Race 2 Day 11: Derry~Londonderry~Doire sets time to beat in Ocean Sprint
18 October 2015
Four teams have completed the Ocean Sprint section of the course and are counting down the miles until the finish in Cape Town.
All teams pushed hard with good average speeds of around 12
knots but it was Derry~Londonderry~Doire which recorded the time to beat so far, completing the 300
nautical mile section in 29 hours, 22
minutes. GREAT Britain was next closest with 29 hours
56 minutes whilst Mission Performance
got 31 hours 23 minutes, and fleet leader Garmin
recorded 32 hours 08 minutes.
ClipperTelemed+, Unicef, Da Nang-Viet
Nam, IchorCoal, PSP Logistics and Visit
Seattle are currently in the midst of their Ocean Sprint battles, with time
results to be updated later today.
After a good run and decision to not head for the Scoring Gate, LMAX Exchange is just ahead of Garmin overall on elapsed time so stands in first on the leaderboard; and Qingdao - which decided to go for the Scoring Gate - is in sixth position.
With around 750 nautical miles to go to the finish for the front of the pack, teams are studying the weather files in anticipation of a high sliding round the bottom of Africa which could hinder progress at the end of the race.
Diane Reid, Skipper of
fifth-placed ClipperTelemed+, said:
“Most of our strategy right now is based on weather file information and
choosing the best route we can. We have chosen to "ride the next
front" without climbing too high too early on the latitude to Cape
Town.
“Part of our strategy with the weather includes the weather to come in the next
few days. Eventually this front will slip around South Africa and we will
be left with the remnants of the high pressure system to fight our way in to
Cape Town. We are trying to pick the path of least resistance and most
wind on our way in on our final approaches.”
For westerly yachts LMAX Exchange and Qingdao, the crews have been working hard to maximise boat speed in the low pressure system. But with gusts in the high 40s for Qingdao, Skipper Igor Gotlibovych said it was sometimes becoming a matter of enduring the racing rather than going for all-out boat speed.
LMAX Exchange Skipper Olivier Cardin described the conditions his team had been facing, including gusts of up to the mid to high 50’s: “For the last two days, we have been sailing very fast with about 35 knots of wind. The waves are now big, some should be about 10 metres and it's very impressive to surf them. The boat accelerates to 20 knots so fast. The ambiance on deck is wet as we are sometimes submerged entirely.
“The crew begin to be tired with these weather conditions. Today, we should see the wind dropping a bit. Making nearly 300 miles per day, we are happy, but from Tuesday, we will have lighter conditions with a high just passing over us for another time.” added Olivier.
Who will be fastest over the Ocean Sprint to win the final bonus point of Race 2: The Stormhoek Race to the Cape of Storms? Keep following progress here on the Race Viewer.
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