They know what an America's Cup is all about, whereas we saw with some of the campaigns like Ben Ainslie Racing and, to a certain extent, Artemis they were perhaps held back by inexperience at times.
I see a hell of a lot of parallels in this Team NZ campaign to 1995. They have a radical boat, a young, talented crew and a helmsman that is at the top of his game.
I've been lucky enough to see Peter Burling compete for a number of years, and he is one of those guys that just sees the game early. Couple that with his intellect and his engineering background, and you can see why he is considered the country's best and brightest sailing talent. He can talk to the designers and engineers at their level - that's a hell of an advantage I would have thought.
What I also like about Burling is he is unflappable - the guy has ice running through his veins. He's certainly not walking around the Team NZ base with the worries of the world on his shoulders.
I don't think Team NZ starting from a point behind is going to be a huge factor, but at minimum they will want to have parity by the end of the opening weekend of racing.
The way the schedule works this time around, with four races scheduled this weekend and then a five-day break before race five, that could have a big psychological impact.
If one of the team's is really strong this weekend, that will play on the other team's mind next week.
Ordinarily, if you have a bad race you're on the water again the next day with the opportunity to put it behind you. In this scenario, if you have bad opening weekend, imagine how that is psychologically to have to wait from Tuesday through to Saturday before you race again.
After San Francisco of course, no New Zealand fan is ever going to feel comfortable even if Team NZ have a dominant opening weekend. But the good thing is, those on board the New Zealand boat don't carry those same scars from San Fran, because aside from skipper Glenn Ashby, it is an entirely new crew.
We'll see tomorrow what they can deliver.