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It’s been a bumpy ride for the past two days of The Ocean Race as winds in the 25-30 knot range interact with the currents of the Gulf Stream to make an uncomfortable and unpredictable sea state.

Despite that, the leading IMOCA trio have been racing north at a 500-mile per day pace, ticking down the miles towards Aarhus, Denmark.

But on Wednesday afternoon (24 May), they are pushing towards the centre of the low pressure system that has been the dominant weather feature of this leg, and are seeing the wind back around from the northwest to the southwest. This will require a gybe and at least a few hours on a east-southeast heading that isn’t particularly favourable in terms of getting to Aarhus.

11th Hour Racing Team, leading the fleet, was the first to see this shift and the first to gybe. It’s been an exhausting run since the start, and skipper Charlie Enright is exhausted.

“There hasn’t been a lot of sleep at all because of the weather. I’m pretty tired,” he said. “We’re trying to manage the situation as best we can, rotating through people. But there’s been a lot of manoeuvres — some expected, most unexpected — so it’s been tough to plan around.”

There’s no opportunity to let up. As the first boat to gybe, 11th Hour Racing Team has seen its lead of 15 miles over Team Holcim-PRB drop to less than one mile, with Malizia — winners of the leg-starting In Port Race on Sunday — also finding its form and staying in touch just 16 miles back. If the others don’t gybe, there will be a new leader in the next hours, even if 11th Hour Racing Team retains a tactically strong position.

“We had a good day today. We managed to find our speed again and kind of match pace with Team Holcim-PRB and 11th Hour Racing Team,” said Will Harris on Malizia. “They managed to get away from us a bit yesterday but we’re trying to find our legs, find our speed in these conditions. But we’re still in touch, a long way to go and we just have to keep going.”

Paul Meilhat’s Biotherm team has dropped back a little more over the past 24 hours, not showing the pace required to stay with the leading trio.

GUYOT envrionnement - Team Europe is not participating in Leg 5 after its dismasting in the final days of Leg 4. The boat is being shipped to Europe and the team is exploring options to rejoin the race.

The ETA in Aarhus remains next Tuesday 30 May, but there is still a degree of uncertainty around this, which should work out over the next couple of days.

Meanwhile, the organising committee of Genova — The Grand Finale launched its ‘one month to go’ countdown today, with Ocean Live Park in the finish port opening on Saturday 24 June.

Leg Five Rankings at 1800 UTC, 24 May

  1. 11th Hour Racing Team, distance to finish, 2,213.7 miles
  2. Team Holcim-PRB, distance to lead, 15.5 miles
  3. Team Malizia, distance to lead, 34.1 miles
  4. Biotherm, distance to lead, 109.4 miles

Find the latest fleet positions on the race tracker at theoceanrace.com.

Published in Ocean Race
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As the fifth leg of The Ocean Race 2022-23 approaches, Team Holcim-PRB skipper Kevin Escoffier and his crew have a total of 19 points — with a one-point lead over Leg 4 winner 11th Hour Racing Team and second-placed Malizia, who are tied at 18 points.

And with double points up for grabs in the upcoming leg, which begins next Sunday 21 May, the team is fighting to ready the IMOCA boat following its devastating dismasting just days out of Itajaí.

One thing that should boost Escoffier’s and morale alike is the return of Charles Caudrelier as part of a handpicked crew of transatlantic specialists intimately familiar with the boat.

The skipper of Dongfeng Race Team (who won the race in 2017-18) and recent Route du Rhum victor will serve as navigator alongside British sailors Abby Ehler and Sam Goodchild, while Yann Riou will take charge of photo and video production as onboard reporter.

“My idea was to reunite the core of the crew,” Escoffier says. “Sam Goodchild will be returning after sailing on his IMOCA and has had a little rest. Abby is coming back in great shape and as motivated as ever.

“As for Tom [Laperche], he has embarked on his own project and was no longer available. So, I called upon Charles Caudrelier, who will be the navigator on board. I chose Charles because he is someone I know very well, who is highly motivated, and who has great experience in The Ocean Race. We communicate well together, and he can contribute a lot in terms of performance on the boat.

“I think we both have a passion for technology and performance. We are also fully dedicated to the sport, and that is something I greatly appreciate. We have started working on the weather and discussing pilot settings, polars [etcetera].”

Abby Ehler and Sam Goodchild have each already competed in two legs of The Ocean Race aboard Holcim-PRB, including the third leg in the Southern Ocean.

Both are enthusiastic about returning to the blue and green monohull. Ehler’s experience with three previous circumnavigations and Goodchild’s extreme motivation will undoubtedly be valuable assets for this leg.

“They are two very good sailors who have already impressed me with their qualities and skills in the previous legs,” the skipper says. “For me, they are among the pillars of the crew. Together, we have completed three-quarters of the circumnavigation in terms of mileage.”

Escoffier is determined to perform well again after the setback in the fourth leg: “We are taking a fresh start, and although we didn’t finish the last race, our lead was comfortable enough to keep us in the lead of The Ocean Race.

“While the upcoming leg is important, I know that there are still 50% of the points to be earned until the finish in Genoa in July. So, we are only halfway through the race. And the pace is only going to accelerate. I know this from experience, so we need to stay focused.”

Leg 5, which covering 3,500 nautical miles across the north Atlantic, promises to be intense once again. Beyond the double points, the demands of this return journey to Europe will require the crew to be fully in sync with the boat and execute a perfect strategy in order to hope for a leading position in Denmark.

“I expect it to be cold,” Escoffier says. “It’s a leg we don’t often do. I have already done several transatlantic crossings in this direction, but always to arrive in France. Going to Denmark will take us through the north of the British Isles. That completely changes the game in terms of weather strategy, and that’s something new for me. We will have to play around the ice limit, not far from Newfoundland. It’s going to be a very interesting leg.”

Published in Ocean Race

Skipper Paul Meilhat and his Biotherm team had a long wait to get to the Leg 4 finish on Thursday morning (11 May) in Newport, Rhode Island.

With an initial ETA of 0530 local time, the light overnight winds nearly died completely with the sunrise, leaving the team to battle adverse conditions for a few more hours before they finally glided across the finish line at 08:04 (12:04 UTC) for a leg race time of 17 days, 19 hours, 49 minutes and 38 seconds.

It’s a third-place finish for Meilhat and leaves his team in fourth spot on the overall race leaderboard — five points behind Team Malizia and 11th Hour Racing Team, who sit equal on 18 points, just a single point adrift of the race leader Team Holcim-PRB.

The Ocean Race is still quite open heading into the race across the Atlantic, which counts for double points,” Meilhat said. “After our good start on this leg we would have liked to have been able to fight with the top guys a bit more but we are happy looking ahead to the next part of the race.”

The leg from Itajaí to Newport started well for Biotherm, who were in the lead — or very close to it — for most of the race up the coast of Brazil. An unfortunate few hours in the doldrums saw the team completely becalmed, while the others raced away, effectively ending their chances of competing for a leg win.

“That’s sailboat racing. That’s the way it goes sometimes,” Alan Roberts said. “You can get mad or frustrated, but it doesn’t help.”

Biotherm sails into Newport on Thursday 11 May after 17 days of racing from Brazil | Credit: Sailing Energy/The Ocean RaceBiotherm sails into Newport on Thursday 11 May after 17 days of racing from Brazil | Credit: Sailing Energy/The Ocean Race

Roberts was one of three new crew members to join Meilhat for this leg, who said the new group gelled quickly to become a strong crew: “It’s not easy to bring a completely new group on board, but I’m happy with how everyone worked together to become a team.”

Meilhat said the team suffered minor damage across several areas during the storm three days ago that saw their rivals on GUYOT environnement - Team Europe dismasted. The Biotherm team will focus on getting the IMOCA boat ready ahead of the Newport In Port Race, scheduled for Saturday 20 May ahead of the leg start on Sunday 21 May.

Leg 4 positions/points

  1. 11th Hour Racing Team - 5 points
  2. Team Malizia - 4 points
  3. Biotherm - 3 points
  4. GUYOT environnement - Team Europe - suspended racing
  5. Team Holcim-PRB - retired from leg - 0 points

The Ocean Race Leaderboard (through Leg 4)

  1. Team Holcim-PRB – 19 points
  2. 11th Hour Racing Team – 18 points
  3. Team Malizia – 18 points (tie is broken by In Port Series standings)
  4. Biotherm – 13 points
  5. GUYOT envrionnement - Team Europe – 2 points
Published in Ocean Race
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11th Hour Racing Team won Leg 4 of The Ocean Race 2022-23, leading the fleet into their hometown of Newport, Rhode Island on a spectacular spring afternoon in New England on Wednesday (10 May).

Skipper Charlie Enright was beaming as he stepped ashore, moments after his team — which includes Irish offshore veteran Damian Foxall — held off Team Malizia to cross the finishing line (at 19:13:22 UTC) for their first leg win of the event.

“This means so much to all of us,” Enright said. “Timing is everything and to be able to get this result, on this leg, coming to our home base in Newport feels incredible. Everybody on the team played a role and did their part.

11th Hour Racing Team’s Malama is greeted by a welcoming flotilla in Newport on Wednesday afternoon 10 May | Credit: Sailing Energy/The Ocean Race11th Hour Racing Team’s Malama is greeted by a welcoming flotilla in Newport on Wednesday afternoon 10 May | Credit: Sailing Energy/The Ocean Race

“It feels so good to see all the boats on the water and the people here on shore to welcome us and share this with us. We’re grateful for the support and happy we could get the win for everybody.”

It wasn’t an easy leg. Over the 17 days of racing north from Itajaí in Brazil, the IMOCA teams had to manage numerous transitions between weather systems, from the southern hemisphere trade winds, through the doldrums and into the north Atlantic trades.

A storm just two days out from the finish brought wind gusts over 50 knots and a brutal sea state, conditions that veteran on board reporter Amory Ross described as “terrifying”.

Team Malizia arrived in Newport at 19:13:22 UTC with a race time of 17 days, 2 hours, 58 minutes and 22 seconds — under 32 minutes from first place | Credit: Sailing Energy/The Ocean RaceTeam Malizia arrived in Newport at 19:13:22 UTC with a race time of 17 days, 2 hours, 58 minutes and 22 seconds — under 32 minutes from first place | Credit: Sailing Energy/The Ocean Race

And through it all, 11th Hour Racing Team and Team Malizia exchanged the lead over a dozen times, before Enright and his squad emerged with the win on Wednesday afternoon.

“This was a great race,” said Team Malizia skipper Will Harris. “It was close racing, which is something we always like, and it sets us up nicely for the legs ahead.”

The results today — combined with overall race leader Team Holcim-PRB having to retire from the leg after dismasting on day four — mean the top three teams on the leaderboard will be within one point when the transatlantic race starts on Sunday 21 May.

Paul Meilhat’s Biotherm crew is still at sea racing towards Newport, with over 150 miles left to run. Their ETA has slipped into Thursday (11 May) as the boat is mired in lighter winds.

Leg 4 positions (as at 22:10 UTC on Wednesday 10 May)

  1. 11th Hour Racing Team - 5 points
  2. Team Malizia - 4 points
  3. Biotherm - racing, DTF 157.7 miles
  4. GUYOT environnement - Team Europe - suspended racing
  5. Team Holcim-PRB - retired from leg - 0 points
Published in Ocean Race
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Wednesday (10 May) dawned with a beautiful morning in Newport, Rhode Island. It’s a cool, crisp, spring day with bright sunshine and clear blue skies.

Unfortunately for the IMOCA trio racing towards The Ocean Race’s Leg 4 finish line off Fort Adams State Park, the high-pressure system clearing the sky today also brings light winds.

11th Hour Racing Team and Team Malizia have therefore been engaged in a low speed, tactical race over the final 80 miles of this leg, weaving through exclusion zones and searching for the first sign of a new breeze.

It’s an agonising way to finish the leg, but on Malizia at least, spirits remain high.

“We have one final fight with 11th Hour Racing Team, one final push, and I think we can be very happy with how we’ve sailed so far,” said Malizia skipper Will Harris. “We just have to enjoy these last few hours at sea and we can look forward to a nice welcome in Newport. No matter how it goes, we can be happy with how we sailed and knowing we’ve given it everything we’ve got so far.”

As they get closer to shore and the sea breeze builds, speeds will pick up and both leading boats are expected to finish later in the afternoon local time (1900 to 1930 UTC) in Newport.

In the latest update from the leading boat at 1730 UTC, navigator Simon Fisher on 11th Hour Racing Team said: “We are reaching in, the breeze is filling in as forecast and things are looking good for an afternoon finish in Newport. We wanted to be between Malizia and the new breeze… and generally it’s been alright. We still have some miles on them and so far so good.”

The third boat racing — Biotherm — is about 160 miles behind and projected to finish about six hours behind the leaders.

“It’s not over yet, we’re still pushing into the finish,” said Alan Roberts on Biotherm. “Some snakes and ladders ahead…”

Elsewhere, following their dismasting in stormy conditions yesterday, the sailors on board GUYOT environnement - Team Europe have secured the boat and mounted a jury rig and are now able to make way across the wind. More information is expected from the team shortly.

Leg Four Rankings at 1800 UTC, 10 May

  1. 11th Hour Racing Team, distance to finish, 13.2 miles
  2. Team Malizia, distance to lead, 10.3 miles
  3. Biotherm, distance to lead, 167.1 miles
  4. GUYOT enironnement - Team Europe, racing suspended

Find the latest fleet positions on the race tracker at theoceanrace.com.

Published in Ocean Race
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The GUYOT environnement - Team Europe crew are safe and working on a jury rig after dismasting in a fierce North Atlantic storm overnight on the closing stages of Leg 4 of The Ocean Race 2022-23 from Itajaí, Brazil to Newport, Rhode Island.

At 0243 UTC on Tuesday (9 May), while the team was racing in fourth place in gale-force winds and big waves, the IMOCA boat slammed off a wave and the mast crashed down.

Despite worsening conditions, the team was able to cut the wreckage of the broken mast away, to avoid further damage to the boat, while preserving as much equipment as possible.

Staff from race control at The Ocean Race headquarters in Alicante are in regular contact with the crew, who have not requested outside assistance and are currently evaluating the next steps along with their shore crew. That could include going to Halifax in Canada or to be towed with a ship or a fishing boat to the USA.

Speaking to journalists from on board the boat via a video link this afternoon, co-skipper Robert Stanjek outlined the crew’s current situation and described the conditions overnight leading up to the mast break.

“At the moment we are about 600 miles away from Newport and there are still big waves and quite a bit of wind too,” he said. “We broke the rig in the night at two o’clock UTC. I think it was not a super strong low pressure but I think we registered up to 50 to 52 knots of wind with an average of 40 to 45 knots.

“We thought we were managing well. We had only the main up with reefs and we were sailing at reduced speed but the waves were a little bit too big. There was a particularly big slam and the mast inverted and broke.”

Asked if the crew had been able to set up any sort of jury rig to aid the boat’s progress towards land, Stanjek said: “That’s the plan, but at the moment the sea state is too big and it is too windy to work on deck. In the meantime we are working on ideas because it is a long way to get to the US.”

The team skipper Benjamin Dutreux said their immediate focus was on getting the boat to shore to properly assess the extent of the damage caused in the incident.

Leg 4, Day 15 (Monday 8 May) onboard 11th Hour Racing Team, as Damian Foxall plugging in the storm jib in strong winds through the Gulf Stream | Credit: Amory Ross/11th Hour Racing/The Ocean RaceLeg 4, Day 15 (Monday 8 May) onboard 11th Hour Racing Team, as Damian Foxall plugging in the storm jib in strong winds through the Gulf Stream | Credit: Amory Ross/11th Hour Racing/The Ocean Race

“We need to work on a plan of how to get back in the race, but the first step is to get the boat to a harbour and to carry out an inventory of the damage,” he said. “We will do our best to rejoin the fleet again but it is hard to say what percentage of a chance we have.”

Meanwhile, at the front of the fleet, 11th Hour Racing Team (USA) and Team Malizia (GER) were the first to emerge from what Amory Ross, the veteran onboard reporter on 11th Hour Racing Team called “terrifying” conditions.

With fewer than 350 miles to race to Newport, the leading pair are still close — about 37 miles of separation on the race tracker as of 1700 UTC — with skipper Charlie Enright’s 11th Hour Racing Team hoping to benefit from some local knowledge on the approach to the crew’s home port.

“We are doing everything we can to try not to break anything,” Enright reported from the boat. “The difference in the leg can be made here by not making any mistakes, keeping high [speed] averages, and keeping the boat moving towards the mark. No bear aways, no breakages and none of that stuff. To the north we go.”

Team Malizia skipper Will Harris said the crew of the German entry had also been focused on avoiding serious damage in the boat-breaking conditions overnight but were gunning to chase down their American rival before the finish.

“It got pretty bouncy but we have been anticipating this for the last four to five days so we knew it was coming. We are pretty experienced now after Leg 3. We got through it, keeping the boat in one piece,” he said.

“We lost a few more miles to 11th Hour Racing Team which is really what we didn’t want, because it just makes it harder to come back to them. We are staying positive and we think there is a chance up ahead. You know it’s not over until we or they cross the line and anything could still happen.”

Current ETA for 11th Hour Racing Team in Newport is Wednesday 10 May between 1800 and 2200 UTC (1400 and 1800 local time) followed by Team Malizia two hours later, with Paul Meilhat’s third-placed Biotherm (FRA) expected to arrive around five hours afterwards.

Kevin Escoffier’s Swiss entry Team Holcim-PRB — which was dismasted earlier in Leg 4 off the Brazilian coast — is on board a cargo ship en route to Newport where the crew plan to step a new mast in time for the start of Leg 5 to Aarhus, Denmark on 21 May, which counts for double points.

Leg Four Rankings at 1700 UTC, 9 May

  1. 11th Hour Racing Team, distance to finish, 291.9 miles
  2. Team Malizia, distance to lead, 37.1 miles
  3. Biotherm, distance to lead, 182.6 miles
  4. GUYOT enironnement - Team Europe, racing suspended

Find the latest fleet positions on the race tracker at theoceanrace.com.

Published in Ocean Race
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As the leading boats get within 600 miles of the Leg 4 finishing line off Newport, Rhode Island, the IMOCA crews are preparing for a brutal afternoon and evening at sea on Monday (8 May).

There is a weather front approaching with southwest winds forecast at 40 knots, gusting as high at 50 knots. If this weather comes through as predicted, it will be some of the strongest winds the teams have faced thus far in The Ocean Race 2022-23.

11th Hour Racing Team and Team Malizia were beginning to feel the impact of this system already as of 1400 UTC this afternoon. Adding to the stress is the current the boats are starting to see as well, due to the Gulf Stream. Fortunately, the wind direction — southwest — is largely in line with the current, which should keep the sea state manageable.

“I’ve been trying to get my head around the forecast for the final couple of days…it’s hard,” said Francesca Clapcich on 11th Hour Racing Team. “Leg 4 is not over! It’s going to be pretty messy.”

“I think the whole fleet will get tested,” said onboard reporter Amory Ross. “We’re making sure we’re prepared going into this and the boat is in good shape. This will be the most wind we have seen all leg. We haven’t even had a reef in since we left Brazil… It’s just one more significant obstacle between here and Newport.”

11th Hour Racing Team has eked out to an 18-mile lead over Team Malizia (as at 1800 UTC) heading into this weather front.

“We are going into a small low pressure, with very strong wind, probably around 50 knots at one stage. Not for very long, but quite extreme,” said Nico Lunven on Team Malizia. “The sea state should not be too bad, I think, because it’s a new system so it shouldn’t have had time to develop.”

For the pair behind, Biotherm and GUYOT environnement - Team Europe, this system will also be an obstacle.

“The forecast has evolved. The low pressure is deeper and stronger than previously forecast” — that was the description given by Alan Roberts on Biotherm. “There’s possibly 50 knots, gusting even higher, to the south of the low. The optimal route takes us that way but in terms of boat preservation it’s not ideal. We have to decide whether to keep heading north towards it, or to tack and invest in the west in order to pass a bit further south of the low. It’s not easy.”

Roberts’ team on Biotherm have made one little hitch to the west in the past 12 hours, sacrificing a little bit of their lead over GUYOT environnement, who now trail by a little over 30 miles on the leaderboard but are in a tactically more difficult position out to the east.

“We are being welcomed to America with a big low pressure,” said skipper Ben Dutreux. “Some forecasts predict 60 knots of wind. It is not a light one. Biotherm has already set a tack. I think they probably don’t want to go into the storm.”

But this last obstacle can’t be avoided entirely. It will be a leg-defining 24 hours on the North Atlantic.

The ETA to Newport remains this Wednesday 10 May. Following the passage through this storm, the wind fades again quite rapidly, meaning another go-slow period before more moderate reaching conditions power the fleet towards land.

Leg Four Rankings at 1800 UTC, 8 May

  1. 11th Hour Racing Team, distance to finish, 534.2 miles
  2. Team Malizia, distance to lead, 18.6 miles
  3. Biotherm, distance to lead, 180.1 miles
  4. GUYOT enironnement - Team Europe, distance to lead, 213.8 miles

Find the latest fleet positions on the race tracker at theoceanrace.com.

Published in Ocean Race
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The competition level is high on day 14 of Leg 4 of The Ocean Race as 11th Hour Racing Team and Team Malizia continue their duel towards the finish.

“11th Hour Racing Team is just a few miles away and we’re doing everything we can to get ahead of them,” said Malizia skipper Will Harris on Sunday (7 May). “The fight is still on. It’s been an intense fight for the last six days or so — really intense racing…

“We’re very motivated to keep pushing to the end and that’s what this race is about sometimes, just pushing a bit more. We’re going to give it everything we’ve got to beat them to Newport.”

His counterpart on 11th Hour Racing Team, Charlie Enright, is up for the challenge.

“As we’ve seen in the last couple of days, the advantage goes back and forth very quickly,” he said. “[The approach to Newport] looks very complicated. We go upwind, there’s a lot of pressure, some circulation in the Gulf Stream. After that it’s a real dog’s breakfast with a bunch of stuff we’ll have to deal with, but we’ll deal with it and figure it out.

“It’s hard to believe that with less than a thousand miles to go we still have about three days of racing, but that’s the way the cookie crumbles.”

The ETA for the leading IMOCA pair is trending towards 0400 local time 0800 UTC) in Newport on Wednesday morning 10 May. But as Charlie indicated, there is still some uncertainty in the models and complications in the choices available to Malizia and 11th Hour Racing Team which could push this slightly in either direction.

Early on Sunday afternoon, 11th Hour Racing Team made a tack to the west that can only be considered a tactical option to positing the boat better for the weather to come, as it meant sailing slightly south of west, costing miles towards Newport.

As the American boat crossed just one mile ahead of Team Malizia, Harris elected to follow on the same line. The race for the lead couldn’t be closer. The pressure on these crews to sail at maximum potential isn’t going to ease.

Some eight hours behind the leading pair, Biotherm continues to fight through some light weather.

“We just haven’t got much wind,” said Alan Roberts, poking his head on deck, with a glassy sea state all around. “We just passed a little front and now we have quite light winds. We need to get into the northwesterly breeze to keep moving, but it’s quite tricky.”

Meanwhile, on GUYOT envrionnement - Team Europe, Seb Simon celebrated his birthday, complete with candle and cake and calls home.

“It’s a real pleasure to have everyone think about me…all the little things people have done for me today, I’m very happy, thank you,” he said.

What will make him happiest of all is gaining over 50 miles on Biotherm in the past 24 hours. On the 2000 UTC update, the GUYOT team was less than 90 miles behind.

Leg Four Rankings at 2000 UTC, 7 May

  1. 11th Hour Racing Team, distance to finish, 819.7 miles
  2. Team Malizia, distance to lead, 4.2 miles
  3. Biotherm, distance to lead, 147 miles
  4. GUYOT enironnement - Team Europe, distance to lead, 233.7 miles

Find the latest fleet positions on the race tracker at theoceanrace.com.

Published in Ocean Race
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While the IMOCA fleet is making progress towards the Leg 4 finish line at Newport, Rhode Island on Saturday (6 May), it hasn’t all been smooth sailing in The Ocean Race this weekend.

11th Hour Racing Team has now grabbed the lead back from Team Malizia as Charlie Enright’s squad squeezed ahead by about five miles on the leaderboard as they continue to tick down the miles towards their home port, still some four-plus days away.

But the transitions between weather systems have been neither straightforward, nor as per the forecast, making for challenging times.

“The wind is supposed to come from the south-southwest, but we actually are sailing in wind from the northeast — so it’s 180-degrees different,” said Chris Pratt on Malizia. “We have huge clouds and thunderstorms… It was supposed to be a cool night in the bunk doing 20 knots reaching. Instead it’s a tough night under the clouds going 15 knots on the other tack!”

Perhaps the team that has had it the worst is Biotherm.

“It’s been very difficult. There was no wind and what little there was would shift around all directions,” said Alan Roberts, looking back at the past 24 hours. “It was really hard. We sailed into a bank of clouds with very little wind from random directions. We did a few 360s trying to keep the boat moving. It was pretty emotional! But we finally found with wind again and now we’re trucking along in the right direction.”

“We were unlucky. It wasn’t on the model,” added skipper Paul Meilhat. “We lost probably 150 miles on the leaders and maybe 100 miles to GUYOT as well. It’s hard to accept but it’s done and now we have to keep fighting. It’s not finished. There are a lot tricks to come still.”

GUYOT environnement - Team Europe were able to close up to Biotherm on Friday but find themselves slipping back again now.

Meanwhile the forecast has the leading pair pushing into northwesterlies, but squalls and thunderstorms should feature heavily today and into Sunday. The challenge continues.

“We just have to try to sail the right direction with the wind we have…even if it’s opposite to the forecast,” concluded Nico Lunven. Wise words from a navigator who has seen it all before.

The ETA for the leaders in Newport is beginning to firm up around Wednesday 10 May. But with the conditions on the water being so different from the models, this should still be considered with a little bit of wiggle room.

Leg Four Rankings at 1500 UTC, 6 May

  1. 11th Hour Racing Team, distance to finish, 1,143.8 miles
  2. Team Malizia, distance to lead, 5.7 miles
  3. Biotherm, distance to lead, 123.8 miles
  4. GUYOT enironnement - Team Europe, distance to lead, 235.7 miles

Find the latest fleet positions on the race tracker at theoceanrace.com.

Published in Ocean Race
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Team Malizia and 11th Hour Racing Team remain locked in a battle that appears destined to last until The Ocean Race Leg 4 finish line off Newport, Rhode Island is in sight.

On Friday morning UTC (5 May), first Malizia and then 11th Hour Racing Team put in successful gybes as the wind shifted south.

The transition immediately showed as a benefit for Charlie Enright’s team who made at least a theoretical gain on the tracker from being on the inside lane.

But Will Harris and his Malizians retain the lead by a hair, at a fraction of a mile, as the two boats now streak towards the southeast coast of the United States.

Ahead of them is more uncertainty: the wind will shift again, this time in front of them, pushing them back off the coast; they will begin to encounter the Gulf Stream current which pushes to the northeast; and the final 48 hours of the leg promises to be “complicated with many transitions, which are still unclear”, according to race meteorologist Christian Dumard.

The ETA remains Wednesday 10 May for the leading pair. But how they get there is far from certain.

Behind, the IMOCA team that has suffered most over the past hours is Paul Meilhat’s Biotherm, who began to weave to the left on the tracker, and slow down significantly, around 0520 UTC on Friday morning. The slowdown to speeds averaging just four knots would last for hours, prompting speculation there was a problem on board.

As it turns out, the team had sailed into a big windless area that didn’t appear on any weather forecasting or satellite models.

“We’re just surrounded by a glassy sea” was the description off the boat.

“People are sending messages to ask if we’ve broken anything, but the only thing wrong is the wind,” said Mariana Lobato.

The team is doing better again, but the big slowdown has presented an opportunity to GUYOT environnement - Team Europe. After trailing a podium spot by nearly 200 miles earlier this morning, the team is now just 83 miles in arrears, a remarkable turn of events.

With the uncertain conditions ahead, there is more of a chance for the GUYOT crew to get back into the podium race than ever before.

Leg Four Rankings at 1900 UTC, 5 May

  1. Team Malizia, distance to finish, 1,415.1 miles
  2. 11th Hour Racing Team, distance to lead, 0.1 miles
  3. Biotherm, distance to lead, 140 miles
  4. GUYOT enironnement - Team Europe, distance to lead, 223 miles

Find the latest fleet positions on the race tracker at theoceanrace.com.

Published in Ocean Race
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https://afloat.ie/resources/marine-industry-news/viking-marine

Featured Sailmakers

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Featured Blogs

W M Nixon - Sailing on Saturday
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