Please select your home edition
Edition
C-Tech 2020 Battens 2 728x90 TOP

Rolex Middle Sea Race - Front runners retire in challenging conditions

by Sail-World.com/KPMS on 19 Oct 2009
BEAU GESTE keeps the pace - Rolex Middle Sea Race Rolex/ Kurt Arrigo http://www.regattanews.com

In the Rolex Middle Sea Race after only thirty hours of sailing, it is evident the pressure is on ICAP Leopard (GBR). Can ICAP Leopard achieve the race record and take the line honours win in this 30th edition?

According to the Sunday evening 19.00 position report, Mike Slade and crew are two hours behind the Course Record, currently held by George David's Rambler (USA). In 2207 Rambler was the first yacht over the finish line, in a time of 47 hours 55 minutes and 3 seconds. To better this record, the first yacht needs to be finish by approximately 11.00 local time on Monday, 19 October.

As of Sunday evening the potent supermaxi had turned the northwest corner of Sicily and for now it remains a big boat race for overall honours with, so far, the mini-maxis dominating the top five handicap positions at Capo Passero, Messina and Stromboli. Yet this part of the game is also far from over.

Bella Mente (USA) and Rosebud/Team DYT (USA) have been the two biggest named casualties to join the increasing list of retirees today. With all monohulls bar one left to pass through the speed trap at Strait of Messina, the challenging conditions encountered so far have proved equally testing for front runners, mid-fleet and back markers.

It took the 69 competing yachts between five and eleven hours to cross the sea between Malta and Sicily on Saturday; certainly one of the faster fleet passages on record. ICAP Leopard was first to Capo Passero, only four minutes ahead of Karl Kwok's Beau Geste (HKG) and, significantly, fifteen-minutes inside Rambler's 2007 time. Last boat to pass, some six hours later was Zizanie (ITA), the veteran Sparkman & Stephens design that last did the race in 1974, winning the cruising division in the process. She was narrowly beaten to the rocky cape by Manana (MLT), surely the most heartening story in the race. Just three days ago, skipper, Kevin Dingli was cutting the remains of his mast free from his yacht Fekruna after a disastrous encounter with a waterspout during the coastal race. Step in the following morning his close friend, Peter Ellul Vincente, owner of Mananawith an offer of his boat. Some quick work to bring her up to standard and Dingli is back in the long distance race. His worst nightmares reverting to a dream come true. Dingli would like to do well, but right now is relieved just to be taking part. Manana exited the Strait just before sunset on Sunday night.

Saturday night, Sunday morning saw fun and games for all the crews, though a few will be ruing their luck as the pressure on equipment that typifies an offshore race started to take its toll. Wizsoft (ISR) was the first to pull into port with equipment failure, followed by Apepazza H30 (ITA). With reports from boats such as Elusive II Medbank (MLT) and Otra Vez Fexco (MLT) making reference to squalls coming from nowhere in the darkness retirements were to be expected. Maya Podesta on Elusive reported, 'these things always seem to happen at night! Knock down after knock down with squall after squall. The lower spreader even managed to get a taste of salt in a 40-knot gust. Everyone aboard is a little wet, but fine.' The good news was that the crew were managing to tuck into some smoked salmon sandwiches. Not quite up to Nikata's (GBR) haute cuisine standards of 'slow roasted Moroccan lamb tagine and Sicilian cheese pasta' but surely welcome.

No news of the menu from Otra Vez, but clearly some bruising reminders of the 2007 race for Edward Gatt Floridia's crew, as they wondered what else the gods of sea and wind had in store, advising, 'wild conditions last night. Sailing with a second reef and small jib. Sea state up and we've no numbers after losing the wand [which records wind speeds at the top of the mast] in a squall.' By all accounts the fast downwind ride up the western shore of Sicily was carrying a sting in the tail for the unprepared and unlucky.

Leopard's report of the night's proceedings was understandably upbeat, even though Slade was finding it hard to shake off Beau Geste, which tailed her bigger opponent up through the Strait like a policeman might a criminal. Leopard was playing the game smart and fair, her team of experienced ocean racers getting her through the tricky channel between mainland Italy and Sicily a good twenty minutes ahead of Rambler's 2007 pace, at ten to midnight in the rain and fifty minutes ahead of Beau Geste.

The daylight hours of Sunday have been easier towards the back of the fleet, but drama was unfolding from early morning at the front. First Hap Fauth's Bella Mente pulled out with equipment failure; an unfortunate and premature end to Fauth's previously successful Mediterranean season. Then, a couple of hours later, news arrived that Roger Sturgeon's, 2007 Rolex Sydney Hobart winner, Rosebud/Team DYT had broken her mast and was heading to Milazzo, all crew unharmed. These two were joined a little while later by Jonathan Gambin's Ton Ton Surfside (MLT). Gambin has good cause to be seriously disappointed, but was by all accounts lucky not to lose his mast as well. 'We were having a really good race. We were at the front of our class even though we are not at our best point of sail going downwind,' said Gambin, continuing, 'we had seen winds between 25 and 30 knots, and were fast with good boat speed. We needed to free a halyard during a sail change and sent a man up the mast. He spotted a big crack in the starboard spreader. Fortunately, we were on port tack. We might have lost the mast if the spreader had gone.' Gambin chose not to chance his luck any further, dropped his sails and has motored to Syracuse.

With 53 yachts round Stromboli by Sunday evening, the overall handicap leader is Andres Soriano's Alegre (GBR), line honours winner at the 2008 Rolex Middle Sea Race. At Stromboli she led Luna Rossa (ITA) and Rán 2 (GBR) by a matter of a few seconds and minutes respectively. Just as on Saturday night, though, this is far too early to be popping the champagne cork even though the smaller yachts rounding the volcanic island later in the day have struck windless patches, as Hilary Cook on Nisida (GBR) reports, 'After a varied race so far with a mix of near calm and 38 knot squalls, Stromboli has proved as atmospheric as ever. Approaching in the company of several boats we were suddenly doing 10 knots in driving rain and zero visibility. The rain then cleared for us to see other boats were headed or had their mainsails down. Then the wind died for us too as we went into the lee of the island. Of most note however is that this is the first time in 6 years - even two years ago - that we haven't been becalmed off Stromboli.'

For ICAP Leopard, passing by Favignana this evening, her line honours position is commanding going into the second half the course. For the course record she needs to put on the afterburners down the western side of the racetrack. With the wind forecast to remain from the northwest for the next 18 hours and in excess of 20 knots, a beacon of hope remains. As we sign off, Leopard's average boat speed is climbing steadily and now exceeds 20-knots. If Slade and crew can keep up that sort of momentum as relentlessly as Ken Read and George David did in 2007, Leopard's card hand will be looking better and better by the hour. Leopard's hardened racers will surely be hoping they have been dealt something special.



Selden CXrCyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERPantaenius Sail 2025 ROW Footer

Related Articles

Eye on the Prize with Cyclops
The contenders optimised for the IRC European Championships This weekend, Poole Regatta plays host to a spectacular edition of the IRC European Championship, as over 50 entries prepare to descend on the South Coast. For the teams gathered, the challenge is as much about versatility as it is about raw speed.
Posted on 20 May
57th La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec day 3
The Cape Finisterre Headache After squalls and low-pressure systems, the fleet is now facing a high-pressure system that is severely slowing the skippers' progress toward Cape Finisterre and the port of Vigo, the finish of this first leg.
Posted on 20 May
RORC Myth of Malham Race preview
All boats will be equipped with satellite tracking this weekend The RORC Myth of Malham Race returns with a potent fleet for one of the Royal Ocean Racing Club's most respected offshore tests.
Posted on 20 May
505 Euro Cup at Fraglia Vela Riva overall
Paul Brotherton and James Fawcett take the victory Day three at the 505 Euro Cup on Lake Garda and again overcast skies and the threat of rain in the forecast did not make for high expectations for the 43 boats from 10 countries. However, as he had all event, the PRO knows the weather.
Posted on 20 May
Doyle Sails: Structured Luff is just two years old
Two years ago Bella Mente won the Maxi Europeans with a Structured Luff Asymmetric. The first Structured Luff asymmetric was developed from a prototype on a 35ft Rob Shaw-designed canting keeler, and then engineered to suit the Maxi 72 Bella Mente. She went on to win the IMA Maxi Europeans in May of 2024, with a race to spare.
Posted on 20 May
Youth development scheme snaps up Clipper 70
Built for the world's toughest oceans and ready for next chapter After completing five circumnavigations and turning thousands of ordinary people into ocean racers, a Clipper 70 (one of the Clipper Race's ocean racing yachts) is beginning a new chapter.
Posted on 20 May
WingFoil Racing World Cup Türkiye day 1
Favourites looking to reassert their dominance in Urla Following a dramatic, light-wind European Championship in Naples that shook up the established order, the international wingfoil racing circuit comes together in Urla, Turkey, this week for the WingFoil Racing World Cup Türkiye.
Posted on 20 May
Tudor Team Alinghi unveils its 'Starting Four'
For the Louis Vuitton 38th America's Cup Preliminary Regatta Following an intensive dual-boat training block in Barcelona, Tudor Team Alinghi has arrived in Cagliari, Sardinia, where it confirms its line-up for the upcoming Louis Vuitton 38th America's Cup Preliminary Regatta.
Posted on 20 May
Patrick Corrigan, AM
A 'Blue Ribbon' 18ft skiff sponsorship partner Mr. Patrick Corrigan, AM is an Australian businessman, focused mainly in the freight industry, an art collector, jazz enthusiast and philanthropist, who was awarded the Member of the Order of Australia medal in the 2000 Queen's Birthday Honours List.
Posted on 20 May
2026 iQFOiL Open Europeans in Portimão Day 2
Tactical racing and changing conditions After an opening day sailed in steady northwesterly conditions, the 2026 iQFOiL Open European Championships continued on Tuesday in Portimão, with the fleet returning to the waters off Praia da Rocha for the second day of competition.
Posted on 20 May