The Transat Race 2004
Plymouth - Boston - Start 31.05.2004
www.thetransat.com - zur Übersicht

09.06.2004
www.conradhumphreys.com

·
· Motorola Ocean Racing Team is traveling to Boston Thursday June 10th so please check online for tomorrow’s race update from Conrad
· HELLOMOTO’s positions will be updated throughout the day tomorrow on our Race Console as normal
· Media enquiries: Mary Ambler will be contactable on her UK mobile and email and working on UK local time in Boston from 10th – 23rd June

HELLOMOTO GOING HELL FOR LEATHER
Day 9: Conrad recounts his “Scary and amazing night!”

Plymouth, England 9th June, 2004. The Transat Race Organisation are predicting that the leading Open 60 monohulls are set to break the existing race record of 14 days, 16hrs, 1 minute set by Yves Parlier in 1992, if they arrive over this weekend in Boston, USA. At 1100 GMT, HELLOMOTO was back in 5th place 17m behind Skandia after an eventful 24hrs locked in a duel and in sight of each other. However, both boats have now slipped 50 miles back on Ecover (Golding), Pindar (Sanderson) and Temenos (Wavre) as they tried to cut the corner on the high pressure to shave miles off these leading boats. With such close racing and over 750m to go, the leader board could still change.

Skandia in Sichtweite von Hellomoto
Foto: Conrad Humphreys/O6T


Conrad tells the story of his mid-Atlantic match race (see attached photo): “Yesterday was so frustrating for us both. Nick came up to cross the corner of the High pressure, there was a small chance to get through but then we were both becalmed for 5-6 hours. The top boats then went off, and Skandia and HELLOMOTO were racing side by side about 100 metres apart. We spent the whole time just trying to outmanoeuvre each other, neither of us sleeping or eating. I spent a lot of the day also repairing the staysail pocket, and saw Nick was also dealing with his own problems, and at the end of the day he called me up, we were both exhausted and talked about our frustrations at being becalmed after busting a gut to catch up the leaders.”

Today of all days, Conrad is indebted to his autopilots as HELLOMOTO carves up the Grand Banks surf at ridiculous speeds, icy cold water spraying over the deck, the sound of rushing water so deafening, he’s hardly able to think. Sailing solo, as Conrad is learning, is a relentless task and you can never have enough rest. In fact, Conrad gave himself the biggest shock last night as he rang in on his satellite phone today to recount his “scary and amazing night!”

“The wind filled in around 2330 GMT last night and Skandia and HELLOMOTO were back up to 12-14 knots racing side by side. I put up the Code 5 – the most powerful headsail onboard – and thought I’d cat nap in the cuddy just in case as the wind was building to 25 – 30 knots. The next thing I was conscious of was waking up over two hours later just in my underwear, but fully in my sleeping bag, with all my clothes in a pile swilling around in the bilges. I had that dry, nauseous feeling in my mouth and then sheer terror hit – I ran up on deck still in my underpants and saw that HELLOMOTO was going at 28 knots boat speed and the Code 5 was still up!

“It was the biggest scare I’ve given myself, I was completely out for 2 hours. For a split second I was totally convinced someone else must have been driving the boat, as I had no idea what had happened in that time. I had to tell myself ‘Conrad, this is not OK, get the sail down!’, and then dropped part of it in the water and so spent an hour putting it on deck. That’s where Nick sailed into the lead. I realised later that I must have gone into sleep walking mode sitting in the hatchway and put myself to bed unconsciously. Given what happened to PRB, we could have been the 3rd rig casualty in this race if it wasn’t for my amazing autopilots – I could kiss the guys at B&G!”

HELLOMOTO is now doing what she was built for – surfing at speeds reaching 24 knots under reefed indexsail and genoa, and thankfully looking after her skipper as he hangs on for the ride across the corner of the Grand Banks. Conrad is surviving on energy snacks and hasn’t got a single dry piece of clothing left. “It reminds me of surfing off Exmouth beach at home, but the Grand Banks are 500 miles long – I’d pay money to do this every time!”

Positions at 1100 GMT
Pos Boat Latitude Longitude Speed Hdg DTF* DTL**
1 ECOVER 42 27.68' N 54 34.56' W 11.1 265 713.7
2 PINDAR 43 06.00' N 53 54.20' W 12.0 266 739.8 26.1
3 TEMENOS 42 23.36' N 53 31.92' W 13.6 257 764.6 50.9
4 SKANDIA 43 43.36' N 50 39.80' W 14.4 268 884.4 170.7
5 HELLOMOTO 43 42.68' N 50 17.00' W 14.1 270 901.1 187.3
* Distance to finish ** Distance to Leader

HELLOMOTO positions & performance data are updated on the new Race Console feature launched on our homepage – www.conradhumphreys.com

WEATHER POINT – see The Transat web site for more details
The Open 60 fleet faces a painful beat upwind to Boston in a decreasing north westerly breeze followed by an increasing south westerly. As the small low in the north western Atlantic moves east, the next is forecast to form to the north of the fleet, with building high pressure to the south. Soon the lighter winds shall be replaced as early as this afternoon by a warm and increasing south westerly between the high and the new low.

Listen in to Conrad Humphreys in the daily skippers’ chat sessions
Public can call this number 0906 540 0300 (UK only – 50p per minute) between 0900 – 0945 hrs BST each day.
Audio files from this session will be uploaded onto the race web site later in the morning.
The Transat Race web site: www.thetransat.com
ENDS
Media enquiries:
Mary Ambler
Communications Manager
Motorola Ocean Racing Team Open 60 HELLOMOTO O6T Ltd Email: mary@o6t.com Tel: +44 (0) 1752 600111 - Mob: +44 (0) 7887 643583
Motorola Ocean Racing Team web site www.conradhumphreys.com – for all sports & news media enquiries & resources
Motorola Online Media Centre www.motorola.com/mediacenter

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