NauticNews

Barcelona World Race: The F Word

Seventy five days of hard racing, the living might be relatively easy now but the small miles, and fractions of a miles are hard won for the Barcelona World Race’s ‘peloton’ trio: Renault Z.E Sailing Team, Neutrogena and Estrella Damm.

With good speeds in the brisk SE’ly winds some 700 miles off the coast of Florianapolis, BRA, blessed now with sunshine, ready miles and even the chance to build some serious hours in the bunk, to try to recharge the weary bones and stressed, aching muscles.

But, with the DTF miles counting down nicely and memories of southern storms, soaring albatross, and the south’s endless pallid, grey chill packed away with the extra thermals, balaclavas, gloves and thick socks, so the F Word inevitably bobs into conversations:

“ We also want to finish for our sponsor Estrella Damm, because we know that it is important to them. And I personally, can’t wait to come back to Barcelona, ​​to my city, to our people, to the welcome … now Pepe and I are very excited to think we will be able to finish the course”.  Said Estrella Damm’s Alex Pella today.

One hundred or so miles to the NE, aboard Estrella Damm’s nearest rival, Ryan Breymaier also uses the F Word, the not the expletive that the Annapolis bred co-skipper might just have let slip a few times over the last 11 weeks at sea:

“For sure you are aware the finish gets closer each day, it’s feeling like that more and more, honestly I am pretty ready to be done! I am really, really pleased with the weather systems we have.  It is going to enable us to get up this South Atlantic very quickly and that is great for me.  We are definitely savouring the moments as they pass, moments of bliss, of the weather we have got right now, it makes the icing on the cake. I just hope the North Atlantic treats us as well as the South Atlantic is treating us right now.”

The two red hulled IMOCA Open 60’s have been enjoying red carpet conditions, but both equally aware that every little mile makes a difference during this stage of their ascent up the Atlantic. But for Pachi Rivero and Toño Piris on Renault Z.E the opportunity to build their cushion during the last 24 hours, to bank an extra 20-25 miles on the pursuing duo. They are expected to hit a transition zone of light airs first, perhaps even by tomorrow morning, and any extra margin is additional insulation as Neutrogena and Estrella Damm are forecast to hold the fast downwind conditions for longer.

For Hugo Boss’ Andy Meiklejohn and Wouter Verbraak there is the disappointment of knowing that 48 hours of constant hard work since they stopped, trying to make their repairs independently in the Falklands, has not been enough. They will have to wait now for the arrival of their shore team members who were due to fly to the remote South Atlantic Archipelago today (Wednesday) on the one scheduled flight per week from RAF Brize Norton in England. The duo were staying at sea, off the east coast of East Falkland, before an expected rendezvous with their team off Stanley, the Islands’ capital.

At the front of the fleet Iker Martinez and Xabi Fernandez have just started to feel their first hints of their own Doldrums slowdown, but not before they have clawed back 137 miles on the race leaders Virbac-Paprec 3 who are 323 miles ahead.

Rankings at Wednesday 16th March at 1400hrs UTC

  1. VIRBAC-PAPREC 3 at 3322,7 miles to finish
  2. MAPFRE at 323,5 miles to leader
  3. RENAULT Z.E at 1300,1 miles
  4. NEUTROGENA at 1527,5 miles
  5. ESTRELLA DAMM Sailing Team at 1619,7 miles
  6. GAES CENTROS AUDITIVOS at 2237,9 miles
  7. MIRABAUD at 2660,9 miles
  8. HUGO BOSS at 3131,1 miles
  9. FORUM MARITIM CATALA at 4557,8 miles
  10. WE ARE WATER at 6478,1 miles
  11. CENTRAL LECHERA ASTURIANA at 8227,6 miles

RTD FONCIA
RTD PRESIDENT
RTD GROUPE BEL

Quotes

Ryan Breymaier (USA) Estrella Damm: “ It is awesome to see Alex. I have known him since before the European Pro Tour and I know that he has been preparing for a long time to do this race, it is really nice to see him. It is so cool to have five minutes to communicate with a fellow skipper, even if you don’t say much the facial expressions and the thumbs up and the smiles and the hand signals between us is enough, It really shows that we are competitors but in a friendly sense, which I enjoy.

We are trying to recover from our days of exhaustion, Boris is in the bunk, sleeping and letting the boat do its thing. The boat is perfectly capable of handling itself at the moment.

Right now to be honest I am not sure what is making the difference, the hull form is quite OK when you have this rolling swell, it is just when it gets super flat that we suffer. Other than that we have a very, very low drag nice keel, a huge sail plan which helps right now, we are only sailing with genoa and main we don’t have a gennaker up, and the boat is sailing at a very high percentage of its polars, it is easily driven, under water all the appendages are low drag and we just can take advantage of having a nice sailplan.

Alex Pella (ESP) Estrella Damm:
“We have a good fight ahead, It’s a sunny day, great,  under spinnaker, staysail and the full main”

“Let’s  see if we’re lucky, because every time we’re in the rhythm something happens to us, like the other day with the staysail. We were very close to Neutrogena and even overtook them, and then that happened and it cost us a hundred miles. Renault Z.E. is way ahead, there will be many accordions (closing up and opening again).

We come from a position a long time ago now, a very strange situation since we stopped in New Zealand, with everything that happened, the cyclone and our injuries… But we are very pleased to have two boats around and knowing that there will be many options that are ahead. We have plenty to play for eat some miles and stress them a little”.

Xabi Fernandez (ESP) MAPFRE: “ Here we are making 11 knots or so. We are at 300 nm of distance from the leaders. In a way, we expected this accordion effect once again, but we have to sail in the Doldrums also… I guess we will keep gaining miles during the next few hours but then we will stop also, so we will see how we can manage it. The important thing here is seeing where the French pair is and also where we are immediately alter the Doldrums because maybe they are almost leaving the Doldrums now and we have not faced them yet…

We are trying to rest as much as possible since we are very tired, but fine. Being able to sleep for a few hours is a godsend! Besides, we are saving some food… But we are fine, looking forward to leave the Doldrums behind us and see what happens then… Afterwards, we will have to sail upwind like crazies! Being honest, we are very much looking forward to the finish in Barcelona… At least the sun is shining now… We can even take some consolation from that.”

Photo Credit: Neutrogena

Tags on NauticNews: Barcelona World RaceOpen 60 IMOCA

More details: www.barcelonaworldrace.org

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