Please select your home edition
Edition
Flagstaff 2021AUG - Excess 11 - LEADERBOARD

Barcelona World Race leaders split paths

by Barcelona World Race on 28 Jan 2015
26/01/2015, Barcelona World Race 2014-15, Onboard Spirit of Hungary with nandor Fa and Conrad Colman Barcelona World Race http://www.barcelonaworldrace.org
As the Barcelona World Race leaders race to the Crozet Islands, once again their paths have diverged – Neutrogena around 200 miles to the south-west of first-placed Cheminées Poujoulat on the water, and gaining around 40 miles in the past 24 hours.

For Cheminées Poujoulat the approach looks straightforward – this morning’s 12-15 knot westerlies shifting south and carrying Bernard Stamm and Jean Le Cam towards the Crozet Isles, to the south of a high pressure system. They are likely to arrive at the archipelago on the morning of Thursday January 29.

Meanwhile Neutrogena have a more manoeuvre-heavy but potentially faster approach. Sailing much of today in 5-10 knots more pressure than their nearest rivals, they are this afternoon skirting the Antarctic Exclusion Zone of 44°S, and look set to gybe by this evening. The wind is forecast to lighten in this area just to the north of the AEZ – the challenge for Guillermo Altadill and Jose Munoz will be staying with the pressure through a series of gybes to make the point. They too are expected to arrive at Crozet on Thursday, and it will be intriguing to see if they have reduced the time deficit from the 12 hours difference bet ween their passing of Cape Aghulas two days ago. Neutrogena have gained 36 miles on Cheminées Poujoulat in the past 24 hours, reducing the margin to 126 miles on the leaderboard.

Aghulas confusion

GAES Centros Auditivos this morning became the third boat to enter the Indian Ocean, crossing the 20°E longitudinal line at 01h40 UTC, after 26 days, 14 hours and 40 minutes of racing. Anna Corbella and Gerard Marin have also regained around 60 miles on the leaders Cheminées Poujoulat.

Gerard Marin reported that they had experienced a fairly rough crossing between the two oceans. A continental shelf approximately 150 miles south of the southernmost point of Africa, Cape Aghulas can famously create steep waves and confused sea states, exacerbated by the unstable winds in the region.

'We recently passed the Cape of Good Hope and the sea has stopped being so difficult. Now we are facing m ore stable waves from astern and we are almost moving at the same speed as them, using the mainsail with a reef and are much happier. In these past few hours we crossed from one ocean into another where the sea was quite confused. It was chaotic and that affected our course because the waves were very violent.'

Fourth-placed Renault Captur, and We are Water in fifth, both continue to post 15-16 knot average boat speeds, now both in the Roaring Forties. For the Garcia brothers this will be their first sojourn into the 'Deep South'. Willy, a jeweller by profession, has completed many Mini Transat and Figaro races but never an IMOCA ocean event, while elder brother Bruno’s previous Barcelona World Race entry ended prematurely at the Cape Verde Islands in 2011.

One Planet One Ocean is also on the cusp of the South, and made the greatest mileage gains today, covering 371 miles in 24 hours on the 15-year-old IMOCA 60 (previously Kingfishe r).

New heights

Spirit of Hungary skipper Nandor Fa, aged 61, undertook a three and a half hour rig climb yesterday, after discovering that main halyard had chafed into the rig tube, splitting the top of the mast and jamming the sail tight.

Co-skipper Conrad Colman explains: 'We could not even raise or lower the mainsail and the conditions for the next few days, it would have been like not being able to lift off the throttle when you approach a bend.'

The Hungarian owner-driver climbed to the very top of the 29m-high mast, cutting free the halyard for Conrad to repair, while he fixed the halyard lead using an outer block.

Conrad reported: 'I saw that the main was slack, so we rehoisted it and pulled the lock line to secure it in place. The sail slipped again which stressed us out as we've had problems with this mechanism before. So, out with the binoculars to see what the problem was (yes, the mast real ly is that high!) and we saw that the halyard was off to the side and had cut into the mast!

'Our carbon fibre mast is incredibly strong but our high tech rope halyard proved tougher. Under tension it jumped off the pulley at the top of the mast and sawed 30 cm down into the mast until it jammed completely.

'I hoisted Nandor up the mast and he cut out the halyard after several attempts to dislodge it (I think I learned some new Hungarian words today!) and sent the shredded end down to me to repair. We now have an external main halyard with a pulley lashed in place at the mast head in the place of the damaged original.'

Provisional rankings at 1400hrs UTC Tueday 27th January 2015

Cheminées Poujoulat (B. Stamm – J. Le Cam) at 16,915.9 miles to the finish
Neutrogena (G. Altadill – J. Muñoz) + 126.0 miles to leader
GAES Centros Auditivos (A. Corbella – G. Marín) + 542.1 miles to leader
Renault Captur (J. Riechers – S. Audigane) + 1050.1 miles to leader
We Are Water (B. Garcia – W. Garcia) + 1739.7 miles to leader
One Planet, One Ocean & Pharmaton (A. Gelabert – D. Costa) + 2193.1 miles to leader
Spirit of Hungary (N. Fa – C. Colman) + 2835.6 miles to leader
ABD Hugo Boss (A. Thomson – P. Ribes)

Skipper’s quotes:

Gerard Marín, GAES Centros Auditivos:

'We recently passed the Cape of Good Hope and the sea has stopped being so difficult. Now we are facing more stable waves from astern and we are almost moving at the same speed as them, using the mainsail with a reef and are much happier. In these past few hours we crossed from one ocean into another where the sea was quite confused. It was chaotic and that affected our course because the waves were very violent.

'Maybe we haven't noticed the difference of sailing with an exclusion zone instead of the ice gates because we are not sailing quite in the lowest zones. It being an Exclusion Zone and us not being allowed to going closer to that zone is a bit of a limitation, but we’ll see how we can deal with that pressure later on.

'[The forecast ahead] doesn’t look quite so good for us because in three or four days it looks like a kind of anticyclone will reach us — and when we pass that one, there is another one. Nowadays we have a lot of work to do, even more with Renault Capture behind us and being so threatening.'

Nandor Fa, Spirit of Hungary

'Today unfortunately we had a problem at the top of the mast. We took off the mainsail to make some repairs, and then when we hoisted again we couldn’t pull it up all the way to the top.

'We heard a big crack, and another one, and we checked we could see the outer block on the mast, at the head of the mainsail was broken, and the halyard was cutting the mast tube about 30cms. So I had to go up and cut off the halyard, and we had to rethread it with an outer block. And now we have the outer halyard, so the sail is up again and we are sailing but it’s not perfect. The full mainsail is 30cm lower than it was before, we cannot hoist to the top. But we fixed it and we kept going.

'Today we are in running conditions, about 12-15 knots of wind from NNW, we are running down under A2 gennaker and full mainsail. For a small period of about three hours during the repairs we dropped down the gennaker, and after the repairs we hoisted again, and we are at full speed again.

'It’s really light conditions at the moment but tomorrow we will be in more wind, bigger waves, and in the next days we are running into stronger conditions, maybe 10 knots higher speed.'

Conrad Colman, Spirit of Hungary (blog):

'The consequence of this repair is that we can't really use the full surface of the mainsail anymore so in lighter winds we will be compromised for the rest of the race. This is incredibly frustrating because we have been getting better and better these past few weeks at sea and were really looking forward to sailing to our full potential from here on out.

'However, we can be proud of ourselves in that we worked well together to find a rapid fix and there's no need to head to shore f or a solution or even consider abandoning the race.?

'We are still here and fighting... Follow along for the next chapter. I'm looking forward to the good bits. I just hope they come in the next few pages!'
2024 fill-in (bottom)North Sails Performance 2023 - FOOTERRS Sailing 2021 - FOOTER

Related Articles

2024 52 Super Series PalmaVela Sailing Week Day 1
Lack of wind leaves fleet on hold in Palma New boats, new faces and an accumulation of pent-up energy and excitement will have to stay on hold as the winds refused to blow today on the Bay of Palma for what should have been the first day of racing for the 2024 52 Super Series season
Posted today at 7:37 pm
Clarisse Crémer sets sail in the Transat CIC
L'Occitane en Provence got off to a great start The 2024 edition of the Transat CIC is under way! After weeks of intense preparations, the starting gun for this legendary transatlantic race was fired this Sunday, off the coast of Lorient.
Posted today at 2:09 pm
Cup Spy Apr 27: Breeze a 'no -show' for Kiwis
Emirates Team New Zealand were the only team to sail on Saturday. The Kiwis struck a nothing breeze Emirates Team New Zealand were the only team to sail on Saturday. The Kiwis struck a nothing day, which at best had a fickle breeze
Posted today at 1:08 pm
The Transat CIC off to a spectacular start
33 yachts are competing in the IMOCA class, 13 in the Class40 class and 2 in the vintage class Brittany turned on its best Spring sailing weather - sunshine, puffy cumulus clouds and a decent 10-15kts of Westerly wind - to send the 48 strong Transat CIC fleet on its way from Lorient towards New York for the start of the legendary solo race.
Posted today at 12:58 pm
Matador takes third Pallas Capital Gold Cup Act
The Australian TP52 fleet returned to action at Sail Port Stephens The Australian TP52 fleet returned to action at Sail Port Stephens for Act 3 of the Pallas Capital Gold Cup. Eleven boats took to the waters surrounding Nelson Bay and completed the series of six races.
Posted today at 10:21 am
37th America's Cup Store: Exclusive 20% discount
Enjoy an exclusive shopping experience at the 37th America's Cup store with our special promotion Enjoy an exclusive shopping experience at the 37th America's Cup store with our special promotion! For a limited time, we're offering a storewide 20% discount on our merchandise including Emirates team TNZ, INEOS Britannia, Alinghi RBR, & American Magic
Posted today at 10:18 am
Alinghi Red Bull Racing welcomes Swiss ski star
Marco Odermatt headed out on the water as BoatOne's first-ever guest Switzerland's skiing sensation, World Champion and Olympic gold medallist Marco Odermatt, swapped his skis for an America's Cup-style work-out this week with Alinghi Red Bull Racing in Barcelona.
Posted today at 10:08 am
worldmarine.media news PILOT SHOW
Featuring Mozzy Sails, Weir Wood Sailing Club, Crewsaver and UpWind by MerConcept Happy to launch the worldmarine.media news pilot show! Many thanks to contributors MozzySails, Weir Wood Sailing Club, Crewsaver and UpWind by MerConcept, sponsored by 11th Hour Racing.
Posted today at 7:00 am
59th Congressional Cup at Long Beach Day 4
Williams and Poole lead their semi-finals 2-0 Day 4 of the 59th Congressional Cup in Long Beach, CA concluded the quarter-final stage of the event, advancing the top four teams to the semi-finals led by defending Congressional Cup champion USA's Chris Poole.
Posted today at 4:45 am
Dawn Treader win Peters & May Round Antigua Race
Blessed with gorgeous conditions in stand-alone race prior to Antigua Sailing Week The Peters & May Round Antigua Race was blessed with gorgeous conditions. The stand-alone race prior to Antigua Sailing Week was held in a warm gradient wind of 10-14 knots, just south of east, with a smooth sea state.
Posted today at 3:30 am