Press conference movistar Racing Team transcript
by Volvo Media on 24 May 2006

Skipper of movistar Bouwe Bekking at the movistar press conference in Portsmouth on 23rd May 2006. Volvo Ocean Race 2005-2006 © Paul Todd Volvo Ocean Race
http://www.volvooceanrace.com
Pedro Campos – Syndicate Head - Good afternoon. The reason we are here today is down to the seamanship and help that we have received and I would like thank Team ABN AMRO and particularly the crew of ABN AMRO TWO.
I would also like to thank our crew because they were pushing to the very limit and doing their best. Their commitment to the project has been more than 100% and it had been proved through different moments through the race but especially in the last hours.
And also I would like to thank the organisation of the Volvo Ocean Race because throughout the night they have been in touch with us and trying to do their best to achieve what we wanted overall which it to get all the crew safe. I was in Madrid in communication with the directors of ABN AMRO and following situation minute by minute.
Bouwe Bekking on the position of movistar:
Right now we actually don’t have a position on the boat. The last position was more than a day ago and we had a beacon but that disappeared at ten o’clock on Sunday night so that’s very bad news. The weather conditions improved today so much that we are able to send out a plane so we can get a visual sight on the area where the last position was known.
There’s an aeroplane right now on the way. The skies are relatively clear and the seas have slowed down a little bit and there is now six to seven metres of swell over there. So the boat will be pretty hard to spot but this is the first thing we are doing. A search and rescue vessel is on standby so as soon as the boat is spotted, that boat will take off and try to savage her.
I hope the boat is still upright. I really have my doubts about it because of the damage and the amount of water which was coming in at such a rate and that was in quite fair conditions. Yet when the whole thing started it was 25 knots, and when ABN AMRO TWO picked us up it was 10 - 15 knots.
But the seas were getting higher and higher and especially with the forecast and we know there have been 10 metre waves and fifty knots plus wind. So I have serious doubts the boat will be still be afloat. If not I think the keel may have fallen off and the boat flipped upside down.
How the next couple of days will go we will have to wait to see. If they see the boat today, we will make a couple of decisions over the next few days as we have 25 people over here working for our team. There are families over here and of course we have obligations to our sponsors.
Bouwe Bekking on the decision to abandon movistar:
First I would like to really thank the movistar organisation in supporting the decision I have taken.
It a huge disappointment especially for myself as I wanted to win this race and I think it was the same for all the guys behind me. It’s just been fantastic during the entire campaign with movistar’s support and as well as a special thanks to the ABN TWO guys. They were in a very tough situation and they did a fantastic job to get us safely here.
I don’t think we will race this boat again even if we get her back. So some of us will come to Rotterdam, because there are some containers over there and of course we will show up at the final prize giving in Gothenburg to show our respect for all the other competitors in this race. And hopefully we will be back, all of us are sailors.
Bouwe Bekking on the difference in safety gear from when Drum capsized in 1985:
I think the difference first of all is we are 21 years further on and the sport has become so much more professional and all the procedures which are in place make this sport as safe as possible. In 1985 I did the Fastnet Race on Phillips Innovator and so I know exactly what the differences are and there were no safety precautions. We had a life raft but that was about it. We didn’t have any training we didn’t know what was going on.
We basically didn’t have a clue and although Drum was maybe one of the most professional crews at that time, I think they were very lucky to survive. Of course I have had a lot of experience over the last 20 years. And we had some of our ordeals on this race as well. Our crew was very well drilled but of course I personally had to make the final call to abandon ship.
Bouwe Bekking on the emotions of leaving movistar:
It’s pretty tough. I had the hardest time last night when ABN came in because then I realised that these were the guys which brought us home.
I have been working on this project of three years. All the other guys have been working on it for two years as well and it’s really hard to make it successful. We’ve had a lot of down sides but we’ve always come back but the moment we stepped off movistar I realised that this was not something we could come back from. This was the end of the race. So it sinks in and I will think a lot more in the next couple of days, but it hit like a hammer.
Bouwe Bekking on the preparation of movistar:
As everybody knows we have sailed half way round the world before even the race started, but we never had any serious problems. Only blowing out a pad eye [a small deck fitting] or something like that. We were 100% confident in the boat and in the first leg we had some structural issues and we had to retire from leg one.
Then on the second leg we had some ram issues then everyone knows we had quite a nice leg into Wellington where we actually had a win and in general we were going very fast and I think that the boat was very competitive but we didn’t score a lot of points basically because of all the retirements.
The current situation even with all the retirements and the problems we have had, we are currently still in third place. So we can look at ourselves and look the guys in the eyes and think that we have achieved quite a lot. Coming back to the damage, we knew as well that we had some issues just before Cape Horn where the boat nearly sank and that is one of the things that comes back in our minds when on Saturday we had the problems with the keel again. What do you do at that stage? What do we do when it gets really bad and the pumps can’t keep up anymore.
We had a long chat in Baltimore and everyone knew that the Atlantic can be very tough and we were 100% confident when we left New York for this leg. And at the moment it happened, everybody looked at each other and said ‘here we go again’.
There were no hard feelings in that sense it was just a matter of getting the boat home and when I came to that final moment, we had a lot of correspondence with race headquarters as well as with ABN TWO just in case the decision was made that we get off.
So all in all everything went very well. It was very relaxed and we have the entire procedure on video. You’ll see from there that everything went very smoothly and professionally, but once I decided to abandon ship I gave all the responsibilities in that sense to Sebastien (Josse) on ABN TWO because we were in their hands. And that communication has been really good.
First of all we were all feeling quite relieved and I can speak for myself saying that when I jumped into the life raft I knew that was really it and that was the moment we were really leaving the ship and I felt really happy I made that decision at that stage. So when I got on to ABN TWO, my first thing was to go over to Sebastien and all the guys individually and thank them as we understood as a group it was very hard for them to come back for us in the situation that they were in and we were very grateful to see our old mates back even though they are younger than us.
And it was a very welcome feeling. We could see in the first couple of hours when we got on they were very down and not very happy but during the next 18 hours I saw them cheering up as a crew and we were a little bit of a distraction for them. So I think it worked out very nicely for them. We could see how energetic
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