Velux 5 Oceans - Alone-Round the World Yacht Race
www.velux5oceans.com - Übersicht

Saturday 2nd December, 2006
British solo sailors finally reach Cape Town (South Africa) aboard ECOVER
HUGO BOSS is sadly no longer

One week after their dramatic ordeal in the Southern Ocean, British solo skippers, Alex Thomson (GBR) and Mike Golding (GBR), finally arrived into Cape Town (South Africa). ECOVER docked around 19.00 GMT on 1 December with two very exhausted, very relieved sailors onboard. The start of the VELUX 5 Oceans yacht race in Spain and the horrific storms of the first night, 41 days ago, now seem but a distant memory. It is time for Golding make a decision about ECOVER's future in the VELUX 5 Oceans, whilst Thomson must come to terms with all that has happened and start to rebuild his life.

Ersehnter Anblick - Signalhill
Foto: www.w-w-i.com/velux_5_oceans
Nine days have now passed since Thomson, 32, suffered severe keel failure whilst in a close third place in the VELUX 5 Oceans. Forced to make the crushing decision to abandon his beloved HUGO BOSS, he took to a life raft and was rescued heroically by fellow sailor Mike Golding, who subsequently suffered a broken mast. Thrown into a very unusual situation together, the two solo sailors have undoubtedly formed a special bond. Having battled 1000 nautical miles to South Africa under vastly reduced sail, they could not have been happier to set foot on dry land.

"Mike has been absolutely brilliant and I am hugely grateful to him for everything he has done," said Thomson on arrival in Cape Town. "We were both looking forward to a few beers last night and it was great to sink my teeth into a cheeseburger after six weeks of freeze-dried food. It has been a long week with an awful lot to take in and I am looking forward to starting a normal life again. I need to come to terms with the fact that life is not what it was. There is a lot to sort out when I come home and I need to switch my focus to my future."

The two skippers were enjoying some of the most extraordinary and exhilarating sailing of the race when disaster struck and neither has been put off by last week's events. A very pragmatic Golding commented: "It hasn't worked out the way we planned it, but all of that is put into perspective. HUGO BOSS is gone and Alex is not. To some extent maybe that is the reason I was here. If that is the only reason I was in this race then that is good enough for me. I am very proud of what I did. Do I feel like a hero? No, Alex would have done the same for me. I know that with single-handed sailors, or indeed sailors - anyone who puts to sea - there is a mutual bond."

"There will be a different relationship between us now. There is no onus on him or me for that to be so. Very early on I said to Alex: 'You are not a passenger and you are not crew. Do what you feel comfortable with. Treat everything on board as if it were your own."
With regard to Thomson's huge loss, Golding said: "He is very disappointed to lose HUGO BOSS, much more than I think he is freely prepared to admit. To damage a boat badly is hard for a skipper, but to lose one is devastating. It is like losing a member of the family."

Thomson and Golding will fly back to the UK together, where Thomson must put the VELUX 5 Oceans behind him and look to his future. His ultimate dream still stands; to be the first British sailor to win the Vendée Globe in 2008. He has a new yacht currently under construction, aboard which he will compete in the double-handed Barcelona World Race next year in the lead up to the Vendée Globe.
- End -

About Alex Thomson
* Alex Thomson set a new 24hr solo monohull World Speed Record in December 2003 covering 468.7nm at an average speed of 19.5 knots during the Défi Atlantique, in which he finished 3rd.
* At 25, Alex Thomson became the youngest skipper ever to win a round the world race - the Clipper Race 1998/99.
* In October 2005 Alex Thomson stepped forward as the only skipper to confirm that he will be racing "3 in 3": 3 grueling round the worlds in as many years: the solo VELUX 5 Oceans in 2006, the inaugural two-handed Barcelona World Race 2007 and the blue ribbon Vendée Globe 2008.
100,000 miles, 3 years, 1 goal: be the first Briton to win the Vendée Globe.
www.alexthomsonracing.com

About HUGO BOSS
Sailing complements the sponsorship portfolio of HUGO BOSS which already includes Formula 1 (Team McLaren Mercedes), IRL (Penske Racing), Tennis (Davis Cup), Golf, Boxing (Vladmir Klitschko) and Soccer. In sailing, HUGO BOSS gets another platform to demonstrate its fashion competence both on the boat with BOSS GREEN and shore-side with BOSS BLACK. BOSS GREEN provides Alex and the crew with highly functional and technical outfits for all possible weather conditions around the globe while BOSS BLACK will dress the crew for every celebration function in the smartest possible way.
www.hugoboss-sailing.com

VELUX 5 Oceans - The Ultimate Solo Challenge
Leg 1 Start: 22 October 2006, Bilbao, Spain
Leg 2 Start: 14 January 2007, Fremantle, Western Australia
Leg 3 Start: March 2007, Norfolk, USA
Race ends: Bilbao April 2007

VELUX 5 OCEANS is the oldest, most established, continuously run, single-handed round the world yacht race. It has taken place every four years since 1982 and is run by Sir Robin Knox-Johnston's Clipper Ventures Plc.
VELUX 5 OCEANS is the longest and toughest event, for any individual in any sport. In 2006, the event gets tougher. The legs between ports get longer. The stopovers are fewer and more compact - with a shorter window of preparation for the next leg. And, by the end of it the skippers will have sailed 30,000 miles of ocean alone, facing all the extremes that nature can throw at them.
www.velux5oceans.com www.clipper-ventures.com

Copyright © 1996-2016 - SEGEL.DE

Segeln blindes gif
Segeln blindes gif