Please select your home edition
Edition
Craftinsure 2023 LEADERBOARD
Product Feature
Typhoon Towyn Glove
Typhoon Towyn Glove

America's Cup winner was cleaning loo when the call came

by Suzanne McFadden 23 Jul 2018 10:34 BST 23 July 2018
Joe Spooner (second from right) waits between races on the crucial Day 3 of the 2013 America's Cup © Richard Gladwell Sail-World.com

Kiwi grinder Joe Spooner thought his America's Cup career was done, and poured all his efforts into portable loos. Then the call came from the New York Yacht Club. Suzanne McFadden reports.

He’s a two-time America’s Cup winner who’s now cleaning toilets across Auckland.

It may sound like Joe Spooner has fallen on hard times. On the contrary, the Kiwi sailor is flushed with success (pun intended).

Spooner may be driving a truck around the city this week, servicing portable loos for his company Kiwi Flush. But, in a few weeks’ time, you’ll find him in Newport, Rhode Island, sailing for the New York Yacht Club’s American Magic team. Training for the 2021 America’s Cup.

It would be Spooner’s dream to race for the Cup on his home waters, while looking back to see his sunshine-yellow thrones lined up along Auckland’s waterfront during the regatta.

He’s already offered his sanitation services to Emirates Team New Zealand boss Grant Dalton.

Spooner loves both of his jobs – comfortably switching between affluence and effluent. He’s proud of the business he and wife, Melanie, set up when they returned home to New Zealand a few years ago.

“I serviced one of the toilets in Castor Bay the other day, and the people were like ‘Aren’t you the guy who did the America’s Cup?’,” Spooner says. “It’s a real leveller, cleaning toilets. But it’s a great way to make a living, and I get to drive trucks. It’s fun.”

At 44, Spooner can’t get the Auld Mug out of his system, even after leaving the holy grail of sailing on uneasy terms.

This will be Spooner’s fifth America’s Cup. The former St Kentigern College student first sailed as a grinder for Team New Zealand in the ill-fated 2003 campaign, before joining Americans Oracle Racing.

He won the Cup with Larry Ellison’s syndicate in 2010 and 2013, and was signed on to sail with them again in Bermuda last year. But Spooner and Oracle Racing parted company in 2015, after a contentious contract battle that ended up in a San Francisco court, and included the unusual arrest of an AC45 yacht.

“I wanted to do that last Cup so badly; I’d signed up, but then we had a falling out,” he says. “I really missed doing it; you kick yourself in a way. But now I have another opportunity to have one more good crack at it.”

Spooner already has a couple of momentous comeback stories in his sailing résumé. The first, when he came close to death after being king-hit from behind.

In 1996, Spooner was a training partner for Finn sailor Craig Monk, leading into the Atlanta Olympics.

As he left a Savannah bar, Spooner was bashed on the back of his head. With a smashed skull and a brain haemorrhage, he lay in critical care in a Georgia hospital for a week.

It was months before he could walk, drive or work. But one of the first things Spooner did was get back in a boat, against neurosurgeons' orders.

Today, the only remnants of the attack are a long scar on the back of his head, and total deafness in his right ear. He gets by with a little lip reading.

The second comeback Spooner was part of, was one of the greatest in sports history, as Oracle returned from 8-1 down against Team NZ on San Francisco’s harbour.

Spooner was a grinder on Oracle’s big cat, who created the ‘Spooner Slide’ - a manoeuvre crossing from one hull to the other, inspired by baseballers’ slides into base. He later got to throw the first pitch at a San Francisco Giants’ game at AT&T Park.

Five years on, Spooner is working with Dean Barker, the Kiwi skipper denied the prized silverware.

“I’m looking forward to sailing with Dean again; it’s the first time since 2003,” Spooner says. “He’s due a win.”

Spooner was invited to try out for the American Magic crew by skipper Terry Hutchinson; the pair have sailed together for years on big boats.

He sailed in trials in Los Angeles, where the strategy was to find the right balance of Cup experience and the next generation of American talent. Spooner will be working in the ‘engine’ of the boat with young US Finn sailors Luke Muller and Caleb Paine, who won Olympic bronze in Rio.

“They’re building a good backbone. There’s a lot of depth in American sailing represented in this team,” Spooner says.

There are also a few mature Kiwis in the squad of 17. Joining Barker and Spooner is Sean Clarkson, who started out as a grinder on NZL20 in the 1992 America’s Cup, and now lives in California. There’s also British-born Jim Turner, who sailed for the GBR Challenge in the 2003 America’s Cup and stayed on in Auckland. He sailed for New Zealand at the 2012 Olympics, finishing fifth in the Star.

When one door closes another opens. Joe Spooner is off to join the New York Yacht Club's American Magic syndicate. Photo: Steve Deane Spooner says age hasn’t diminished his abilities on a boat, and he’ll be “pushing bloody hard” to be a regular crewman. “They know my date of birth, so that’s not a problem,” he laughs. “I’ve hit the fitness hard in the last month or so, so I’ll hit the ground running in the US. I need to in my old age.”

What he’ll finder harder, he suspects, is being separated from his family. Melanie and their two school-age children, Lucia and Ruben, will stay in Auckland, while Spooner has to live in the US to meet the new nationality rule in the 2021 Cup protocol.

For the rest of this story newsroom.co.nz

Related Articles

America's Cup: Revealing Reveals - the new AC75s
In the AC design stakes it's clear that different solutions have been found for similar questions As the Louis Vuitton 37th America's Cup nears, the intensity ramps up and with four teams revealing their box-fresh AC75s, it's abundantly clear that different solutions have been found for very similar questions. Posted on 24 Apr
America's Cup Defender christened "Taihoro"
Cup Defender named “To move swiftly as the sea between both sky and earth.” In a stirring ceremony, Iwi Ngati Whatua Orakei gifted and blessed the name ‘Taihoro' on the boat that Emirates Team NZ will sail in their defence of the 37th America's Cup. The launch event took place at the Team's base in Auckland's Wynyard Point. Posted on 18 Apr
America's Cup: Swiss launch a beauty of detail
Alinghi Red Bull Racing family came together to celebrate the first launch and another milestone Today was the official launch at the Swiss team's beautiful base in the heart of the Port Vell with Chiara Bertarelli, daughter of Ernesto, cracking the bottle on the foredeck and naming their new AC75 challenger. Posted on 17 Apr
America's Cup: Emirates Team NZ reveal AC75
Emirates Team New Zealand unexpectedly rolled their new AC75 out of the shed, on Friday Emirates Team New Zealand unexpectedly rolled their new AC75 out of the shed, on Friday, during a break in the gales which have been lashing Auckland. Posted on 12 Apr
America's Cup simulator game has first race
Eight top sailors sail first race ahead of upcoming America's Cup e-sports regatta The official simulation videogame of the 2024 America's Cup and upcoming e-sports championship was launched on Tuesday in Barcelona, bringing together the sailing and virtual worlds. Posted on 10 Apr
America's Cup launches Official Game
AC Sailing built on simulation technology used by America's Cup teams, will be available for free AC Sailing, the ultimate regatta simulator built on actual simulation technology used by America's Cup teams, will be available for free download on Epic Store and Steam from today April 9th, 19:00 CET Posted on 9 Apr
Cup Spy Special: Swiss AC75 reveal
First look at the Backless Boat - Alinghi Red Bull Racing's new AC75 revealed in Barcelona The AC37 Joint Recon Team peered over the fence at the unveiling of the Backless Boat - the Swiss AC75 - the first of the Challengers for the 2024 America's Cup. Its most distinctive feature is the radical cutaway topsides at the back end of the hull. Posted on 5 Apr
Glittering, star-studded reveal of the Swiss ‘Boat
The magnificent Port Vell base of Alinghi Red Bull Racing was the hottest ticket in Barcelona The magnificent Port Vell base of Alinghi Red Bull Racing was tonight, the hottest ticket in Barcelona for friends, family, sponsors and dignitaries from Spain and around the world for the ‘reveal' and roll-out of the Swiss AC75. Posted on 5 Apr
America's Cup: The hidden world of Hydro explained
Emirates Team NZ explain the hydro systems which may be seen on their new AC75 race boat There are many hidden parts to an America's Cup campaign where innovation, performance and talent often remain unseen. Hydraulics is one such area, when Emirates Team NZ's new race boat is launched next month, the hydro components will be largely unseen. Posted on 19 Mar
America's Cup: Swiss accept AC75 delivery
Alinghi Red Bull Racing's AC75 raceboatwas delivered to the team base in Barcelona, on Monday Alinghi Red Bull Racing's AC75 raceboat 'BoatOne' was delivered to the team base in Barcelona, on Monday, and now begins her final build phase, including rigging and hardware fitting with an unveiling not scheduled before April 5. Posted on 6 Mar