Vestas 11th Hour Racing becomes a leader again. After the disastrous shipwreck of the last edition, the crew led by the U.S. skipper Charlie Enright has been the first to cross the finish line in Lisbon, 1870 nautical miles and a week after the start of the first leg of the prestigious round-the-world race in Alicante. Vestas was closely followed by the Spanish MAPFRE team in second place and the French-Chinese Dongfeng Race Team in third.
It’s a tremendous victory for the Vestas 11th Hour Racing – which US and Danish flags – that, just a few days ago, also had to overcome a few systems failures onboard during the leg. The team, in fact, discovered that a disconnected water ballast hose had filled the yacht with 800 liters of water.
Victory wasn’t easy. After a first phase under uncertain weather conditions, the wind shut down on the final approach, and an early morning lead of 34-nautical miles over second-placed
“We have a long way to go certainly, but this was a good way to start,” said skipper Charlie Enright. “SiFi (navigator Simon Fisher) did a great job. He didn’t really make any missteps… But every sked is nerve-wracking, especially when you’re stuck in a river going backwards!”
“Very pleased with the result. It’s a solid start, exactly what we
The experience and desire of the MAPFRE crew was on full display in the 30+ knot winds they had pushing out of the Mediterranean on the second night. Fernández and his team put in more manoeuvres than the rest of fleet to stay in a narrow band of strong winds and emerged from the experience in the second place slot they would never relinquish.
Dongfeng Racing Team skipper Charles Caudrelier made an excellent recovery on Leg 1, needing to scratch and claw for every inch, after falling to the back of the fleet on the approach to Gibraltar. And fight they did, slowly reeling in the fleet and finally recovering to pass team AkzoNobel with only 220 miles to go, to complete the podium.
“It was very hard,” Caudrelier said. ” Weather forecast and reality were often conflicting and this made the race even more interesting”.
As with the boats in front, it was a slow-motion dance to the finish line, with Brunel gliding across in the dark, guided by America’s Cup star Peter Burling, to secure sixth place.
That left seventh place for Dee Caffari’s Turn the Tide on Plastic. Despite a brilliant start, the team which promotes an interesting UN campaign against plastic pollution in the oceans, proved to have still a long way to do to compete with the other teams.
The next leg – 7,000 nautical miles
1. Vestas 11th Hour Racing, 8 points
2. MAPFRE, 6 points
3. Dongfeng Race Team, 5 points
4. team AkzoNobel, 4 points
5. Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag, 3 points
6. Team Brunel, 2 points
7. Turn the Tide on Plastic, 1 point
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