Please select your home edition
Edition
Kingfisher Yacht Ropes at METSTRADE 2025

Countdown to Rolex Middle Sea Race

by Regatta News on 6 Oct 2008
Nisida, breaking in the waves near Trapani Rolex Middle Sea Race 2007 Rolex / Carlo Borlenghi http://www.carloborlenghi.net
With only a matter of days until the start of the 29th Rolex Middle Sea Race, organisers the Royal Malta Yacht club are rubbing their hands together at the prospect of an entry exceeding seventy boats for the first time ever.

Not only that, but the yachts are drawn from most corners of the sailing world with the fleet flying no less than eighteen different national flags. Entries close on 11th October and the race itself starts from Marsamxett Harbour on the 18th October - so there is still time to be part of an historic contest that marks the 40th anniversary of this 607 nautical mile adventure.

The race is open to yachts from 9-metres to 30.5 metres and this year will see the full range. Currently, the 100-foot Farr designed Rapture (MAR) takes pole position in the size stake. This is not something that particularly troubles Jeff Hanlon, Rapture's captain, who explains 'this will be the first of four planned offshore races for Rapture. We chose the Rolex Middle Sea Race because it is one of the most famous races you can do and we enjoy this style of offshore distance racing. We have an international crew joining us for the race, all good experienced offshore racers, a crew of good, well-humoured blokes that know what they're doing.'

Hanlon has heard all about Malta's hospitality and the scenery around the course. Hanlon has also heard the race can be difficult, but again this is not an overriding concern, 'I have known about the race for years. I was even told recently not to do it due to its tough reputation for bad weather, but that's yacht racing. It's as much against the weather sometimes as it is against the other boats.' And with the Rolex Middle Sea Race tending to blow hot or cold and rarely in between, Hanlon is perceptive in this judgement.

Other big boats, over seventy-feet, include Stormvogel (GBR) 39-years after her last participation, Steinlager II (NZL) and Michael Cotter's Whisper (IRL), hoping to complete the course this time after retiring in the face of the storm last year. The newcomer is the Nauta 80 Acaia Cube (ITA) owned by Italian filmstar, Claudio Amendola.

Much has been written already about the battle royal shaping up in the 50 - 70 foot range, where the IRC race boats - Rosebud/Team DYT (STP65/USA) and Andres Soriano's Allegre (Mills 68/GBR) - have just been joined by a second STP 65, Jim Swartz's Moneypenny (USA). And the participation of the 60-foot, Veolia Oceans, Boogaloo (FRA) could add another twist to the tale. Those that represent shape of things today will find themselves up again some of the former workhorses of the oceans - the VO60, Big One (CRO) makes a welcome return and is joined by a trio of 2000 vintage Open 50s, 13 (ITA), Regione Piedmont (ITA) and Vento di Sardegna (ITA). The 50-foot Rolex Fastnet 2007 winner Chieftain is back under new ownership, Adrian Lee, and a new name, Lee Overlay Partners (IRL), but still sports her canting keel. The sole TP52 is the IRC optimized RAN (GBR) owned by Skype co-founder Niklas Zennström.

Elsewhere in this size band are a pack of cruiser/racers, such as the Baltic 56, Lurigna (SUI), the Shipman 63 Coral (RUS), the Swan 62 Berenice (ITA), the J/V 53 Bank von Bremen (GER) and the First 50 ISR 500, which is apparently the first ever entry received from Israel. Imagine owner Gil Tagar's surprise to find he will not be alone, with a second Israeli flagged yacht scheduled to on the startline - Wizsoft.

Wizsoft is one of six First 47.7s that will be engaged in a private competition in the sub-fifty foot bracket. The others are Enoch (ITA), headstart.at (AUT), Gyrate (GBR) and Femme Fatale (HUN) and RMYC Commodore Georges Bonello Dupuis' Escape (MLT). Other local Maltese boats fill the ranks here too - Arthur Podesta continues his uninterrupted run of participation with Elusive Medbank, past race-winner John Ripard Jr has entered Lazy Duck with a crew made up mainly of his children and other close relatives, David Franks goes again with Strait Dealer as does Tim Camillieri on Vikesha

Into the forty-foot and below segment and there are more familiar Maltese names, including Sandro Musu's Aziza, Jonas Diamantino's Gasan Mamo Comanche Raider and an entry from Maltese Falcon (the Maltese Beneteau 40.7 version) is expected today, which will bring entries to 77. Diamantino was one of three Maltese skippers to finish the storm-ridden race of last year, and would be forgiven for giving the race a miss this year. Not a bit of it. He's back and with a new boat, the old IOR two-tonner giving way to an ILC 40, explaining that 'I felt that after the severe bashing she got in the last Rolex Middle Sea Race that the old boat required too much maintenance to consider her safe for more races.'

It is not just any ILC 40 though; one previous owner was Spanish sailing star Pedro Campos. Even so, while he will never say never Diamantino does not hold up much hope of winning, 'whilst my team and I sail the race for the pure pleasure of it and the sense of accomplishment it is always the intention to try and win it some day. Although we are unlikely to win it with this boat this year maybe some time in the near future we will! I am fortunate that I have had the same great crew for the last six years and I always look forward to sailing with them confident in their ability and confident in the knowledge that for them, like me, safety and fun is paramount.'

There are a number of boats hovering around the minimum length mark, but rounding out the fleet at a shade over 31-feet looks to be Noel Racine's JPK9.6 Foggy Dew (FRA). According to Racine, 'I have wanted to do the race for 3 or 4 years now, but it is a big logistical exercise getting a boat of this size to Malta.' And though Racine has not done the race before, he has two Rolex Fastnet's under his belt - the long, slow 2005 race (good practice if this year's RMSR is tortuously difficult) and the 2007 high-wind, big sea version (good practice if we have another Mediterranean belter).

Last but not least, there are two multihulls competing and, if this is not testimony to the enduring fascination of the race, one is none other than Hans Nagel's HighQ1, which finished last in 2007 some 24-hours after the penultimate boat. Maybe Nagel has had a word with the wind gods and agreed a better package for 2008.

The Rolex Middle Sea Race commences on Saturday 18th October 2008 from Marsamxett Harbour, Malta. Entries close on 11th October. The final prize giving is at noon on 25th October.

George David's Rambler (USA) established the current Course Record of 47 hours 55 minutes and 3 seconds in 2007.

Pantaenius Sail 2025 AUS FooterKingfisher Yacht Ropes at METSTRADE 2025Sea Sure 2025

Related Articles

18ft Skiff SIXT Spring Championship Race 6
Spring Championship final race and Club Championship Race 3 on Sydney Harbour Balmain (Henry Larkings, Tom Grimes and Fynn Sprott) won Race 3 of the Club Championship on Sydney Harbour today, but it was Sixt, crewed by Jacob Marks, Alex Marinelli and Matt Doyle which won the 2025 SIXT Spring Championship, and Yandoo Trophy.
Posted today at 8:26 am
Marine Auctions: November Online Auctions
Bidding to Open on Friday 21st November at 5am AEST Bidding to Open on Friday 21st November at 5am AEST and will close on Thursday 27th November 2025 at 2pm AEST. Now accepting entries for the December Online Auction.
Posted today at 6:24 am
B14 NSW State Titles at Woollahra Sailing Club
Textbook Nude weather on the beautiful Sydney Harbour The sun was shining on the first day of the B14 NSW State Titles at Woollahra Sailing Club on the 1st November 2025.
Posted today at 5:59 am
Predictwind A-Cat Worlds - Day 6 - Three-Peat
Poland's Jakub Surowiec has won his third successive Open division World Champion title Poland's Jakub Surowiec has won his third successive Open division World Champion title at the 2025 Predictwind A-Class Catamaran Championship sailed off Milford Beach, Auckland on Sunday.
Posted today at 4:51 am
Predictwind A-Cat Worlds - Day 6 - Preview
The forecast is for a light NE seabreeze to build - with the offer of champagne sailing conditions The Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championships will conclude today, Sunday, off Milford Beach. The forecast is for a light NE seabreeze to build
Posted on 15 Nov
PredictWind A-Class Cat Worlds 2025 Day 5
Saturday dawned with the PredictWind forecast promising something exciting happening weatherwise Saturday dawned with the PredictWind forecast promising something exciting happening weatherwise, on Day 5 of the Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championships, being sailed at Milford Beach, NZ.
Posted on 15 Nov
49er and 49erFX Nationals return to Lake Macquarie
Hosted by South Lake Macquarie Amateur Sailing Club The 49er and 49erFX Nationals have returned to Lake Macquarie for a dedicated Nationals event from 14-17 November 2025, hosted by South Lake Macquarie Amateur Sailing Club, and sponsored by the Bay Hotel.
Posted on 15 Nov
IRC at Heart of International Team Racing Revival
Strengthening its position as the unifying measurement system for top-level offshore competition The IRC Rating Rule continues to strengthen its position as the unifying measurement system for top-level offshore competition, as two of the sport's most prestigious team events confirm they will share the same IRC framework.
Posted on 15 Nov
Predictwind A-Cat Worlds - Day 5 - Poland wins
Poland won its first medal of the world championship, and leads the Open fleet by a 4pt margin. Poland's Jacek Noetzel claimed the first title, on the penultimate day of the 2025 Predictwind A-Class Catamaran World Championships being sailed at Milford on Auckland's North Shore.
Posted on 15 Nov
44Cup Marina Jandía - Another 44Cup first
The 2025 season of RC44 racing concludes next week This year the high performance owner-driver one design class has made its debut in Scheveningen in the Netherlands and rounds off the year with another first - Marina Jandía near the southern tip of Fuerteventura in the Canary Islands.
Posted on 15 Nov