Please select your home edition
Edition
North Sails Performance 2023 - LEADERBOARD

Volvo Ocean Race fleet fights two battles in the wild Southern Ocean

by Volvo Ocean Race on 30 Mar 2015
Onboard Team Alvimedica - Leg five to Itajai - Volvo Ocean Race 2015 Amory Ross / Team Alvimedica
Volvo Ocean Race – Team Alvimedica lead fleet towards Cape Horn
- Leg five bragging rights still up for grabs
- Follow all the action of the Cape Horn rounding tomorrow




The Volvo Ocean Race fleet in the wild Southern Ocean was fighting two battles on Sunday – for bragging rights to lead the fleet round Cape Horn, and the race to win leg five.

The first will be decided between Monday afternoon and evening and the other around April 5-6 in Itajaí, south-east Brazil, after three weeks of unprecedented, close-quarter racing.



The outcome of both contests is impossible to predict although the Turkey/USA crew of Team Alvimedica (Charlie Enright/USA) are currently narrow favourites as they led a group of five boats at 1240 UTC on Sunday.

Should Enright’s crew achieve either, it would be a major achievement for a team that is the youngest in the race and led by a 30-year-old Volvo Ocean Race first-timer who first dreamed of entering a team on the film set of the Disney movie, Morning Light some eight years ago.



They certainly can take neither achievement for granted. Early on Sunday, they led by just 4.1nm from MAPFRE (Iker Martínez/ESP), with Dongfeng Race Team (Charles Caudrelier/FRA), Dutch crew Team Brunel (Bouwe Bekking/NED) and overall race leaders, Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing (Ian Walker/GBR), up to 8.2nm further adrift.

It is anyone’s to win.



To add to the plot, conditions in the Southern Ocean continue to be super testing with winds of some 45 miles an hour (73 kilometres an hour) and waves likely to approach 10 metres (30 feet).

And the latest forecast promises no let up once the fleet has rounded the Horn and moved into the final stage of a thrilling leg up the Brazilian coast through the south Atlantic to Itajaí.



Enright gave a taste of the relentless pressure on board as his crew battled to stay ahead of the fleet and also steer through the worst of the weather.

“I think everyone will remember today for the rest of their lives,” he reported in a message to shore after crossing ahead of Spanish rival MAPFRE, during a skirmish for the lead on Saturday.

“It was completely insane – very little sleep, moving sails every hour. All the boats knew where you had to be to be ahead, but the problem is not everybody can be there at once. So it was a real fight.”



Enright will not be alone in remembering this leg for the rest of his life.

The boats have avoided some huge icebergs on the route so far after Cyclone Pam kept them waiting three extra days in Auckland at the start and three of them crashed to their sides mid-week in so-called ‘Chinese gybes’.



Team SCA (Sam Davies/GBR), suffered the most serious damage with a broken fractional code zero (FRO) sail, which has hampered them significantly in such challenging conditions.

At 1240 UTC, they trailed the main pack by just under 300nm. Navigator Libby Greenhalgh (GBR) described their experience on board in a blog from the boat on Sunday.

“Life on board is like being in a cold, damp car with no windows while someone is learning to drive, bunny-hopping down the road or practising their emergency stops,” she wrote.

“When we hit a wave and the water ploughs over the top, it does so with such force that the water finds its way into the boat through every little nook and cranny. So much so that it felt like it was raining on us one day in the galley!”

The fleet has just passed the halfway mark of the race in terms of legs completed. In all, they will sail nine legs, visit 11 ports, and every continent. The event, staged once every three years, will conclude in Gothenburg, Sweden, on June 27.

 
Leg 5
DTL
(NM)
GAIN/LOSS
(NM)
DTF
(NM)
Speed
(kt)
ALVI ALVI 0 0 2495.7 22
MAPF MAPF 4.1  2 2499.8 22
DFRT DFRT 6.2 0 2501.8 22
TBRU TBRU 8.7  1 2504.3 22
ADOR ADOR 12.3  1 2507.9 22
SCA1 SCA1 299.5  25 2795.1 14
VEST VEST DID NOT START


PredictWind - Routing 728x90 BOTTOMCyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERRooster 2023 - Aquafleece Robe - FOOTER

Related Articles

RS Elites and RS Fevas at Antigua Sailing Week
Wall-to-wall sunshine, windward-leeward racing on Caribbean trade winds Wall-to-wall sunshine, windward-leeward racing on Caribbean trade winds, and amazing beach-side parties, Antigua Sailing Week is here for the 55th edition of this famous island regatta.
Posted today at 6:52 pm
Helly Hansen Chester Race Week preview
Largest fixed keel regatta in Eastern Canada boasts 120-year history, hosting over 1,200 sailors Helly Hansen Chester Race Week 2024 will take place in scenic Chester, Nova Scotia and this year's highlight will be the J70 Canadian Championship as part of the event.
Posted today at 6:31 pm
The Transat CIC: how to follow the start
The 48 competitors will leave Lorient heading for New York on Sunday Switzerland's IMOCA racer Oliver Heer: Now I have my back to the wall. Inside, personally I feel a lot of pressure.
Posted today at 5:45 pm
52 Super Series 2024 starts this weekend
The counters have returned to zero After thrilling end to the 2023 52 SUPER SERIES circuit which saw Germany's Platoon, owned and steered by Harm Müller-Spreer, win the season title on tie-break, the five regatta 2024 circuit opens on Sunday.
Posted today at 5:04 pm
Last Chance Regatta at Hyères, France Day 6
Six Olympic dinghy places claimed by emerging nations Six of the eight men's and women's dinghy Olympic places on offer at the Last Chance Regatta were claimed by sailors supported by the World Sailing Emerging Nations Program on a rain-soaked final day of qualification at the Semaine Olympique Française.
Posted today at 4:36 pm
Antigua Wingfoil Championship Race Day 1
Participants of all ages and backgrounds at Antigua Sailing Week Against the lush green mountains of Antigua, colourful Wingfoil sails adorned the horizon, marking the commencement of Antigua Wingfoil Championship Race Day 1 during Antigua Sailing Week.
Posted today at 12:06 pm
Cup Spy Apr 25-26: Three Sailings and a Reveal
Kiwis and Italians while American Magic popped out of the shed for a mast fitting Two teams sailed today - one in Auckland and the other in Cagliari. American Magic gave an unexpected reveal today, when the US Challenger opened the shed door and saw daylight for the first time.
Posted today at 10:16 am
59th Congressional Cup at Long Beach Day 2
First four advance to quarter-finals Closing out the opening round-robin stage of the 59th Congressional Cup today in Long Beach, the top four teams - Ian Williams/ GBR, Jeppe Borch/ DEN, Dave Hood/ USA and Gavin Brady/ USA, each advance to the Quarter-final stage of the event.
Posted today at 3:40 am
Finns and French finish Ocean Globe Race
Galiana WithSecure and Evrika excape the windhole 40nm from the finish line It was a long, painfully slow final two days to complete their circumnavigation. But, finally, Galiana WithSecure FI (06) and Evrika FR (07) crossed the Royal Yacht Squadron finish line in a moody windless, moonlight Cowes arrival.
Posted on 25 Apr
No major fears for Sunday's Transat CIC start
There will be no initial gales to contend with, rather a relatively light winds start As all of the Transat CIC skippers convened this morning at Lorient's La Base for the main briefing before Sunday's start of the 3,500 miles solo race across the North Atlantic to New York, ideas about the weather are the main topic of discussion.
Posted on 25 Apr