Koch Decries Expense of Cup
SAN DIEGO — Bill Koch the capitalist looks at Bill Koch the sailor and allows that as a businessman, he’s a pretty fair sailor.
The America 3 boss, who opens defense of the America’s Cup against Italy’s Il Moro di Venezia Saturday, says the campaign has become too expensive and the spy games have gotten out of hand.
“The money is obscene,” said Koch, who confessed he has spent $64 million, about 10% of his worth.
“It’s too much. It could be better spent. If I had known it would cost this much there is no way in hell I would have done it.”
When he started his campaign two years ago he thought he’d be able to do it for about $15 million, with another $5 million set aside as a “contingency.”
As costs escalated through the construction of four boats based on expensive research and testing programs, he started having second thoughts.
“Two or three times I thought about dropping out,” Koch said, “but once you mount a tiger you can’t get off.”
If Koch were to win, the San Diego Yacht Club would retain custody of the Cup, but he isn’t sure he would try to defend it in 1995.
“If I didn’t have to spend $64 million, I probably would,” he said. “If I could spend $10 or $15 million, sure, I would. If the yacht club wants me to defend it, I’ll tell them, ‘You help me raise the $64 million.’ ”
Koch is said to have spent $2 million alone on sophisticated espionage operations to seek out his rivals’ secrets.
“More than that,” he said. “It makes me sick.”
A large part of that expense was Guzzini, the notorious spy boat loaded with electronics to track rivals’ performances.
Koch has a solution: “Eliminate the (keel) skirts and secrets and have everything open . . . put all of the America’s Cup defenders and challengers together in one big long compound so it could attract a lot of people, everybody could see what everybody else is doing and you wouldn’t spend a lot of money spying, and you wouldn’t spend a lot of money on counter-intelligence, trying to protect yourself.”
Koch also thinks the boats should be built and maintained less expensively by eliminating the process to cure the carbon-fiber hulls and modifying the ballast rule so designers won’t make them so flimsy.
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