] -[insects chirping] 60 00:03:58,863 --> 00:04:00,448 [person breathing deeply] 61 00:04:05,078 --> 00:04:09,415 The first America's Cup that I'd heard was the 1962 America's Cup. 62 00:04:10,458 --> 00:04:12,293 Australia versus United States. 63 00:04:13,711 --> 00:04:16,756 How this country was tuned into this event halfway around the world. 64 00:04:16,839 --> 00:04:17,924 [car honks] 65 00:04:18,007 --> 00:04:21,135 [news anchor] These races have captured the imagination of millions. 66 00:04:21,719 --> 00:04:23,388 The President of the United States himself 67 00:04:23,471 --> 00:04:25,598 abandons the cares of Washington to attend. 68 00:04:26,599 --> 00:04:29,978 The Australians, if they win, see it as an opportunity 69 00:04:30,061 --> 00:04:34,023 to project their little-known country onto the international stage. 70 00:04:34,565 --> 00:04:36,109 I can… I can still hear it. 71 00:04:36,192 --> 00:04:38,987 [reporter 1] Winds 20 to 25 knots and seas choppy… 72 00:04:39,070 --> 00:04:42,073 [Bertrand] I was just a little boy listening on the wireless. 73 00:04:42,907 --> 00:04:46,744 I was seven years old listening to a small transistor radio, 74 00:04:46,828 --> 00:04:48,663 lying in bed in the middle of the night. 75 00:04:48,746 --> 00:04:50,581 A little tiny transistor radio. 76 00:04:50,665 --> 00:04:52,792 Like a little transistor radio. 77 00:04:52,875 --> 00:04:54,836 My mother said, "You get a good night's sleep," 78 00:04:54,919 --> 00:04:56,838 and I'm trying to listen to the radio. 79 00:04:56,921 --> 00:04:58,756 [reporter 2] …all over the eastern seaboard 80 00:04:58,840 --> 00:05:00,800 flock to the waters of Newport, Rhode Island. 81 00:05:00,883 --> 00:05:02,135 [Lissiman] Three in the morning, 82 00:05:02,218 --> 00:05:05,805 12 hours different time zone in Newport, Rhode Island. 83 00:05:08,891 --> 00:05:12,854 [commentator] This is Newport, the home of the America's Cup yacht race. 84 00:05:13,604 --> 00:05:15,064 Since the turn of the century, 85 00:05:15,148 --> 00:05:18,401 it's been the holiday playground of the nation's super rich. 86 00:05:18,484 --> 00:05:22,530 As a little boy, I was infatuated with the incredible history. 87 00:05:24,574 --> 00:05:26,576 All these incredible characters. 88 00:05:27,160 --> 00:05:30,496 [commentator] And when the summer breezes begin to roll in across the sound, 89 00:05:30,580 --> 00:05:34,459 their minds turn to the only game in town, yacht racing. 90 00:05:37,920 --> 00:05:40,423 [Bertrand] For me to skipper an America's Cup boat, 91 00:05:40,506 --> 00:05:43,384 that set my imagination into another direction. 92 00:05:45,011 --> 00:05:46,346 [projector whirring] 93 00:05:46,429 --> 00:05:49,265 It was like the door opening to another world. 94 00:05:49,766 --> 00:05:53,353 ["Why Can't I Touch It?" by Buzzcocks plays] 95 00:06:11,454 --> 00:06:13,414 ♪ Well, it seems so real… ♪ 96 00:06:13,498 --> 00:06:15,166 There are some people at Internal Revenue 97 00:06:15,249 --> 00:06:18,378 who think yachting is not much more than a dubious tax deduction. 98 00:06:19,087 --> 00:06:21,672 The America's Cup, however, is something else again. 99 00:06:22,215 --> 00:06:23,341 [crowd cheering] 100 00:06:23,424 --> 00:06:26,719 ♪ And it seems so real I can taste it… ♪ 101 00:06:26,803 --> 00:06:31,349 The America's Cup's always been the top echelon of the sport of sailing. 102 00:06:31,432 --> 00:06:34,894 -♪ I can feel it ♪ -[crowd screams] 103 00:06:34,977 --> 00:06:41,943 ♪ So why can't I touch it? ♪ 104 00:06:45,071 --> 00:06:47,907 [Bertrand] The America's Cup is one boat versus one boat, 105 00:06:47,990 --> 00:06:49,867 one country versus one country. 106 00:06:49,951 --> 00:06:51,536 The best of seven races. 107 00:06:52,620 --> 00:06:56,040 First boat to win four races wins the America's Cup. 108 00:06:56,124 --> 00:06:59,127 It's one-on-one. It's like a duel to the death. 109 00:07:01,504 --> 00:07:05,716 [announcer] Look at it go down! This is yachting's answer to the Titanic. 110 00:07:05,800 --> 00:07:09,470 [man] They basically have a desire to beat each other's brains out, 111 00:07:09,554 --> 00:07:13,182 but it's a lot better than going to war or shooting it out in the streets. 112 00:07:14,016 --> 00:07:16,477 [Bertrand] The unique element of the America's Cup 113 00:07:16,561 --> 00:07:19,480 is you're given a shot every four years, just like the Olympics. 114 00:07:19,564 --> 00:07:23,985 It's a huge commitment, both physically and psychologically. 115 00:07:24,861 --> 00:07:28,614 [Longley] The rules were any country could challenge for the America's Cup, 116 00:07:29,115 --> 00:07:33,744 but you had to design the boat in the country you were challenging from. 117 00:07:34,620 --> 00:07:37,373 You had to build the boat in that country as well. 118 00:07:37,957 --> 00:07:40,460 [Bertrand] So these projects need money. 119 00:07:41,377 --> 00:07:42,211 Lots of money. 120 00:07:42,295 --> 00:07:44,172 ♪ But then it looks so real… ♪ 121 00:07:44,255 --> 00:07:48,009 [reporter] The super-rich have brought large bank accounts, millions of dollars. 122 00:07:48,759 --> 00:07:50,803 In the case of the America's Cup, 123 00:07:50,887 --> 00:07:53,848 we're talking high-cost, high-tech yacht racing. 124 00:07:53,931 --> 00:07:55,224 [all cheering] 125 00:07:55,308 --> 00:07:57,101 [Bertrand] Unlike any other sport, 126 00:07:57,935 --> 00:07:59,312 the US had never lost. 127 00:07:59,395 --> 00:08:01,189 ♪ And it sounds so real… ♪ 128 00:08:02,356 --> 00:08:04,233 [Lissiman] It was the longest winning streak 129 00:08:04,317 --> 00:08:05,568 in sporting history 130 00:08:06,694 --> 00:08:10,656 where the New York Yacht Club had successfully defended the Cup 131 00:08:10,740 --> 00:08:13,784 in Newport, Rhode Island, for 132 years. 132 00:08:15,161 --> 00:08:18,372 [Bertrand] There was a sense of arrogance by the New York Yacht Club. 133 00:08:18,456 --> 00:08:20,333 This is our patch. 134 00:08:20,416 --> 00:08:23,044 You can play with the patch and then we'll bid you farewell. 135 00:08:23,961 --> 00:08:26,547 [reporter 1] The New York Yacht Club have defended this Cup 136 00:08:26,631 --> 00:08:28,549 against all-comers from around the world 137 00:08:28,633 --> 00:08:30,843 with such complete sailing mastery 138 00:08:30,927 --> 00:08:33,513 that it's a wonder anyone comes after it at all. 139 00:08:33,596 --> 00:08:35,973 -[crowd cheering] -[cannon fires] 140 00:08:40,603 --> 00:08:43,856 [reporter 2] The New York Yacht Club on Manhattan's West 44th Street. 141 00:08:44,524 --> 00:08:48,152 With its windows carved in the manner of a 17th century Dutch yacht, 142 00:08:48,236 --> 00:08:50,613 this is the center of the yachting universe. 143 00:08:51,113 --> 00:08:52,448 The exclusive preserve 144 00:08:52,532 --> 00:08:55,701 of some of America's wealthiest and most influential men. 145 00:08:57,078 --> 00:08:59,080 [ominous music playing] 146 00:09:01,541 --> 00:09:02,959 [music builds] 147 00:09:05,002 --> 00:09:10,299 The New York Yacht club were ferocious defenders of the America's Cup. 148 00:09:12,093 --> 00:09:14,971 [Lissiman] They reeked of old American money, 149 00:09:16,305 --> 00:09:18,474 Vanderbilts and Roosevelts. 150 00:09:19,600 --> 00:09:22,770 So there was a huge amount of mystique. 151 00:09:23,854 --> 00:09:26,315 [Longley] And there was something about the American boats. 152 00:09:27,400 --> 00:09:30,695 They had this aura about them. They were immaculate. 153 00:09:31,362 --> 00:09:34,907 Their sails always looked like they were carved out of alabaster. 154 00:09:38,035 --> 00:09:40,830 They oozed style, wealth. 155 00:09:40,913 --> 00:09:43,416 Oozed this unbeatableness. 156 00:09:48,504 --> 00:09:51,007 And one day, way back in 1970, 157 00:09:51,674 --> 00:09:53,759 we go into the New York Yacht Club. 158 00:09:54,302 --> 00:09:55,636 [Simmer] And there was a room, 159 00:09:55,720 --> 00:10:00,099 it was this kind of octagonal room where the Cup was sitting. 160 00:10:04,854 --> 00:10:07,481 [Bertrand] We spoke to the curator, and he said, "You realize, John, 161 00:10:07,565 --> 00:10:11,902 that that trophy had not been touched by human flesh for a hundred years." 162 00:10:16,198 --> 00:10:19,118 I looked at this trophy and I thought, "My God, John, this is it." 163 00:10:19,201 --> 00:10:21,912 Perfect, shiny silver. 164 00:10:22,622 --> 00:10:23,748 The Holy Grail. 165 00:10:23,831 --> 00:10:25,583 [up-tempo instrumental music plays] 166 00:10:34,842 --> 00:10:36,469 [reporter] This is the family jewel. 167 00:10:36,552 --> 00:10:37,928 Silver under glass. 168 00:10:38,471 --> 00:10:42,892 This is what the Americans are spending $45 million on this year alone. 169 00:10:42,975 --> 00:10:44,935 Now, legend has it 170 00:10:45,019 --> 00:10:48,189 that the first American skipper to end up losing this Cup 171 00:10:48,689 --> 00:10:50,066 will end up losing his head. 172 00:10:55,154 --> 00:10:57,573 [Bertrand] There's no question the emerging force 173 00:10:57,657 --> 00:11:00,326 for the New York Yacht Club was Dennis Conner. 174 00:11:01,077 --> 00:11:04,580 A native of San Diego, California, folks, please welcome Dennis Conner. 175 00:11:04,664 --> 00:11:06,082 [audience applauds, cheers] 176 00:11:06,165 --> 00:11:09,377 He was the might and focus of the New York Yacht Club. 177 00:11:11,128 --> 00:11:13,130 And he took the America's Cup 178 00:11:13,214 --> 00:11:15,257 from an amateur world to a professional world. 179 00:11:15,341 --> 00:11:16,467 Dennis changed the game. 180 00:11:16,550 --> 00:11:18,344 But isn't it true that you've taken a sport 181 00:11:18,427 --> 00:11:22,181 that was, uh, previously considered kind of what wealthy guys did on weekends, 182 00:11:22,264 --> 00:11:24,934 and turned it into more like stock car racing? 183 00:11:29,897 --> 00:11:32,608 Dennis was the best. He was the best. 184 00:11:32,692 --> 00:11:35,403 Ah, he's brilliant, absolutely brilliant. 185 00:11:39,407 --> 00:11:42,618 I think it's fair to say Dennis was a different person. 186 00:11:45,705 --> 00:11:51,043 One of these skippers who will do anything to win. 187 00:11:52,670 --> 00:11:54,714 [Conner] If the most important thing in the world 188 00:11:54,797 --> 00:11:57,925 was winning the America's Cup and sailing with Dennis Conner, 189 00:11:58,008 --> 00:12:01,679 over going to church, over your job, over your wife, your kids… 190 00:12:02,513 --> 00:12:05,349 "Oh, I gotta take off for two weeks to go skiing." 191 00:12:05,433 --> 00:12:08,561 Well, enjoy your skiing, but don't bother coming back. 192 00:12:10,813 --> 00:12:12,857 [Bertrand] The first time I raced against Dennis 193 00:12:12,940 --> 00:12:14,942 was 1974, the America's Cup. 194 00:12:17,653 --> 00:12:18,904 And we had no chance. 195 00:12:21,407 --> 00:12:24,952 The Australians, they weren't in the America's Cup business. 196 00:12:25,035 --> 00:12:27,705 Psychologically, you have to perform at a very high level. 197 00:12:28,998 --> 00:12:30,708 You got down to the boat early 198 00:12:30,791 --> 00:12:33,878 and checked the weather, tide, current, sailing instructions, 199 00:12:33,961 --> 00:12:36,630 got your boat in the water, made sure it was smooth and clean, 200 00:12:36,714 --> 00:12:38,549 getting out to the course and checking the wind, 201 00:12:38,632 --> 00:12:40,968 current, and the race committee and getting instructions, 202 00:12:41,051 --> 00:12:43,554 and checking the wind before the start, which way it was shifting. 203 00:12:43,637 --> 00:12:45,556 You had the right sails, the right mast. 204 00:12:45,639 --> 00:12:48,100 You'd practiced. Your crew weighed the right amount. 205 00:12:48,184 --> 00:12:52,772 If you did all those things, every time, you would then have no excuse to lose. 206 00:12:55,149 --> 00:12:58,903 Lambs to the slaughter each time. Hammered in '74. 207 00:12:58,986 --> 00:13:02,364 [Tom Brokaw] Dennis Conner came through for America again today, 208 00:13:02,448 --> 00:13:05,201 winning the race by more than a minute and a half. 209 00:13:07,369 --> 00:13:09,205 Got hammered again in '77. 210 00:13:09,288 --> 00:13:11,332 [reporter 1] The experts said it'd be 4 and 0, 211 00:13:11,415 --> 00:13:15,127 and they've done in the Australians four races to zero. 212 00:13:15,211 --> 00:13:17,463 Went back again in 1980, got beaten again. 213 00:13:18,172 --> 00:13:20,299 [reporter 2] And Australia simply couldn't catch up 214 00:13:21,008 --> 00:13:24,178 and has now failed in three attempts to win the America's Cup. 215 00:13:25,095 --> 00:13:27,139 [Conner] I won 38 straight races. 216 00:13:28,891 --> 00:13:30,643 I was the best sailor in the world. 217 00:13:32,561 --> 00:13:33,896 I slaughtered them. 218 00:13:36,857 --> 00:13:37,900 [theme music playing] 219 00:13:37,983 --> 00:13:39,902 Welcome back to Turpie Tonight. 220 00:13:39,985 --> 00:13:40,945 [theme music stops] 221 00:13:41,028 --> 00:13:42,571 Ah! What a cue! 222 00:13:43,405 --> 00:13:45,533 I want you to listen carefully to this. 223 00:13:45,616 --> 00:13:48,202 In September 1983, 224 00:13:49,078 --> 00:13:52,790 someone will be challenging the Americans for the America's Cup, 225 00:13:53,415 --> 00:13:54,750 and this man will be skipper. 226 00:13:54,834 --> 00:13:57,837 Ladies and gentlemen, would you please welcome John Bertrand? 227 00:13:57,920 --> 00:13:59,922 [audience applauding] 228 00:14:00,714 --> 00:14:01,590 [Bertrand] Deep down, 229 00:14:01,674 --> 00:14:05,427 I knew if there's anyone that can actually take on Dennis Conner, 230 00:14:06,720 --> 00:14:07,972 it was someone like myself. 231 00:14:12,560 --> 00:14:14,478 [host] How long have you been sailing? 232 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] During this program, 271 00:16:22,064 --> 00:16:24,358 you'll be training for careers in marine engineering. 272 00:16:24,441 --> 00:16:28,779 There will be lab work, sea projects, and plenty of difficult classwork. 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] Conner is putting his troops through a training program 300 00:18:04,249 --> 00:18:07,586 as tough as any yet devised for an America's Cup campaign. 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] …and outstanding tactician Hugh Treharne 341 00:20:38,820 --> 00:20:41,406 join other senior members of the Australian team. 342 00:20:42,157 --> 00:20:44,368 Is this the year of the impossible? 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] Listen to the helicopters above. 379 00:22:50,077 --> 00:22:53,121 -[helicopter blades whirring] -[man] You see the US Coast Guard. 380 00:22:54,581 --> 00:22:58,043 We're all working hand in hand together as a team. 381 00:22:59,419 --> 00:23:00,962 And then you see Dennis Conner… 382 00:23:03,298 --> 00:23:05,675 and his American boat, Liberty. 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] The battle of the Cup has become a war of technology, 388 00:23:24,903 --> 00:23:27,697 and Conner had wanted to build himself a fearsome weapon. 389 00:23:28,824 --> 00:23:32,577 So he went to the heavily-guarded US Government weapons research center. 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] Seen here is the barefoot Australian, Ben Lexcen. 398 00:24:01,481 --> 00:24:05,152 He's Alan Bond's unlikely choice to design his yacht 399 00:24:05,235 --> 00:24:08,071 for the upcoming 1983 America's Cup. 400 00:24:08,780 --> 00:24:12,826 But where many designers live in a world full of calculus and geometry, 401 00:24:13,618 --> 00:24:16,204 Ben Lexcen lives in a world of art. 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] Lexcen's seven models underwent test trials 448 00:27:27,020 --> 00:27:30,357 in minute detail in at least 200 runs, 449 00:27:30,440 --> 00:27:34,194 which allowed the designer to make constant refinements to his secret keel. 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] We sat down with designer Ben Lexcen 505 00:31:25,383 --> 00:31:28,761 and talked about his partnership with team owner Alan Bond. 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] A supremely confident Alan Bond 512 00:31:52,452 --> 00:31:53,536 told a news conference today 513 00:31:53,620 --> 00:31:55,955 that Australia II would win the America's Cup. 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] ♪ 1540 WADK, Newport ♪ 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] Dennis Conner, the incumbent America's Cup defender, 529 00:32:57,517 --> 00:33:02,188 a solitary man with a single focus, to win again in 1983. 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] Five, four, three, two, one. -[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] Australia has turned the mark 571 00:35:17,824 --> 00:35:20,159 and is absolutely flying downwind. 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] Australia II has won. 575 00:35:26,499 --> 00:35:29,794 [announcer 3] You can see Australia II. She's just crossed the finishing line. 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] Australia II, by some… 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] What is that beneath the hull of the Australia II? 600 00:36:44,076 --> 00:36:46,996 A keel, but what kind of a keel? 601 00:36:47,079 --> 00:36:49,832 It's this summer's mystery at Newport. 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] Armed guards patrol this place around the clock. 609 00:37:10,853 --> 00:37:13,105 Their job is to protect Australia II, 610 00:37:13,189 --> 00:37:16,609 the yacht that may very well succeed in making sporting history. 611 00:37:18,361 --> 00:37:20,404 [reporter 3] Australia's designer, Ben Lexcen, 612 00:37:20,488 --> 00:37:23,282 he's something of a reluctant superstar here, 613 00:37:23,950 --> 00:37:26,244 but they all want to know about his keel. 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." 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] Australia's keel has so impressed everyone 624 00:38:07,535 --> 00:38:10,413 that the British have put wings on the keel of Victory. 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] Australia II has won! 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] The man who won the Cup last time 646 00:39:18,773 --> 00:39:20,733 for the United States is jittery. 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] So if the Americans lose, 674 00:40:33,305 --> 00:40:37,268 then a substantial amount of that might be spent in Western Australia. 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] An ABC News Brief brought to you by Apple Computer. 679 00:40:51,574 --> 00:40:54,160 Now from Los Angeles, here's Peter Jennings. 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] At the center of all the fuss this year 697 00:41:39,705 --> 00:41:41,290 has been barefoot Ben Lexcen. 698 00:41:41,790 --> 00:41:43,459 With three years' schooling, 699 00:41:43,542 --> 00:41:47,796 he's the man who has designed, arguably, the fastest 12 Metre ever. 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] The Americans try and confirm that Lexcen was helped by Dutch designers. 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] The director of the Netherlands Ship Model Basin has charged 722 00:43:01,412 --> 00:43:05,791 that members of the New York Yacht Club tried to get him to sign a false affidavit 723 00:43:05,874 --> 00:43:08,544 stating Ben Lexcen was not the designer. 724 00:43:09,378 --> 00:43:12,131 [Van Oossanen] I was very surprised to come face-to-face with two people 725 00:43:12,214 --> 00:43:14,466 who wanted me to sign a document 726 00:43:14,550 --> 00:43:18,387 which said that I was the designer of Australia II rather than Ben Lexcen, 727 00:43:18,470 --> 00:43:21,348 which is almost too ridiculous to even think of. 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] We're about to go live by satellite to Newport. Rob Mundle, are you there? 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] The two yachts are now approaching the first marker, 763 00:45:18,841 --> 00:45:20,801 and it's good news for Australia. 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] Liberty wins. 780 00:46:19,193 --> 00:46:22,362 Sounds like a World War I poster, but it is instead the headline 781 00:46:22,446 --> 00:46:24,865 out of today's opening round of the America's Cup. 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] You are watching Australia II, 810 00:47:51,118 --> 00:47:54,204 the 12 Metre that has set the yachting world on its ear. 811 00:47:54,955 --> 00:47:57,249 [race official] Three, two, one. 812 00:47:57,833 --> 00:47:59,418 -[gun fires] -[crowd cheering] 813 00:48:03,297 --> 00:48:05,757 [announcer 2] Australia II has just passed Liberty 814 00:48:05,841 --> 00:48:08,427 and is taking off down the course. 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] We have just reached the three-hour mark of this race, 817 00:48:22,107 --> 00:48:24,985 and the winds here in Newport are starting to pick up. 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] Australia sailed across the line 824 00:48:50,260 --> 00:48:53,555 to win the third race by three minutes and 14 seconds. 825 00:48:54,306 --> 00:48:57,309 Since 12 Metre started racing for the America's Cup, 826 00:48:57,392 --> 00:49:00,354 that's the biggest margin ever recorded by a challenger. 827 00:49:01,605 --> 00:49:03,899 [commentator] Australia II is exceptionally fast. 828 00:49:03,982 --> 00:49:06,944 This is what the New York Yacht Club is afraid of. 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] Look at this. 844 00:49:58,161 --> 00:50:00,288 The boat at the top of the screen is Liberty. 845 00:50:00,372 --> 00:50:02,916 Six seconds ahead of Australia when the gun fired. 846 00:50:04,418 --> 00:50:06,336 [commentator 1] Liberty went around the first mark 847 00:50:06,420 --> 00:50:07,879 36 seconds ahead. 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] We get into a classic tacking duel. 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] Liberty led Australia across the finish line by 43 seconds. 856 00:50:38,201 --> 00:50:39,411 [commentator 4] There she goes. 857 00:50:39,494 --> 00:50:42,622 She's shooting it. There's the gun. This race is over. 858 00:50:42,706 --> 00:50:44,624 The Americans lead three to one. 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] The despondent Australians return to their dock, 866 00:51:06,313 --> 00:51:07,814 knowing they're down 3-1. 867 00:51:07,898 --> 00:51:10,400 They cannot afford to make any more errors. 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 Congratulations, you've done a magnificent job to this point. 883 00:52:11,336 --> 00:52:15,090 What you've shown in relation to our technological capacity, 884 00:52:15,173 --> 00:52:18,093 our determination as individuals… 885 00:52:18,176 --> 00:52:21,179 You've got the entire support of Australia. 886 00:52:21,263 --> 00:52:23,181 We'll all be looking forward to your return 887 00:52:23,265 --> 00:52:26,184 when we will do you as proud as you have done us. 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] And so almost unbelievably, that's Australia ahead at the first mark. 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 met a strange lady, She made me nervous… ♪ 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 ♪ And she said ♪ 903 00:53:30,874 --> 00:53:33,084 ♪ Do you come from a land down under? ♪ 904 00:53:35,253 --> 00:53:37,422 ♪ Where women glow and men plunder… ♪ 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 ♪ You better take cover ♪ 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 ♪ Buying bread from a man in Brussels… ♪ 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 said, do you speak my language… ♪ 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] The Aussies certainly have joined the hype and hoopla here with gusto, 919 00:54:22,801 --> 00:54:25,637 promoting their souvenirs and image aggressively. 920 00:54:25,720 --> 00:54:27,597 ♪ Can't you hear the thunder? ♪ 921 00:54:28,848 --> 00:54:31,643 ♪ You better run, you better take cover ♪ 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] The red defender was towed up river 961 00:57:02,669 --> 00:57:06,047 so that 1,000 pounds of her ballast could be removed. 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] We're with you, Australia II! 982 00:58:08,943 --> 00:58:12,947 We're with you, Australia II! 983 00:58:13,490 --> 00:58:15,200 We're with you… 984 00:58:17,327 --> 00:58:19,871 [announcer] It's the premier sailing event in the world. 985 00:58:19,954 --> 00:58:22,248 It's the cup that's never been lost. 986 00:58:22,332 --> 00:58:24,959 It's the race that may end the longest winning tradition 987 00:58:25,043 --> 00:58:26,794 in international sports history. 988 00:58:27,420 --> 00:58:30,590 Live from Newport, this is the 25th defense, 989 00:58:30,673 --> 00:58:32,842 the final race for the America's Cup. 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] It's an emotional morning for Mrs. Beryl Bertrand, 996 00:58:55,406 --> 00:59:00,370 as her son, John, takes Australia II into the grand final of the America's Cup. 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] Five seconds away from the start. 1017 01:00:24,495 --> 01:00:26,706 -[gun fires] -[commentator 1] There's the starting gun. 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] They are neck-and-neck at the moment. 1021 01:00:35,798 --> 01:00:38,176 John Bertrand has now turned towards Liberty. 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] Australia's gone right on top of Liberty 1024 01:00:44,140 --> 01:00:45,141 by about two boat lengths. 1025 01:00:45,224 --> 01:00:46,684 Both boats on starboard tack. 1026 01:00:47,435 --> 01:00:50,229 [commentator 4] Uh-oh! It looks like John Bertrand has decided 1027 01:00:50,313 --> 01:00:51,689 not to cover Dennis Conner. 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] The boat is gaining maximum speed 1033 01:01:11,334 --> 01:01:13,544 moving very nicely through the water there. 1034 01:01:13,628 --> 01:01:15,797 [commentator 5] She certainly looks like a different boat 1035 01:01:15,880 --> 01:01:18,049 and obviously she's sailing like a different boat today. 1036 01:01:19,008 --> 01:01:22,178 [commentator 6] You can see the two yachts are now approaching the first marker, 1037 01:01:22,261 --> 01:01:24,472 and it's not good news for Australia. 1038 01:01:24,555 --> 01:01:28,434 [Mundle] Liberty is leading by 29 seconds at the first mark. 1039 01:01:29,143 --> 01:01:31,562 [commentator 6] That failure by John Bertrand to recover 1040 01:01:31,646 --> 01:01:32,563 could be tragic. 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] We're just watching 1048 01:01:56,170 --> 01:01:59,340 Liberty having rounded the fourth mark on the course, 1049 01:01:59,424 --> 01:02:01,843 the margin around 55 seconds, Bob. 1050 01:02:02,427 --> 01:02:04,429 The Cup is as good as lost. 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] It appears Liberty has a healthy lead at this point. 1059 01:02:30,037 --> 01:02:32,373 It's a race Dennis Conner cannot lose. 1060 01:02:33,750 --> 01:02:36,544 [reporter] The tension mounts at the Bertrand household. 1061 01:02:36,627 --> 01:02:38,755 Mrs. Bertrand experiences the agony 1062 01:02:38,838 --> 01:02:43,384 of watching The Wonder from Down Under fall behind the American yacht, Liberty. 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] Dennis Conner's come to the right-hand side of the course, 1073 01:03:16,417 --> 01:03:19,545 looking for a big wind shift which he hopes will be over here. 1074 01:03:19,629 --> 01:03:23,174 We get to the top marker, and Dennis, he tacks way out. 1075 01:03:24,091 --> 01:03:25,885 [commentator] This is an unusual move. 1076 01:03:25,968 --> 01:03:28,679 Dennis has decided not to cover John Bertrand. 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] As they head off there, 1092 01:04:22,692 --> 01:04:25,278 you can see crewmen winding those coffee grinder winches, 1093 01:04:25,361 --> 01:04:27,446 trying to keep the yacht at maximum speed. 1094 01:04:27,530 --> 01:04:30,116 [man] It's going to be a mammoth effort if she should do it. 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] There you see Australia II coming back 1098 01:04:39,959 --> 01:04:41,752 right now towards Liberty. 1099 01:04:42,253 --> 01:04:44,005 This race is a hot one. 1100 01:04:44,964 --> 01:04:49,093 Only a matter of minutes ago, the America's Cup was as good as lost. 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] So Australia II is back in the race. 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] The tension at the moment is absolutely electric out there. 1108 01:05:09,155 --> 01:05:11,866 Australia II's decided to come back and attack. 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] A collision course at the moment. 1115 01:05:35,973 --> 01:05:38,768 -Looks like Australia II will go across. [man] A gutsy move. 1116 01:05:38,851 --> 01:05:41,604 [Mundle] An unbelievable move to come across there now. 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] It looks like Australia II is back in front. 1119 01:05:50,071 --> 01:05:52,448 -Absolutely incredible. -[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] And now it's all on. 1127 01:06:18,182 --> 01:06:21,185 An absolute drag race to the finish. Do you believe this, Bob Lobel? 1128 01:06:21,894 --> 01:06:24,730 [Lobel] I've seen a lot of things, but never anything like this. 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] We're looking for the smoke at any moment. 1138 01:07:05,229 --> 01:07:08,399 They're about to do it. They're about to cross the line. 1139 01:07:08,482 --> 01:07:10,818 They make a final move. It's over! 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] Australia II has done it! 1143 01:07:17,575 --> 01:07:20,119 They have won the America's Cup! 1144 01:07:20,202 --> 01:07:24,165 Will you stand up, Australia? Will you stand up and cheer? 1145 01:07:24,248 --> 01:07:29,128 Because this is the finest day in the history of Australian sport. 1146 01:07:29,211 --> 01:07:30,796 John Bertrand, the skipper, 1147 01:07:30,880 --> 01:07:33,924 and all of those men out there on that boat, 1148 01:07:34,008 --> 01:07:37,678 they have written their name large in Australian history. 1149 01:07:38,387 --> 01:07:40,598 They have won the America's Cup. 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] And this is just such a tremendously festive scene, 1192 01:10:40,694 --> 01:10:43,113 the sun now perched on the horizon 1193 01:10:43,197 --> 01:10:46,742 as Australia II makes her way back into Newport Harbor, 1194 01:10:46,825 --> 01:10:50,454 the first challenger ever to win the America's Cup. 1195 01:10:51,121 --> 01:10:53,123 [horns blasting] 1196 01:10:54,667 --> 01:10:58,545 It is a mob scene here on the dock of Australia II. 1197 01:10:59,755 --> 01:11:02,299 The Australians have finally done it. 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] There's a very happy Alan Bond. 1204 01:11:28,367 --> 01:11:30,619 He's gonna take it up without the curtains. 1205 01:11:30,703 --> 01:11:32,371 The keel is gonna be seen. 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] It's a brilliant piece of engineering design work, 1210 01:11:47,594 --> 01:11:48,887 extremely creative. 1211 01:11:49,805 --> 01:11:51,807 [Mundle] Ben Lexcen, designer of Australia II, 1212 01:11:51,890 --> 01:11:52,725 the man who did it. 1213 01:11:52,808 --> 01:11:55,311 He has achieved his life's ambition. 1214 01:11:55,978 --> 01:11:57,563 There, believe it or not, 1215 01:11:57,646 --> 01:12:00,566 Dennis Conner wearing his New York Yacht Club hat. 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 think Dennis does look a little bit stunned there, David. 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] It was Dennis Conner's last appearance 1238 01:13:35,452 --> 01:13:36,995 as America's Cup skipper, 1239 01:13:37,079 --> 01:13:41,417 a great performer bowing out a loser with tears in his eyes 1240 01:13:41,500 --> 01:13:42,918 and a whirl of his hat. 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've been to cities ♪ 1268 01:15:30,734 --> 01:15:33,195 ♪ That never close down ♪ 1269 01:15:34,530 --> 01:15:36,114 ♪ Like Newport… ♪ 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 ♪ But no matter how far ♪ 1273 01:15:45,457 --> 01:15:49,586 ♪ Or how wide I roam ♪ 1274 01:15:50,546 --> 01:15:55,926 ♪ I still call Australia home ♪ 1275 01:16:01,890 --> 01:16:04,184 ♪ I'm always travelling… ♪ 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 ♪ My heart's here waitin'… ♪ 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 still call Australia… ♪ 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] Today, in San Diego, California, 1288 01:16:43,181 --> 01:16:47,477 Dennis Conner announced his comeback for the 1987 America's Cup. 1289 01:16:49,021 --> 01:16:53,984 However, he will not be facing the skipper who wrenched away the trophy in 1983. 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 ♪ Come back to the shore ♪ 1299 01:17:16,214 --> 01:17:18,675 ♪ I realize something… ♪ 1300 01:17:19,801 --> 01:17:20,886 [gun fires] 1301 01:17:20,969 --> 01:17:23,305 [announcer 1] There's the gun. Stars & Stripes has done it. 1302 01:17:23,388 --> 01:17:25,307 They've won the America's Cup. 1303 01:17:26,266 --> 01:17:28,393 [announcer 2] He has climbed yachting's Mount Everest, 1304 01:17:28,477 --> 01:17:31,521 and he has captured, once again, yachting's holy grail. 1305 01:17:32,481 --> 01:17:34,483 [announcer 1] Revenge for Dennis Conner. 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 ♪ But no matter how far ♪ 1315 01:18:16,566 --> 01:18:20,529 ♪ Or how wide I roam ♪ 1316 01:18:20,612 --> 01:18:24,408 ♪ I still call Australia… ♪ 1317 01:18:24,491 --> 01:18:26,159 [reporter] Bond's property interests stretch 1318 01:18:26,243 --> 01:18:28,787 from Sydney to America to London and Hong Kong. 1319 01:18:28,870 --> 01:18:32,499 It is an empire worth $10,000 million. 1320 01:18:34,584 --> 01:18:37,796 [Peter Allen] We want all the crew to come back out. Sing it for them. 1321 01:18:38,588 --> 01:18:41,842 [people singing] ♪ But no matter how far ♪ 1322 01:18:41,925 --> 01:18:45,971 ♪ Or how wide I roam ♪ 1323 01:18:46,054 --> 01:18:46,930 ♪ I still call… ♪ 1324 01:18:47,013 --> 01:18:49,474 [man] Probably the greatest Prime Minister of Australia. 1325 01:18:49,558 --> 01:18:51,810 He relates to the people. The public love him. 1326 01:18:51,893 --> 01:18:54,104 What does one of our greatest prime ministers do? 1327 01:18:54,187 --> 01:18:57,190 He sculled it. Listen to them. They're going, "Scull, scull, scull!" 1328 01:18:57,274 --> 01:18:59,484 And the great man, Bobby Hawke, nailed it. 1329 01:18:59,568 --> 01:19:02,237 He said, "Thank you very much, boys. Cheers." 1330 01:19:04,364 --> 01:19:07,159 ♪ I still call Australia… ♪ 1331 01:19:07,242 --> 01:19:11,663 [man] Ben Lexcen, designer, perfectionist, and his Toyota Tarago, 1332 01:19:11,747 --> 01:19:14,040 a design that pleases even Ben Lexcen. 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] And at mark number four, it's American Magic. 1336 01:19:29,222 --> 01:19:32,517 She turns toward home at 50 knots per hour. 1337 01:19:32,601 --> 01:19:33,685 This is it! 1338 01:19:33,769 --> 01:19:37,481 Welcome to the 2021 America's Cup. 1339 01:19:39,858 --> 01:19:44,446 Allegations against one basketball ref of betting the outcomes of games 1340 01:19:44,529 --> 01:19:45,947 is rocking the NBA. 1341 01:19:46,907 --> 01:19:49,618 [man 1] Man, did I fuck my life up. 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] Cruel, twisted hoax. 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] This is the finest day in the history of Australian sports. 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] AND1 basketball, baby! 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] It does not get any stranger than this one. 1352 01:20:24,319 --> 01:20:26,029 [reporter 1] Donaghy is under investigation… 1353 01:20:26,112 --> 01:20:28,448 [reporter 2] It's front-page news all over town. 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]