Dominican Today Forum » Living in the DR » Entertainment and Sports » One of the truly great Sporting events about to kick off
#1 - Posted 28 October 2011, 9:18 PM
Location: United States
Join date: June 2008
Member #: 933
Posts: 7983
Send Message
One of the truly great Sporting events about to kick off
Quote:
More than just an ocean race – teams prepare for in-port test


The first points of the Volvo Ocean Race 2011-12 will be up for grabs on Saturday – and although the event is known as the world’s premier round the world yacht race, first blood will go to the team that’s quickest round an inshore course.

At 1200 UTC (1400 local time) the starting gun will fire and the six Volvo Open 70 race boats will open the throttles in the Iberdrola In-Port Race, marking the start of nine months of full-on competition and intense rivalry.

In-Port races take place in all 10 Host Ports around the world testing the crews’ skills at close-quarters manoeuvres and tactics. Sailed close to the shore, the races provide a spectacle for the millions of people who will watch the race worldwide, while also providing opportunity for the teams to pick up extra points that could prove vital when overall positions are decided.

For some teams the focus will be entirely on scoring in the nine offshore legs, and that will be reflected in the way they approach the inshore racing. But for others, the In-Port races will be key to moving up the overall leaderboard as more than 20 per cent of all points on offer over the entire race can be won.

To see the possible courses for the Iberdrola In-Port Race click here.

“There’s a lot riding on the in-port races – they are going to be intense,” said CAMPER helmsman/trimmer Adam Minoprio. The 26-year-old New Zealander is a newcomer to ocean racing but will be in his element inshore, having won the 2009 World Match Racing Tour.

“Team New Zealand has a great background with inshore racing and the skillset of the crew makes us a very strong team,” Minoprio added. “This week we sailed the in-port race course which took us an hour and everyone on board was exhausted after it. It works out we have to do a sail change every eight minutes so there will be a lot of hard work on board.”

Abu Dhabi skipper Ian Walker, who won silver medals at the Olympics in 1996 and 2000, said: “Everything is ready and we can’t wait to line up against the other teams. We have spent this week concentrating on inshore manoeuvres and it has gone very well. The forecast is for strong breeze on Saturday so there will be extra pressure on the crew to get it right.”

Telefónica skipper Iker Martínez, who picked up gold at the 2004 Olympics and silver in 2008, has the added boost of having his long-term crew Xabi Fernández alongside him.

Fernández, who fills the role of trimmer on the Volvo Open 70, said: “The boats aren't designed for this type of race but instead for ocean racing and the quickfire manoeuvres required in an in-port race are very complicated to perform. If you make one mistake you can lose a lot of ground and end up finishing last.”

Ken Read, skipper of PUMA’s Mar Mostro, said he has mixed feelings ahead of the first in-port race.

“It’s very clear how good everybody is so I guess I feel a little trepidation knowing that,” he said. “But we’re as good as we’re going to be and it’s time to get out there and put our money where our mouth is. Every point counts, and if you took the six teams right now and had a tiddlywinks contest it would be a blood match. Every point is huge.”

Making his debut in the Volvo Ocean Race, Groupama sailing team skipper Franck Cammas promised his team would put up a fight.

“This is what we are here for, to fight against these teams and these skippers,” he said. “It’s always a great fight because these people sail extremely well. They make very few mistakes and it’s hard to outsmart them but we will put up a fight.”

Despite being the only second-generation boat in the fleet, Team Sanya skipper Mike Sanderson can rest easy over his yacht’s inshore potential. In the 2008-09 race the boat, then raced as Telefónica Blue, placed on the podium in all seven in-port races with four wins.

“As Telefónica Blue, she was great in the inshore racing and a rocket ship upwind or tight reaching,” Sanderson said. “Hopefully we have kept 99 per cent of that and improved her performance for the heavy air stuff.”

The Iberdrola In-Port Race is expected to take around an hour to complete. Racing will be streamed live at volvooceanrace.com and will be accompanied by a live blog of the action.

The first offshore leg of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Alicante to Cape Town, starts on November 5.


Proof of dreadlocks Bigotry.
"....... what did Cubans do to deserve preferential treatment?......and treat Black people in the most racist of ways.......... the Cubans are just a bunch of uberracist savages."
: I WILL NOT ANSWER ANY POSTS BY THE BIGOT KNOWN AS DREADLOCKS.
Post IP/Country: 98.254.152.12* / US
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
#2 - Posted 5 November 2011, 7:51 PM
Location: United States
Join date: June 2008
Member #: 933
Posts: 7983
Send Message
RE: One of the truly great Sporting events about to kick off
CAMPER shine as teams head out towards brutal seas
5753
PAUL TODD/Volvo Ocean Race
CAMPER with Emirates Team New Zealand enjoyed the best of a fast and furious inshore course today before the most evenly matched fleet in Volvo Ocean Race history blasted out towards brutal sea conditions at the start of Leg 1.

A crowd of 60,000 watched as Spain’s Crown Prince Felipe fired the gun to set the six boats on their way. French soccer legend Zinedine Zidane joined Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing on the inshore course, making it a gala start to the first ocean leg, which will take the fleet over 6,500 nautical miles to Cape Town, South Africa.

Chris Nicholson’s CAMPER were the slickest of the six away, as winds gusting up to 30 knots greeted the fleet. CAMPER increased their lead over PUMA Ocean Racing powered by BERG to 1 minute 39 seconds at the Alicante leaving mark at the end of the eight-nm course, with Team Telefónica another 36 seconds behind.

Abu Dhabi came next, followed by Groupama sailing team, who took a voluntary two-turn penalty following a collision with PUMA’s Mar Mostro just before the start, and Team Sanya.

“Our skills are offshore for sure,” said Cammas, skipper of the first French team to compete in the Volvo Ocean Race in 18 years. “We are in this race for the first time so we need to learn a few things. It’s important to finish the first 24 hours in good shape because the race is very long and we don’t want to break anything early on. The first night could be the hardest of the whole leg.”

After almost three hours of racing, Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing skipper Ian Walker said it had been the most chaotic start ever.

"Wow – what a start," he said. "That has to be the most chaotic 40 minutes of sailing I have ever been involved with. Six teams with only 10 sailors trying to throw their 70ft boats around a tiny course in 25 knots of wind. I am not sure what our guest Zinedine Zidane made of it but he looked happy to get off!

"We are already approaching Cabo de Palos only two and a half hours into the race. We have been struggling a bit at high speed reaching as we expected against the three Juan K boats but at least we have just overtaken CAMPER. I don’t foresee much rest tonight as we push on upwind towards Gibraltar."

Emotions were running high on the dockside prior to the departure ceremony as the sailors said tearful goodbyes to their loved ones, who they won’t see until they reach Cape Town around three weeks later.

A huge crowd turned out to enjoy the excitement pulsing through the docks. Even the most hardened competitors were caught up in the moment as the Volvo Ocean Race 2011-12, the 11th edition of the race, took up a journey that will take the fleet over 39,000nm around the world, finishing in Galway, Ireland in July.

For Sanya’s Mike Sanderson, the race’s most experienced skipper and winner of the 2005-06 edition, it is the first time he has competed in this race as a father – and there was no hiding the emotion for the New Zealander.

“Today feels different to any race I have done,” said Sanderson, whose wife Emma competed in the 2001-02 edition on Amer Sports Two. “There are more emotions when you leave for a Volvo Ocean Race and even more so when you have to say goodbye to kids. I’d be lying if I said it was just business as usual. It means so much more.”

Following the traditional “kiss and cry” moment the teams were introduced to Prince Felipe. The Prince, a keen sailor, visited the Volvo Ocean Race with his wife Letizia when the Princess of Asturias was named godmother to Telefónica last month.

Zidane heralded the race as “beautiful” before joining the Abu Dhabi team. He might have added that it was extremely wet, after he jumped backwards off the boat at the end of the inshore course.

Professional big-wave surfer Laird Hamilton, who was on board PUMA´s Mar Mostro, was doubtless more accustomed to leaping off. He said he had “incredible respect” for the crews.

With the boats departing to their team songs blasting out across the Race Village, the spotlight turned to the racecourse where hundreds of spectator boats had gathered to get up-close and personal with the six Volvo Open 70s.

Ian Walker’s Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing had drawn first blood in the event’s curtain-raiser, the Iberdrola In-Port Race, sailing to a 14-minute victory to claim six points and the top spot on the leaderboard heading out to Cape Town.

Leg 1 sees the teams take on the unpredictable Mediterranean, the tidal bottleneck of the Straits of Gibraltar and the strong northeasterly trade winds of the North Atlantic before facing the Doldrums, a constantly-moving area of high pressure found a few hundred miles either side of the equator, notorious for being one of the toughest regions on the planet to sail through.

Once through the Doldrums the teams will search out the southeasterly trade winds close to the Brazilian shore, hoping to pick up the meteorological slingshot effect that will fire them through the South Atlantic to Cape Town.

The teams will have to face a baptism of fire in the first 24 hours of the race, with head-on winds of more than 25 knots forecast and choppy seas – potentially boat-breaking conditions.

“The conditions at first will be ideal for these boats – fast sailing in fresh breeze,” said Gonzalo Infante, the Volvo Ocean Race’s chief meteorologist. “But within about 12 hours, as the boats race into the night, they will have to punch upwind into winds around 25 knots and confused seas. These boats will be slamming around and it will be very wet on deck.”

Rounding positions and provisional times at the Alicante leaving mark: 1. CAMPER with Emirates Team New Zealand 39 minutes 44 seconds, 2. PUMA Ocean Racing powered by BERG +1 min 39 sec, 3. Team Telefónica + 2:15, 4. Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing + 2:55, 5. Groupama sailing team + 3:57, 6. Sanya +7:38

Proof of dreadlocks Bigotry.
"....... what did Cubans do to deserve preferential treatment?......and treat Black people in the most racist of ways.......... the Cubans are just a bunch of uberracist savages."
: I WILL NOT ANSWER ANY POSTS BY THE BIGOT KNOWN AS DREADLOCKS.
Post IP/Country: 98.254.152.12* / US
#3 - Posted 6 November 2011, 11:14 AM
Location: United States
Join date: June 2008
Member #: 933
Posts: 7983
Send Message
RE: One of the truly great Sporting events about to kick off
Quote:
CAMPER LEADS CHARGE TOWARDS GIBRALTAR STRAITS

Leg 1 Report: 06/11/2011 - 12:55 UTC
DTL DTLC BS DTF
1 CAMP 0.00 0.0 11.6 6242.9
2 TELE 6.30 3.0 13 6249.2
3 PUMA 9.40 1.0 12.7 6252.2
4 GPMA 10.10 5.0 11.3 6253.0
- ADOR Suspended Racing
- SNYA Suspended Racing

After a bumpy night beating down the Spanish coast in head winds gusting 25 knots, Chris Nicholson’s CAMPER leads the fleet towards the first waypoint 55 nautical miles dead up wind to the entrance to the Straits of Gibraltar.

Telefónica (Iker Martínez/ESP) is hard on her heels just over six nautical miles behind, while PUMA’s Mar Mostro (Ken Read/USA) and Groupama 4 (Franck Cammas/FRA) are only 10 miles adrift in third and fourth position.

At 1300 GMT today, the fleet had clearly split with Telefónica and PUMA’s Mar Mostro taking the inshore track where the sea state is worse, but the winds are lighter, and CAMPER and Groupama 4 are 28 nm further offshore in a lot more wind. The short choppy sea state has caused the fleet to throttle back to an average speed of approximately 12 knots.

It has been a testing 24 hours for the six-strong fleet which left Alicante yesterday in a blaze of glory. The strong conditions have caused Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing’s Azzam (Ian Walker/GBR) and Team Sanya (Mike Sanderson/NZL) to suspend racing , leaving the remaining four to press on towards Gibraltar and the exit out into the Atlantic. More information at: www.volvooceanrace.com
Proof of dreadlocks Bigotry.
"....... what did Cubans do to deserve preferential treatment?......and treat Black people in the most racist of ways.......... the Cubans are just a bunch of uberracist savages."
: I WILL NOT ANSWER ANY POSTS BY THE BIGOT KNOWN AS DREADLOCKS.
Post IP/Country: 98.254.152.12* / US