Mrs McAsey said from the cup venue yesterday that the latest losses were hurting but the crew have handled the situation well. "They seem pretty good ... they're not too worried, just keep chipping away and hopefully get that win and it will be all over."
But the protracted race has had an effect on her family.
"I am exhausted, the kids are exhausted. People back home have been watching the races for 10-12 days now but we've been here two and a half months.
"I've got a 1-year-old and a 5-year-old and Chris needs a bit of uninterrupted sleep."
Among the hordes of Kiwis at the cup venue is Northland joiner Andrew Hewlett, who watched yesterday's races at a pub about an hour's drive north of San Francisco, but planned to be at the race venue this morning.
He's lived in San Francisco for nine years and said the recent losses "sucked".
"Last four or five days, a lot of Americans have been coming down to the race venue and that makes me nervous but I think we'll win the next one because we can't have too many losses in a row.
"The other thing is the rivalry between them, let alone Dean Barker who's a Kiwi and James Spithill [Oracle skipper] who's an Aussie, and we know that when New Zealand and Australia play, it's the Kiwis that always win.
Meanwhile, Whangarei-based airbrush artist Brad Walters was paying particular attention to what rudders were on Team NZ's Black Cat. About a year ago he painted the iconic buzzy bee on to a pair of carbon-fibre rudders. He believed they were being used during the winning part of the campaign but hadn't seen them in the recent races.
"They need that bit of good luck. Perhaps they need to put them back on the boat."
A year ago he was approached by the team building the hi-tech cat to decorate the rudders. At the time it was top secret and he was unable to tell anyone about the work.