Over the past 48 hours each team has thrown their cards on the table,
 lining up west to east and committing to the routing they think will 
best fire them towards the steady, favourable breeze the trade winds 
offer.    Team Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag plumped for the most westerly position, 
setting themselves up around 120 miles off the Brazilian coastline.
Forty miles further out to sea, and on the same parallel, Turn the 
Tide on Plastic were the most easterly boat, pinning their hopes on 
being the first to pick up the new breeze when it arrives in the next 24
 hours.
Splitting the difference, and with the narrowest of advantage, just 
slightly north of their rivals, Vestas 11th Hour Racing had usurped Turn
 the Tide on Plastic from the top spot at the 1300 UTC position update.
Turn the Tide on Plastic skipper Dee Caffari said she was willing to 
lose out temporarily in favour of a better position for the new breeze.
“Yesterday was all about making short term losses to make long term 
gains,” she said. “That is what I was telling the team as we pushed out 
to the east while it was easy to gain miles in that direction.
“Today we are dealing with a sequence of rain clouds as best we can. 
Some have a shift in them and some carry just an increase in pressure. 
We hope the latter are only for us so we can accelerate on our 
competitors while in the cloud. Fingers crossed for some lady luck in 
the clouds we encounter on this leg.
“We believe, with the exception of random cloud activity, that this is us on starboard for a very long time.”
Simeon Tienpont’s team AkzoNobel was one of the teams that managed to
 benefit from a cloud, overtaking Team Brunel and Scallywag overnight.
“The big difference is how you manage the clouds,” AkzoNobel’s Chris 
Nicholson said. “We made a huge gain on Vestas and MAPFRE then lost it 
all in a cloud. In a straight line and with the same breeze there’s not 
much difference between the teams - the deciding factor is getting 
through the clouds.”
Meanwhile on Team Brunel, thoughts are already turning to the 
impending crossing of the Equator for the fourth time in this edition.
Maritime tradition dictates that those who haven’t crossed the Equator before must make an offering to King Neptune.
Brunel’s only inductee on this leg is Australian Olympic silver 
medallist Nina Curtis – and the crew are already enjoying the 
anticipation.
“Nina is get a bit worried about King Neptune's visit, even though it
 is still days away,” Brunel skipper Bouwe Bekking said. “The guys love 
to wind her up. We will make sure she doesn't lose all her hair…”
The next 24 hours are so crucial to the outcome of the leg that the 
race tracker has gone live, giving race fans real-time information about
 the position of the boats.
| 
 | |||||||||||||
| DTL nm | GAIN_LOSS | STATUS | SPEED kt | COURSE | TWS kt | TWD | DTF nm | ||||||
| 1 | VS11 | 0.00 | 0.00 | RAC | 9.2 | 17º | 9.0 | 69º | 4306.64 | ||||
| 2 | TTOP | 0.92 | RAC | 12.1 | 22º | 13.3 | 91º | 4307.56 | |||||
| 3 | DFRT | 2.73 | 0.00 | RAC | 10.4 | 5º | 10.0 | 55º | 4309.37 | ||||
| 4 | MAPF | 3.27 | 0.00 | RAC | 9.8 | 7º | 11.5 | 71º | 4309.91 | ||||
| 5 | AKZO | 8.17 | 0.04 | RAC | 10.4 | 19º | 11.3 | 74º | 4314.81 | ||||
| 6 | TBRU | 11.37 | RAC | 11.7 | 22º | 12.8 | 77º | 4318.02 | |||||
| 7 | SHKS | 17.00 | 0.02 | RAC | 11.9 | 15º | 13.3 | 79º | 4323.64 | ||||

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