

|
Volvo Ocean Race 2011/2012 - Leg 8 - Lissabon - Lorient - Start 10.06.2012
www.volvooceanrace.com - Übersicht
Fotogalerie Leg 8
Tagesberichte siehe Menu unten
Pressemitteilung vom Start der 8. Etappe des Volvo Ocean Race
June 13, 2012 - 1900 UTC Leg 8 Day 4
TELEFÓNICA KEEP PEDAL DOWN AS STORM FORCES PACK RESHUFFLE Leg 8 13/06/2012 19:04:06 UTC
&xnbsp; DTL DTLC BS DTF
1 TELE 0.00 0 25 867.7 2 PUMA 4.60 2 22.4 872.3 3 CMPR 9.90 0 24 877.5 4 GPMA 11.10 8 22.2 878.7 5 ADOR 29.40 5 22.5 897.1 6 SNYA 50.30 7 21.8 918.0
Telefónica (Iker Martínez/ESP) is leading the charge not only towards the finish of Leg 8 in Lorient on Friday but straight towards the centre of a particularly nasty north-Atlantic depression. Groupama (Franck Cammas/FRA) faltered briefly, allowing PUMA Ocean Racing powered by BERG (Ken Read/USA) and CAMPER with Emirates Team New Zealand (Chris Nicholson/AUS) to overtake.With around 800 miles to go before the fleet will need to gybe – a tricky manoeuvre at the best of times - the worst of the weather is yet to come. Gusts of over 40 knots and swell of six or seven metres is expected, but as yet the fleet is showing no sign of easing up.
|

Foto: Yann Riou
|
The pressure is on for the leaders and no one is going to back off unless it’s really necessary.
“We’ve thrown a rock on the accelerator so that no one can take their foot off and driving the boat is pretty exciting right now,” said Ken Read, skipper of PUMA Ocean Racing powered by BERG. According to Read, the weather has a Southern Ocean feel to it. “We are heading for a bashing,” he said today in a live interview from the boat. With a fractional code zero headsail set and one reef in the indexsail, Read said the waves were just starting to build, something for which the Bay of Biscay has a notorious reputation.
Though the conditions are likely to bordering on a seamanship and survival situation, there is still a race to be won, and the stakes are high. Groupama’s overall lead could easily topple and with extra pressure on the rig and sails, it is a fine balance between being competitive and being prudent. “You always worry about things, but you can’t worry too much,” cautioned Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing skipper Ian Walker, currently in fifth position. “We are still racing and we still have to get to Lorient as fast as we can.”Sail changes in heavy conditions are expensive. With everything stacked as far aft as possible and only one person going forward into the galley at any one time, controlling the possibility of a nosedive is paramount. A slow sail change or a wipe-out could easily cost leaders Telefónica their 4.6 nautical-mile (nm) margin in a matter of minutes.
Former race winner and skipper of sixth-placed Sanya, Mike Sanderson, says it’s the heavy airs downwind sailing that makes the Volvo a ‘must-do’ race. “It’s with an air of excitement and with nervousness that we go into this,” he said. “To be honest, I think every skipper would be lying if they said they look forward to it. It’s anxious times.”At 1900 GMT, Telefónica was averaging 25 knots of boat speed, 4.6 nm ahead of PUMA, and 9.9 nm ahead of CAMPER with Emirates Team New Zealand, both of whom have overhauled Groupama.Skipper Chris Nicholson and his men were slightly to the west of the leading trio and, with miles still to catch up they were pushing flat out.“We have the right sail configuration going into this low, and when we need to change, it will be a pretty quick change,” Nicholson said. “We have to push hard to keep the pressure on these guys. We will judge it at the time if we need to back off, but for now, we will keep the hammer down.”As the pace continued to heat up, Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing were just shy of 30 nm off the lead while Sanya, who were struggling to be competitive against the newer boats, were trailing 50.3 nm behind in sixth place.The next day and half could be make or break for the leaders. It is forecast to be an extremely windy night and it will be necessary to stay in one piece and as well as staying fast. The finish in Lorient could be as early as Friday midday.
June 13, 2012 - 0700 UTC Leg 8 Day 4
STORMS THREATEN AS TELEFÓNICA TURN FIRST FOR HOME
Leg 8 13/06/2012 7:01:39 UTC
&xnbsp; DTL DTLC BS DTF 1 TELE 0.00 0 16.6 1118.4 2 GPMA 0.80 0 15.5 1119.3 3 PUMA 1.80 0 15.6 1120.2 4 CMPR 6.70 2 15.2 1125.1 5 ADOR 12.70 4 14 1131.1 6 SNYA 22.70 7 13 1141.1
In an exciting duel this morning, at 0456 GMT Telefónica (Iker Martínez/ESP) led Groupama (Franck Cammas/FRA) by three minutes as they rounded the turning point at the Azores island of São Miguel on Leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race. Now the leaders are battening down the hatches to tough it out in winds of 40 knots and a huge sea state for the final 1,000-mile push to the finish in Lorient, France.At the turning mark, less than an hour separated the first five teams who are now clear of São Miguel and pointing north east, while Sanya and Mike Sanderson were just off the northern tip of the island.
Supporters from the islands turned out at dawn, hollering and cheering as the teams sailed through the archipelago.According to Hamish Hooper, Media Crew Member with fourth-placed CAMPER with Emirates Team New Zealand (Chris Nicholson/AUS), things will only become more interesting and more intense over the next 24 hours as the barometer drops and the wind builds to some very strong gales.Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing’s navigator Jules Salter says that as much as 45 knots of wind is possible as the fleet nears the centre of the depression which is sweeping across their path. “Unfortunately, the way in which the storm is moving right now, it will be difficult to get to where we are trying to go without seeing some exceptionally heinous conditions,” he said.
It will be Thursday before the fleet is in the thick of the low, which could produce conditions not seen since the Southern Ocean on Leg 5, which saw five of the six-boat fleet suffer serious damage.Holding it together will be key for the top four still in contention for overall honours, and while Telefónica, Groupama, PUMA Ocean Racing powered by BERG (Ken Read/USA) and CAMPER will be less inclined to take risks, Abu Dhabi and Sanya, who are clearly out of the frame for an overall win, will, perhaps, be braver. “It’s about time we got some real smoking downwind conditions – this should be quite a finish into France,” remarked Abu Dhabi’s watch leader Craig Satterthwaite.At 0700 GMT today, in a building breeze, Telefónica led Groupama by 0.8 nm, with PUMA just 1.8 nm behind the leader. Still well in touch, 6.7 nm behind the Spanish team were CAMPER, while Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing were a further six miles astern. Speeds were already back up to 16.6 knots for the leaders, while Sanya, who were 22 nm behind and still trying to get clear of the island, were only managing 13 knots.
“Everyone is getting ready for one last push," said PUMA MCM Amory Ross. "We know it will be tough, tiring, wet and wild, but it’s only for a few days and they will be some of our last, so bring it on. What would a leg of this race be without some extremely uncomfortable sailing?" &xnbsp;
|
|
|