Please select your home edition
Edition
Rooster 2025

Volvo Ocean Race - Sanderson and Team Sanya fight on

by Volvo Ocean Race on 8 Nov 2011
Team Sanya, skippered by Mike Sanderson from New Zealand at the start of leg 1 of the Volvo Ocean race 2011-12 from Alicante, Spain to Cape Town, South Africa Paul Todd/Volvo Ocean Race http://www.volvooceanrace.com
Volvo Ocean Race competitor Mike Sanderson holds two wins in three editions under his belt and as such, is keener on flying than floundering. This is particularly why it is so difficult for the New Zealander to come to terms with the calamity that struck his Team Sanya crew only hours into the start of Leg 1.

The race’s most recently formed team were forced to suspend racing around six hours into the 6,500 nautical mile sprint from Alicante, Spain, to Cape Town, South Africa, after discovering severe structural damage to the bow of their Volvo Open 70.

With the bow section flooding, Sanya had no option but to head for the nearest port – Motril, around 250 miles along the coast from Alicante. The damage to the boat was worse than they feared – and the team are now looking ahead to Cape Town.

'It’s quite a sad moment for me personally,' said Sanderson, 40, speaking to volvooceanrace.com from his hotel in Alicante where the team had converged for a crisis meeting. 'It’s our first leg and we haven´t got there. There are lots of emotions there, it’s very sad.'


Ever the fighter, Sanderson said his team was now '100 per cent focused' on getting their boat to Cape Town by any means possible in time to make the start of the second leg to Abu Dhabi.

'As it stands right now we are 100 per cent focused on getting to Cape Town,' said Sanderson, who won as skipper in 2005-06 on ABN AMRO ONE and as a young crewman in 1993-94 on New Zealand Endeavour.

'The worst case scenario is that we ship the boat to Cape Town and we aren’t able to fix it in time.'

'The experts we have spoken to have told us [the repair] is probably between a two to three week job. This is the Volvo Ocean Race and you’ve got to do what you’ve got to do. At this stage, all we’re doing is going 100 per cent to make sure we can get to start in Cape Town.'

It was still unclear exactly what had caused the damage, which occurred when the boat was thirty nautical miles southeast of Motril. However Sanderson said he suspected the boat had hit something in the water as nightfall set on the fleet.

'I have to believe looking at the way the damage is that we’ve hit something and that’s put a puncture wound in and that’s started peeling the boat away,' he added. 'It wasn’t until we hit the dock and got off that we knew we had a deal-breaker on our hands and that it would be very unlikely we would be continuing in this leg.'

'The last thing we want to be is quitters or reckless or unprofessional. We’re never going to be any of those things.'

'We have a great bunch of guys who 100 per cent believe in what we are doing here and they totally understand what the objectives are of this team. For ourselves we have to give it 150 per cent. We want to get back into this as soon as possible and be mixing it up as we have been doing already.'

Volvo Ocean Race website

X-Yachts X4.0Excess CatamaransRolly Tasker Sails 2023 FOOTER

Related Articles

Oliver Heer confirms 2028 Vendée Globe ambition
The Swiss skipper aims to return for the 2028 edition of the legendary solo race with a newer boat After completing the Vendée Globe 2024 on his first attempt, Oliver Heer, the Swiss-German skipper of Tut gut Sailing, has confirmed his intention to return for the 2028 edition of the legendary solo race.
Posted today at 8:18 am
SailingFast to provide unrivalled event support
During the WASZP Games at the Weymouth & Portland National Sailing Academy SailingFast UK is set to land in Weymouth on the 8th of July and will be on-site until the 26th of July to provide the GOLD STANDARD in event support.
Posted today at 7:00 am
2025 29er Europeans at Lake Garda Opening Ceremony
More than 500 sailors paraded through the Riva del Garda's beautiful streets The 2025 29er European Championship officially opened today in stunning Riva del Garda, hosted by Fraglia Vela Riva. More than 500 sailors paraded through the city's beautiful streets in a colorful, high-energy opening ceremony.
Posted on 2 Jul
The power of tech
What is the cost of safety? How do you measure it? More importantly, how do you appreciate it? What is the cost of safety? How do you measure it? More importantly, how do you appreciate it?
Posted on 2 Jul
Stay, play and save at the 2025 Sydney Boat Show
The ultimate indoor boating experience will take over Sydney Showground, Sydney Olympic Park The ultimate indoor boating experience, Sydney Boat Show, will take over Sydney Showground, Sydney Olympic Park from 14 to 17 August for the first time.
Posted on 2 Jul
Jazz Turner Faces Everything and Rises
Non-stop, solo, unassisted British Isles navigation has captivated sailors & non-sailors alike Jazz Turner's Project FEAR, her non-stop, solo, unassisted navigation of the British Isles in her Albin Vega 27ft yacht has captivated sailors and non-sailors alike.
Posted on 2 Jul
GKSS Match Cup Sweden & Nordea Women's Trophy D3
Surprise exits in Marstrand as Quarter-Finalists decided The qualifying round-robin stages at GKSS Match Cup Sweden in Marstrand finished today with the surprise departure of defending champion USA's Chris Poole/ Riptide Racing and Switzerland's Eric Monnin/ Capvis Swiss Match Racing Team from the Open Class.
Posted on 2 Jul
Rolex TP52 Worlds in Cascais Day 1
Sled sparkle in Cascais' Atlantic surf to lead After seemingly being starved of boisterous top end conditions for some years now Okura's Sled crew have been relishing a return to big breezes and big waves.
Posted on 2 Jul
Freestyle Pro Tour Paros overall
The Meltemi winds once again set the stage for the final day As the riders gathered at the event site of the 2025 FPT Paros for one last time and the Meltemi winds once again began blowing strong, the stage for the final day of the event was set.
Posted on 2 Jul
Rolex Fastnet Race: Offshore classics set to race
IRC Zero has a rich seam of ocean-going history running through it IRC Zero has a rich seam of ocean-going history running through it. While French round the world race legend Jean-Luc Van Den Heede (aka VDH) isn't competing in the Rolex Fastnet Race, two of his former steeds will be on the IRC Zero start line.
Posted on 2 Jul