Please select your home edition
Edition
Maritimo M50

Rolex Middle Sea Race – Day 2 – The calm before the storm

by RMYC on 22 Oct 2017
Dieter Schön’s Maxi72 Momo at the start of the Rolex Middle Sea Race Rolex/ Kurt Arrigo http://www.regattanews.com
George David's American Maxi, Rambler 88, has made the best of the light breeze dominating the first 24 hours of the 38th Rolex Middle Sea Race to build a commanding lead over her rivals.

Pressing on through the sticky conditions, Rambler had reached Stromboli this afternoon with the majority of the fleet still to pass through the Messina Strait. While the going has been slow so far, gale force winds are still forecast to arrive from the northwest during the small hours of Monday morning. This threatened increase will play a large part in determining the race outcome.

By the end of the first night at sea, the 2017 Rolex Middle Sea Race fleet had passed Capo Passero, on the south eastern corner of Sicily. As expected, the moderate easterly wind enjoyed at the start faded yesterday evening and yachts struggled to maintain their early brisk pace. Headway during hours of darkness proved difficult, testing patience at skill.



At Capo Passero, the overall leader under IRC was Dieter Schön's German Maxi72 Momo. Vadim Yakimenko's Russian TP52 Freccia Rossa was leading IRC Two, Eric Daher's French Ker 46 Tonnerre de Glen was leading IRC Three, Jamie Sammut's Maltese Solaris 42 Unica was leading IRC Five, and Igor Rytov's Russian JPK 1080 Bogatyr was leading IRC 6. The standings will undoubtedly change as the yachts continue to play snakes and ladders before exiting the narrow confine of the Messina Strait.

At 1200, on the second day, many yachts were enjoying a blade of fresh northerly breeze on their approach to the southern end of the infamous strait. Jamie Sammut, skipper of the 42-foot Unica, had time to contact the Royal Malta Yacht Club: “Last night we went to the east, offshore, to look for more wind, which proved to be a good tactic. This morning we headed back towards the Sicilian coast. Now we have 20 knots and we are making excellent progress towards Messina, we expect to pass through the strait in a few hours. At the moment, we have a huge number of dolphins leaping out of the water around the boat, which is just spectacular!”

Around the same time, Connor Doyle's Irish DK46 Hydra – Performance Yacht Charter was hugging the Italian mainland coast making good speed to Messina. “We are short tacking and the mood on board is great.” commented boat captain Lucy Jones: “We expect to make Stromboli by midnight, hopefully before the strong breeze arrives, so we can get set for the leg to Favignana, which should be a bumpy ride.”



The majority of the fleet in the Rolex Middle Sea Race is expected to pass through the strait by the end of today. Overnight, strong to gale-force winds will build from the northwest. For those on the passage from Stromboli to Favignana, the wind will be on the nose and leave crews facing a tough beat across the top of Sicily. Once around the next corner, the course will open onto a potentially wild sleigh-ride. 40 knots of wind and a significant sea state are expected to push the yachts south to Lampedusa and the eventual turn back towards Malta.

104 yachts started the Rolex Middle Sea Race. So far, six boats have officially retired: Proteus (USA), Hispaniola (LTU), Jings! (GBR) Vamos Adelante (ITA), Wind (RUS), Xpresso (MLT). All crew are safe and well.

Pantaenius Sail 2025 AUS FooterZhik 2025 Black Friday SaleSwitch One Design

Related Articles

37th Phuket King's Cup under way
Big boats practice: dinghies racing Dinghy racing started today in the 37th Phuket King's Cup, set against the beautiful backdrop of the Andaman Sea, with 80 young sailors competing for eight titles.
Posted today at 2:15 pm
First Look: Seldén CXr at Metstrade 2025
Patented ratchet design and innovative 'nail' terminal Code sails have revolutionised sail handling on yachts, and Seldén's second generation of furlers, called CXr, have a patented ratchet design, as well as an innovative 'nail' terminal to connect to the torsion cables.
Posted today at 12:00 pm
America's Cup: Luna Rossa's AC75 returns
November began with the return of the AC75 Luna Rossa to Cagliari. The talent development continues. November began with the return of the AC75 Luna Rossa to Cagliari, welcomed at the base by the shore team and the design team. The Italian team has resumed its sailing talent search, ahead of the defence of its America's Womens and Youth titles.
Posted today at 11:13 am
Marine Auctions: December Online Auctions
Bidding to Open on Friday 12th December at 5am AEST Bidding to Open on Friday 12th December at 5am AEST and will close Thursday 18th December 2025 at 2pm AEST. Now accepting entries for the January 2026 Online Auction.
Posted today at 6:36 am
Video: All-female crew start their record attempt
The Famous Project CIC aim for the Jules Verne Trophy The all-female crew on The Famous Project CIC have set off on an attempt to capture the Jules Verne Trophy and break the round the world record.
Posted on 1 Dec
IRC contenders ready for RORC Transatlantic Race
19 boats are entered for the 3,000 mile race from Marina Lanzarote to Antigua, West Indies With less than 50 days to go before the start of the 2026 RORC Transatlantic Race, 19 boats are entered for the 3,000 mile race from Marina Lanzarote to Antigua, West Indies, with more boats expected to join them.
Posted on 1 Dec
The right way at the 2025 Beneteau Cup
30 years ago a trend was created 30 years ago a trend was created. One that would then make its way around the globe, as Beneteau saw not only the merit of the Beneteau Cup, but just how much joy it brought to sailors, visitors, sponsors, and attendees in general.
Posted on 1 Dec
Heartbreak for the Flying Roos in £2M Grand Final
As Great Britain claims victory A flawless start from Australia in the final wasn't enough to stop the Brits who capitalised on a crucial wind patch to clinch the 2025 championship...
Posted on 30 Nov
Keep it in the family. Keep it Tasmanian.
Seeing as we have been somewhat zeroed in on Tassie over the last little while, let's keep going Now the Australian with the fastest time for a solo, non-stop, and unassisted circumnavigation of this here planet is Ken Gourlay, OAM.
Posted on 30 Nov
Sail Melbourne delivers world-class racing
A classic Port Phillip challenge for Australia's best Sail Melbourne once again demonstrated why Port Phillip is known for world-class racing, serving up a full mix of conditions across four demanding days.
Posted on 30 Nov