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Volvo Ocean Race 2001/2002

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VOLVO OCEAN RACE - Kapstadt-Sydney - 4. Wochenbericht
Southampton, England, December 8th, 2001 Week 4.
Illbruck Win Leg Two
At 11.22 local time on Tuesday 4th December, John Kostecki’s illbruck
Challenge sailed through the shadow of the world famous Sydney Opera House
and across the finish line, taking line honours and eight points for the
second time in as many Volvo Ocean Race legs.
Burying the gremlins of their leg one performance, Gurra Krantz and his
SEB crew sailed into Sydney Harbour a little over one hour and thirteen
minutes behind illbruck after 24 days at sea to clinch second position.
SEB only relinquished the lead to illbruck in the dying stages of the leg
in Bass Strait when a major broach and then flooding in the bow section
allowed John Kostecki’s team to sneak past SEB, sail away and clinch
victory.
illbruck’s three year work-up to the event is now evidently paying
dividends as the crew believes there is no secret edge to their
performance, just a well-rounded campaign with a fast boat, good crew work
and excellent routing. “I don’t think it is just my success, it is the
success of everyone on the boat. The boat is very fast and we have got a
good team,” said navigator Juan Vila after docking at Darling Harbour.
The question now on everybody’s lips is whether the illbruck Challenge can
carry forward their momentum and dominate the race.
Even after their opening night problems when the boat took on serious
amounts of water through a broken bow inspection hatch and instantly lost
20 miles, Kostecki was always confident about their leg winning prospects.
“I’ve never really ever worried about falling off the tracks,” he said.
illbruck and SEB worked their way through the calms and storms over the
final 48 hours of the leg to the best effect to open up a small lead over
the pursuing five-boat fleet. But a near flooding of the first bow
compartment in the watertight bulkhead on SEB temporarily put the brakes
on Gurra Krantz’s challenge for the lead 24 hours from Sydney.
After a sail change, the crew found that boat speeds were low and an
inspection revealed that a deck hatch had accidentally opened when a sail
was dragged over it, letting in over a ton of sea water.
This mixed with all the crew’s rubbish from three weeks at sea, creating a
smelly broth that had to be sieved before being emptied into the Tasman
Sea.
“Woos [Gareth Cooke] was standing in the mess in his shorts and bailing
and sending the buckets out on a chain of crew hands. The water was
looking more like a soup and smelled like rotten lobster tail soup,”
skipper Krantz explained.
Third for the second leg in a row, News Corp crossed the finish line at
13.17hrs local time the same day.
While they were 31 miles down on SEB just 18 hours before the finish,
Fanstone and navigator Ross Field pushed for every possible inch over the
final 236 miles to Sydney, not accepting their position until SEB
completed the leg.
Being the sole Australian flagged yacht in the race, a good finishing
position in Sydney was always going to be high on their priority list.
That morning, they cut inshore to within half a mile of the New South
Wales coast in order to cheat the worst of the southbound current. While
they were not rewarded with an extra position, they did cut their deficit
on second placed SEB to just 7.6 miles by the finish line.
“We’re definitely going better than we were on the first leg. Third place
is good, it puts us in second overall so we’re happy with that,” said Ross
Field.
Four hours later, djuice snatched fourth place from Grant Dalton’s grasp.
djuice dragons slipped past Amer Sports One three hours out from Sydney.
Seven minutes after Knut Frostad’s team finished, Amer Sports One was the
fifth yacht to complete leg two.
But a late twist in the tale undoubtedly cost Grant Dalton’s team valuable
miles to djuice, as on Monday afternoon they suffered their second medical
blow of the leg.
Skipper Grant Dalton was hurt after the Frers designed Volvo Ocean 60
crashed off a wave during a gale in the Bass Strait.
After crossing the Opera House finish line, the Nautor Challenge yacht
detoured to the Sydney Customs Wharf and Dalton was taken off the yacht on
a stretcher. He has suspected broken ribs and severe bruising.
Explaining the incident, Dalton said: “I was in the galley area and I was
suddenly launched into space. I broke the stove and the fitting that held
it to the bulkhead and slammed into the side of the boat.
“Roger [Nilson, navigator and doctor on Amer Sports One] suspects broken
ribs and maybe some internal damage. It is very painful when I breathe,”
added the Kiwi, who is a veteran of five Whitbread races.
Nilson had confined Dalton to a bunk and administered pain-killers, “Grant
is in severe pain and has massive bruising,” he said. “Grant cannot move
without severe distress.”
For Knut Frostad, it had been a mixed second leg. The djuice crew led the
fleet for several days through the Southern Ocean, but succumbed to the
lighter breezes that engulfed the yachts as they reached western
Australia.
Then, after several thousand miles of on-the-edge sailing in the Southern
Ocean through fields of iceberg’s, Frostad’s crew nearly ran into major
trouble with the Sydney skyline just over the horizon.
During the final morning at sea, the pink and black Laurie Davidson
designed yacht struck an object in the water.
“As we gybed and crossed Amer's stern, about one mile behind them, we hit
something very hard with the keel, doing about 15 knots boat speed,”
explained Frostad.
“It could have been a whale or a large sunfish. We almost stopped and
nasty sounds came from around the rig and keel. A couple of guys fell over
in the cockpit, but no one got injured. After a quick check of the boat,
it looks like it has survived this one as well.”
Later that night, ASSA ABLOY sailed into Sydney Harbour to finish sixth.
Their leg had been a classic case of what could have been.
The gold and blue Farr design is certainly competitive but skipper Neal
McDonald and navigator Mark Rudiger were punished for a small tactical
blunder approaching Bass Strait.
“It’s an easy thing to fix as we have a good boat and great crew, we just
need to work on our side of things. It is amazing how close we were to
nailing it,” said Rudiger. Both are confident they can turn their fortunes
around.
Finally, Lisa McDonald’s team sailed into Sydney Harbour under the cover
of darkness at 03.00hrs on Saturday morning (8th December) to become the
final crew to complete the second leg of the Volvo Ocean Race.
It had taken the all-women team on Amer Sports Too an extra three and a
half days to sail the 6,550-mile leg from Cape Town, through the Southern
Ocean and onto Sydney, Australia, than leg winners illbruck.
Lisa and her team now have 18 days to recuperate and replenish themselves
before the fleet set sail on leg three of the nine-stage around the world
race on Boxing Day.
On December 26th, the eight yachts will join the Sydney to Hobart race
fleet. They will have a brief three-hour pit stop in Tasmania before
setting off again across the Tasman Sea to Auckland, the City of Sails,
New Zealand.
At a meeting on the previous Friday afternoon (7th December) in Sydney,
the Race Committee presented Notice to Competitors No. 7 regarding the two
protests against Amer Sports Too and djuice.
The Race Committee continued its investigation and was surprised to
discover that the table Bay Traffic Separation Scheme is not an
International Maritime Organisation adopted scheme. The authority for this
Separation Scheme comes from the South African 'Marine Traffic (Inshore
Vessel Traffic Services) Regulations 2000' under the authority of the
South African Marine Traffic Act 2 of 1981.
Further research brought to light new information from the South African
Maritime Safety Authority that the Traffic Scheme does not apply to
pleasure yachts involved in sport or recreation, as stated in "Marine
Traffic (Inshore Vessel Traffic Services) Regulations 2000". Therefore the
Race Committee has decided that because a protest based on non-compliance
with Rule 10 of the Collision Regulations would fail in this case it would
be inappropriate to proceed with these protests.
Also on Friday, Keith Kilpatrick, who was taken seriously ill during the
second leg, decided not to continue in the race on medical advice.
Keith was taken off Amer Sports One at Eclipse Island off the coast of
Western Australia during the final week of the leg after being diagnosed
with an intestinal blockage, which has since cleared.
"After consulting several specialists it has been decided it is in my best
interests to go home to California and recuperate,” explained Keith. ”It
has become evident that the trauma experienced by my body is more severe
than previously thought. After recuperating for about two months I will be
totally fit.
"Obviously I will not be sailing on the next two legs (from Sydney to
Auckland and Auckland to Rio de Janeiro) so in the best interests of the
team I have decided to step aside so that a permanent replacement can be
made."
With the fleet ashore, it was with great sadness that the Volvo Ocean Race
learned that Sir Peter Blake, five-time Whitbread Round The World Race
sailor and double America’s Cup winner, was tragically killed in Amazonia.
Sir Peter, 53, was a major figure in the world of sailing and helped make
the former Whitbread race the pinnacle of ocean racing it is today. As
skipper, he made history a decade ago by winning all six legs and the
overall prize in the 1989-1990 Whitbread Round The World Race on
Steinlager 2.
Chief Executive of the Volvo Ocean Race, Helge Alten, said: “Everyone is
shocked and saddened by this tragic news. Sir Peter Blake will always be
remembered as one of the greatest sailors the world has seen through his
achievements in all areas of the sport. His personal warmth and caring
meant he was always an approachable figure and an inspiring personality.
At this time our thoughts are with his family.”
Elapsed time for leg 2 of the Volvo Ocean Race
Illbruck: 022d 13h 22m 26s
SEB: 022d 14h 35m 45s
News Corp 022d 15h 17m 29s
djuice 22d 19h 43m 35s
Amer Sports One 022d 19h 50m 12s
ASSA ABLOY 022d 22h 31m 05s
Amer Sports Too 026d 04h 59m 22s
Volvo Ocean Race Position Report, Day 27, 16.12 hours GMT
PS Yacht Latitude Longitude DTF CMG SMG TFHR DTL DTL-C ETA PO
1 ILBK 33 51.45S 151 12.77E 0 000 0 0 0 +00000 04 DEC 00:22:26 16
2 TSEB 33 51.45S 151 12.77E 0 000 0 0 0 +00000 04 DEC 01:35:45 10
3 NEWS 33 51.45S 151 12.77E 0 000 0 0 0 +00000 04 DEC 02:17:29 12
4 DJCE 33 51.45S 151 12.77E 0 000 0 0 0 +00000 04 DEC 06:43:35 7
5 AONE 33 51.45S 151 12.77E 0 000 0 0 0 +00000 04 DEC 06:50:12 11
6 AART 33 51.45S 151 12.77E 0 000 0 0 0 +00000 04 DEC 09:31:05 7
7 ATOO 33 51.45S 151 12.77E 0 000 0 0 0 +00000 07 DEC 15:59:22 3
PS - Position; DTF - Distance to Finish; CMG - Course made good; SMG -
Speed made good; TFHR - 24 hours run; DTL - Distance to leader; DTL-C -
Distance to leader change; ETA - Estimated time of arrival; PO -
accumulated Points
ILBK illbruck Challenge
AONE Amer Sports One
ATOO Amer Sports Two
AART ASSA ABLOY Racing Team
NEWS News Corporation
TYCO Team Tyco
TSEB Team SEB
DJCE djuice dragons
Volvo and Volvo Ocean Race Background
The Volvo Car Corporation has its headquarters in Gothenburg, Sweden.
27,400 people worldwide are employed by Volvo Cars and in the year 2000,
the company's sales increased to 422,100 cars.
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