An eventful opening 24 hours in the Volvo Ocean Race has seen skipper
Charlie Enright’s Vestas 11th Hour Racing grab the lead as the fleet
converge on the Strait of Gibraltar. The Vestas boat, along with team AkzoNobel, were the first to make a
break for the Spanish coast as night fell on Sunday evening, where they
benefited from favourable conditions and emerged in front of the fleet.
“We took the inshore route with good angle and we know we crossed
ahead of the fleet when we converged with them again,” explained
Enright. “For now the only boat in sight is AkzoNobel. But we like our
sail set up. We feel like we’re going through the water well.”
That’s an understatement. On Monday afternoon, the team, along with
second placed AkzoNobel is picking up a nice shift as well as increased
pressure and the leading pair will likely extend their lead into the
Strait.
For team AkzoNobel, it’s been a whirlwind 24-hours. After three of
the team’s most experienced crew elected not to sail Leg 1, reinstated
skipper Simeon Tienpont submitted his final crew list just an hour
before leaving the dock. But the new configuration has been on fire
since leaving Alicante, and at the 13:00 UTC position report was in a
solid second place.
Splitting the difference between the northern and southern tracks has
been David Witt’s Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag team, fighting hard now to
hold off MAPFRE, who will be just a few tenths of a mile behind. In contrast, Dongfeng Race Team, one of the pre-race favourites, has
fallen back since leading the fleet out of the host city of the event,
Alicante, Spain.
"Last night we lost a lot. We are in 5th or 6th position, which is
hard for us," said Chen JinHao (Horace) on Dongfeng this morning.
"Pascal and Charles were working all night so we can be faster. It was a
bad night, but sailing is sailing. We can come back!”
Of course it is very early: one day into what is projected to be a
six or seven day, 1,450 nautical mile leg from Alicante to Lisbon,
Portugal. And certainly the leaders are under no illusion as to what awaits
them after the passage through one of the busiest stretches of water in
the world.
“The race won’t be won or lost (in the Strait),” Enright said. “And
there’s a big patch of light breeze waiting for us on the other side.” The wind is forecast to build through the Strait and for the exit
into the Atlantic. But overnight, it will ease, and the concertina
effect may bring the backmarkers back into the leaders. In a very real
way, the race has just started.
Leg 1 - Position Report – Monday 23 October – 13:00 UTC
1. Vestas 11th Hour Racing -- distance to finish -- 1096 nautical miles
2. team AkzoNobel + 6nm
3. Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag +15
4. MAPFRE +15
5. Turn the Tide on Plastic +17
6. Team Brunel +18
7. Dongfeng Race Team +19
2. team AkzoNobel + 6nm
3. Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag +15
4. MAPFRE +15
5. Turn the Tide on Plastic +17
6. Team Brunel +18
7. Dongfeng Race Team +19
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