Boating New Zealand Boat Reviews
Reviews
Boating New Zealand News
News
Boating New Zealand Sports
Sport
Boating New Zealand Lifestyle
Lifestyle
advertise
Boating New Zealand Boat Reviews
Reviews
Boating New Zealand News
News
Boating New Zealand Sports
Sport
Boating New Zealand Lifestyle
Lifestyle
BOAT-REVIEWS-MOBILE
Boat Reviews
BOAT-NEWS-MOBILE
News
BOAT-SPORTS-MOBILE
Sports
BOAT-LIFESTYLE-MOBILE
Lifestyle
HomeAmerica's CupAC38America’s Cup AC75s set to return as training and Recon begin in January

America’s Cup AC75s set to return as training and Recon begin in January

Mid January marks the first AC75 sailing days of the new America’s Cup cycle, with Recon returning to bring early training into public view.

America’s Cup closed out 2025 with anticipation building toward an intense start to the new year. That expectation sharpens on 16 January, the first day teams are permitted to sail their modified AC75s under the new Naples 2027 rule set. While racing remains some distance away, this moment marks a clear shift from design theory to on water reality, played out under the returning glare of the Joint Reconnaissance programme.

Until the AC75s are cleared to sail, teams have remained active in AC40s. Emirates Team New Zealand and Luna Rossa both carried out two boat training late last year, while Athena Racing continued its pathway focus, sailing with Youth and Women’s squads from Barcelona. That foundation work now gives way to the much larger challenge of integrating new systems, new crew formats, and heavily revised boats.

Five teams enter historic America’s Cup Alliance to supercharge future of sport’s oldest trophy

- Advertisement, article continues below -

The first AC75 sailing days will be exploratory. Crews are adapting to a five sailor configuration, with cyclors gone and battery powered systems taking their place. Every function on board has changed, from sail handling to energy management, and early sessions will prioritise reliability, communication, and role clarity rather than outright pace.

What changes immediately is visibility. From the moment an AC75 leaves the dock, Recon comes online. Assigned two person Recon units will document activity on the water and around team bases, feeding a shared cloud system accessed by all competitors and selected media. For fans, Recon once again becomes the primary window into the Cup’s most secretive phase.

Recon will shape the narrative in January. Deck layouts, crew movement, and system choices will provide the first indicators of how teams are approaching the new cycle.

Share this
Orient Express Racing of France racing INEOS Britannia
Article
Article

America’s Cup Naples really does start coming into 2026!

AC38
Training hours are building, new boats are nearly ready, and a possible American entry adds fresh te...
Article
Article

Athena Racing secures major investment from Oakley Capital

AC38
Britain’s America’s Cup team confirms a majority ownership deal as the Cup shifts toward a more stru...
Riptide Racing partnerships
Article
Article

Riptide Racing adds Harken as the US syndicate’s America’s Cup bid takes shape

AC38
Riptide Racing has confirmed Harken as its official hardware supplier, becoming the second commercia...

Comments

This conversation is moderated by Boating New Zealand. Subscribe to view comments and join the conversation. Choose your plan →

This conversation is moderated by Boating New Zealand.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Kirsten Thomas
Kirsten Thomas
Kirsten enjoys sailing and is a passionate writer based in coastal New Zealand. Combining her two passions, she crafts vivid narratives and insightful articles about sailing adventures, sharing her experiences and knowledge with fellow enthusiasts.

LATEST NEWS