Friday 30 January 2009

VOR: IT’S A WIN FOR TELEFÓNICA BLUE IN LEG 4


Bouwe Bekking is at the helm. In front (l-r) are Gabriele Olivo (ITA), Xabier Fernandez (ESP), Tom Addis (AUS). Telefonica Blue, skippered by Bouwe Bekking (NED), finishes first, on leg 4 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Singapore to Qingdao, China at 07:00:25 GMT. Image copyright David Kneale/Volvo Ocean Race.

by Volvo Ocean Race media

In a leg that has been full of drama, bravery and courage, Bouwe Bekking and his men racing Telefónica Blue have pulled off their second leg win in a row to take first place on the podium in Qingdao, China, after sailing immaculately.

PUMA (Ken Read/USA) finished in second place at 0817 (1617 local time).

Ericsson 4 (Torben Grael/BRA) took the third spot at 0904 GMT (1704 local time).

Telefónica Blue


Telefonica Blue, skippered by Bouwe Bekking (NED) (pictured), finishes first, on leg 4 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Singapore to Qingdao, China at 07:00:25 GMT. Image copyright Rick Tomlinson/Volvo Ocean Race.

Shortly before crossing the finish in thick fog at 0700 GMT (1500 local time), after racing for 11 days, 2 hours and 26 seconds (11d:02h:00m:25s), Bekking said, “I feel far from comfortable. Even if it should go wrong, the guys should all feel like the moral winners of the leg, they sailed like champions.”

The eight points for the leg win, brings Telefónica Blue’s total score to 41.5 points, just 3.5 points behind race leader Ericsson 4.

Once clear of the finish, an exhausted Bekking talked about the leg that has taken its toll on most of the boats in the fleet.

“It was the hardest leg of the Volvo Ocean Race ever. It is just great to be here in one piece and we are in one piece.

“I am so happy with the team, they showed great seamanship. We have Olympic medallists and offshore sailors onboard and they just got on with it and came together.

“We hit something, you can see it on the bow, but we don’t know what it was. It has crushed a bit of the bow, but that is the only thing we have found. We have checked all the bulkheads, they seem to be fine, and we have no delamination, so I am very happy with that. We will be ready for the in-port race for sure.

“We just put keel in the middle and nursed the boat in the storm. I was downstairs at the time, so I kept shouting up to the crew to slow us down. If I had been on deck, I might have pushed harder, but being downstairs was better in the end.

“It was the craziest sailing I’ve done, but we are here at last. I am like an old seaman and I think that you need to stay away from land in storms, so that is what we did. When we were by Taiwan there was 30 – 35 knots of wind, but it was the sea state that was the problem, but the boat did a glamour job.”

Bekking had kept Telefónica Blue in the top three for the entire leg, but perhaps the turning point was navigator Simon Fisher/GBR made an offering of birthday Sangria to King Neptune on day three, in the hope that the King would keep watch as they headed out into the notorious Luzon Strait later in the leg.

The crew picked their way through the minefield of unmarked shoals and atolls in the lee of the Philippines, watching the depth sounder drop to just a few metres, but were still determined not to give an inch, knowing, as Simon Fisher had said, that to win this leg, taking the easy way round wasn’t really an option.

As the rest of the fleet headed for shelter on day six, 23 January, Bekking was preparing for the worst. “We are just enjoying the last day in paradise and then we go to hell,” he said. “The real race will start when the big breeze comes in and then, it will be very hard.”

While the rest of the fleet hung back, Bekking pressed on, out into the 200-mile Luzon Strait and gales topping out at 55 knots. Ericsson 3 (Magnus Olsson/SWE) and Ericsson 4 (Torben Grael/BRA) watched Telefónica Blue’s progress from their chasing position in the shelter of Luzon Island, anxious to see how Bekking fared before following.

Bekking directed operations from the confines of his bunk, laid low with a damaged back. He paid tribute to his crew at time, saying: “They all worked as a great team in the last 36 hours. The only thing I could do was be awake and give my input and advice, which was, above all, ‘boys, keep it in one piece’.

The team survived another, even worse storm off the northeastern tip of Taiwan, and also collided with a submerged object, damaging the crash bow section of the boat.
However, Telefónica Blue emerged from the aftermath of carnage relatively unscathed, other than breaking their wind instruments, and stole a commanding lead, which they held to the end.

PUMA


PUMA Ocean Racing, skippered by Ken Read (USA) (pictured), finishes second, on leg 4 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Singapore to Qingdao, China at 08:17:36 GMT. Image copyright Rick Tomlinson/Volvo Ocean Race.

Kenny Read/USA, guided PUMA through the finish of Volvo Ocean Race leg four in Qingdao, China today at 0817 GMT (1617 local time) to claim second place after an unbelievable effort, which saw the team break their boom and drop anchor in the Philippines order to make repairs.

On arrival in Qingdao, PUMA’s skipper, Kenny Read said:
“Our crew really became a team on this leg. We have really found our legs. After our problems we came back with an unbelievable effort. We came together.

“There were many times when I was sat behind the computer, looking for safe havens. It was always at the back of my mind, if we needed to go to a safe place quickly.

“All of us have used storm sails, but none of us has had to do it three separate times on one leg. Even with that, we almost had too much sail area, but last night was the best night of sailing we had on the leg.”

PUMA’s navigator, Andrew Cape/AUS, a veteran of three Whitbread/Volvo Races, added:
“It was a not very pleasant course, but we had to do it. We threw the lead to survive and we came second in the end. It was nasty with lots of wind and big seas and there seemed to always be a rock in the way. It was the most difficult leg I have ever done."

Torben Grael brought Ericsson 4 alongside just under an hour later, to claim six points for third place. Grael said:
“This leg has been very hard on the boats, but our boat has taken it well and at least we got here, but you are never sure. The crew has been perfect.

“The weather has been better than expected, and the temperature only dropped in the last few hours, when it became very cold, so we had good wind all the way in.

“I think we all want to win, but we all wanted to get here in one piece. We had lots of trouble with fishing boats and nets, we had to back down three times and there were so many boats out there. But it is the way it goes, you win some you lose some. I feel bad for the other boats. I was in that position last race and I know how it feels. It is hard for the sailors.”

Leg Four Finishing Order Qingdao
1. Telefónica Blue/ESP (Bouwe Bekking/NED) 8 points
2. PUMA/USA (Ken Read/USA) 7 points
3. Ericsson 4/SWE (Torben Grael) 6 points

Overall Leaderboard (Provisional)
Ericsson 4: 45 (FINISHED)
Telefónica Blue: 41.5 (FINISHED)
PUMA: 38 (FINISHED)
Green Dragon: 22.5 (RACING)

Green Dragon (Ian Walker/GBR) is still racing, with 347 miles to go, and is anticipated to finish in fourth position on 31 January.

Teams that have suspended or retired from this leg will be assigned points by the race committee at a later date.

Ericsson 3: SUS
Delta Lloyd: SUS
Telefónica Black: DNF
Team Russia: DNS

Volvo Ocean Race

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