Please select your home edition
Edition
Allen Brothers

Kiwi grinding veteran on eighth America's Cup - this time for USA

by Suzanne McFadden/Newsroom 13 Jan 2021 04:55 GMT 21 October 2020
Sean Clarkson (No.9) looks up at the mainsail as American Magic's first AC75, Defiant, goes through its paces on the Hauraki Gulf © Will Ricketson

As the challengers for the 36th America's Cup prepare to square off this week, Suzanne McFadden finds Kiwi sailor Sean Clarkson making an eighth bid for the silverware - but this time for the Americans

Sean Clarkson is a rarity in the America’s Cup sailing fraternity.

At 52, the Kiwi professional sailor is lining up in his eighth America’s Cup regatta. No other sailor in this edition of the Cup has been on the grinding handles for as long as he has.

It’s been 29 years since Clarkson made his Cup debut in San Diego on board NZL20 – the Red Sled – in New Zealand’s failed challenge for the Auld Mug in 1992.

Back then he was a marine biology student at the University of Auckland, and sailing in the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron’s youth scheme. The New Zealand Challenge was looking for strong, young men to bolster their sailing squad, and the 22-year-old Clarkson ditched his degree, bulked up and joined the Kiwi crew.

Now seven campaigns – under five different national flags - later, Clarkson throws his considerable heft of experience into the New York Yacht Club’s American Magic sailing team, who launch their assault on the Prada Cup challengers series in Auckland later this week.

When I meet with him in American Magic's hospitality lounge - which, because of Covid-19, is empty apart from us - Clarkson asks: “Are you surprised I’m still alive?”

Not so much that’s he’s still breathing, but I'm definitely intrigued as to why he’s still sailing for the holy grail of yacht racing.

He explains that he’s just lucky he hasn’t fallen to bits yet. “I’ve never had an injury, never had an operation or broken a bone,” he says.

Sailing has always been the livelihood of this Kerikeri-raised New Zealand Olympic sailor, round-the-world race winner and multiple world champion, who’s also a husband and dad.

And the passion to finally win the America's Cup still burns bright.

Clarkson, his wife Shawn and their two teenage sons, Finn and Felix, arrived in Auckland in May, leaving their home in Mill Valley, just north of San Francisco, after a long pandemic lockdown.

Finn is driving a forklift around the American Magic base below us. He’s working as a labourer for the team while on holiday from Auckland Grammar School.

“He’s 16 and he’s already bigger than me,” Clarkson laughs. Finn is also an athlete - in water polo, mountain biking and rugby. Not sailing. “I told the guys, if I had just one of his lungs, I’d be a better athlete than I am now.”

Clarkson is also in awe of the burly, powerful grinders he sails alongside on American Magic’s AC75, Patriot. Even though some are just learning the art of sailing.

Swede Anders Gustafsson is a four-time Olympian and world champion canoe sprinter (as well as a former Royal Guard of Carl XVI Gustaf, the King of Sweden); and American Tim Hornsby also hails from an Olympic kayaking career.

“Having been a frontline athlete in previous America’s Cups, it’s somewhere between humbling and downright embarrassing how good some of these guys are,” Clarkson marvels. “They’re 25 years younger, but they’re also athletes who are the best in the world. They’re freaks of nature.”

As he works out twice a day in the team gym, spending six hours a week on the grinding machine alone, Clarkson is spellbound by his crewmates.

“You’re in the gym blowing yourself out, and you look across and they’re doing 30 percent more than you, and they’re just talking away,” he says.

“But these guys come from threshold sports where they just love the pain. And I can still hang in there.”

Knowing he needed to “find some magic from somewhere” to physically stay in the game for an eighth Cup campaign, Clarkson has done a lot of reading into the science of exercise. “It’s pretty impressive that I can look at the training programme now and understand why we’re doing it,” he says.

Fitness is one of the obvious evolutions Clarkson has witnessed in three decades of sailing at the apex of the sport.

“It’s a different world now. For a few of our guys, the Christmas Cup regatta [sailed in Auckland last month] was the first sailboat race they’d ever done,” he says.

For the rest of this story click here

Related Articles

America's Cup: American Magic splash and sail
American Magic sailed Tuesday revealing an interesting deck layout including aft facing cyclors American Magic rolled out their new AC75 at 5.45am on Tuesday, with the first set of slightly asymmetric race foils, rudder and rig all in place and revealing an interesting deck layout putting the helms and trimmers side by side and well forward. Posted on 8 May
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