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Volvo Ocean Race – Weekend warriors prepare for battle

by Volvo Ocean Race on 18 Nov 2017
Day 14, Leg 2, Lisbon to Cape Town, on board AkzoNobel. Brad Farrand in an alomost Chameleon like state with the matching wet weather gear up the mast. He is doing a rig check before the winds start to pick up later today – Volvo Ocean Race James Blake / Volvo Ocean Race
Those following the rankings and tracker for the Volvo Ocean Race could be forgiven for thinking they’d glanced away for more than one of the six-hour position reports.

The leaderboard is constantly undergoing a shake-up, reflective at the moment almost entirely by how far east a team is positioned.

As the fleet approaches the latitude of the finish line in Cape Town, this is hardly surprising. Any progress to the east is a direct mile off the 2,500 or so miles left to the finishing line.



But tactically, it’s hardly that simple, and teams that many experts are touting as in the strongest position on this leg are still charging to the southwest, effectively sailing away from the finishing line in an effort to pick up strong breeze in a weather system that will carry them to the finish in about a week’s time.

“The last position sked dropped us from first to fifth,” said team AkzoNobel watch captain Chris Nicolson. His team had been positioned furthest to the east the last few days and had thus been leading the rankings.

“But we’re now exiting out of the high pressure system and waiting for a low pressure to pick us up. There are several boats on our bow, but the race is to the next low pressure system. We’ll probably drop some more miles at the next sked, but the game is to set ourselves up for the front to come through and ride that for the next four days or so.”



An interesting development over the past 24 hours has been in the different tactics of Dongfeng Race Team and MAPFRE, two boats who had been leading the charge south for most of the past week.

But in the early hours of Saturday morning, Dongfeng appears to have switched tactics, and is now approximately 80 miles further east. That means closer to Cape Town, but also nearer to the lighter winds of the high pressure system. In fact, while MAPFRE is sailing in 16 knots of wind at the 1300 UTC report, Dongfeng is seeing just 12 knots. How this plays out over the next 12 – 24 hours could determine the leader into Cape Town.



Leg 2 – Position Report – Saturday 18 November (Day 14) – 13:00 UTC

1. Turn the Tide on Plastic -- distance to finish – 2,471.9 nautical miles
2. Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag +4.1
3. Dongfeng Race Team +6.8
4. team AkzoNobel +46.0
5. Vestas 11th Hour Racing +58.4
6. Team Brunel +71.2
7. MAPFRE +71.2



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