Sunday, October 21, 2007

Middle Sea Race started

The 2007 Rolex Middle Sea Race set off today from Marsamxett Harbour with the crews apprehensive about what may lie ahead but displaying a quiet confidence that they are prepared for tough race and some tough decisions. Last night, 60 yachts were registered to take part. Following a pretty sobering weather briefing, three yachts chose not to start this morning. Since the start four yachts have retired, leaving 53 yachts on the course. In the absence of a record fleet, the event may still make history. This morning's routings for the two fastest monohulls - George David's 90-foot Rambler (USA) and Tom Hill's 76-foot Titan 12 (USA) - suggested a finish time of between 7 and 8AM on Monday morning! The fleet was divided into five starts, the first group of the smallest yachts setting off at 1100 to the thunderous echo of the field gun. The doublehanded British yacht Slingshot of Shaun Murphy and Roger Barber repeated its excellent start of last year and led the fleet off the line. It was the Maltese old-stager Arthur Podesta and Elusive Medbank that claimed the glory of first boat out of the harbour and round the turning mark off Tigne Point. Podesta was closely followed by Georges Bonello DuPuis' Primadonna (MLT) and the Ripard/Calascione family on Jammin (MLT). A short break in proceedings allowed the crowds to catch their breath and the bigger yachts time to enter the harbour before the final group of three starts. The Greek yacht Superfast Racing, a former winner of the race (as Optimum 3), led the third start away whilst Cippa Lippa (ITA) found herself red-faced and over early. Not a crucial error in 607 mile race, but not good in front of so many onlookers. Start four saw the big boys come to line. Taking full use of the ten minutes between the preparatory signal and the start gun, these behemoths appeared to sniff the air at the line one or two times before returning into the depths of the harbour. Stephen Ainsworth's Loki from Australia seemed to get the best of it closely followed by Titan XII nearest to the Royal Malta Yacht Club. Rambler with Jerry Kirby on the bow and Ken Read on the helm had a decidedly second row start but soon carved her way to the front. At 4.45pm this afternoon Rambler was abreast of Sicily making 12 knots, with Titan 12 behind and then a chasing pack comprising Superfast, Ourdream Damiani (ITA), Whisper (IRE), Atalanta II (ITA), Valkyrie (CAN) and Loki about three miles further back. Talking to the skippers and navigators this morning, they were all keenly aware of the weather approaching the racecourse. Nick Lykiardopulo (owner of Aera that won overall the storm ridden Rolex Sydney Hobart in 2004 and who participated in the infamous '98 race aswell) is racing as Navigator on Nikos Lazos and Pericles Livas' Superfast Racing. Lykiardopulo felt the 52-foot Greek yacht could be well-postioned for the system despite its strength, "I think we'll see 55 knots tops, which is probably more than we saw in 04, but quite a bit less than in '98. But we'll be fine. She is a strong boat, we'll have to spend a bit more time on the wind than the maxis but we should be most of the way across the north of Sicily before the wind hits. It might get a bit bumpy on the western corner." He even found time to laugh that, "the good thing about being navigator when it pours with rain is that you get to sit down below and check the equipment."




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