Please note: We are temporarily in maintenance mode, and some features, such as Buy&Sell, Forums and Messaging are temporarily offline. Back soon!

New York Barcelona Transoceanic Sailing Record - Sailing fast



12:45 AM Sat 10 Apr 2010 GMT
'Alex Pella onboard Estrella Damm - New York Barcelona Transoceanic Sailing Record (Photo :&copy Laura Carrau / FNOB)' New York - Barcelona Sailing Record (NY-BCN) Click Here to view large photo
After leaving New York's Ambrose Light at a little after 1430hrs (NY Time) yesterday afternoon in warm, summer-like sunshine the two Barcelona IMOCA Open 60s Estrella Damm and W-Hotelshave had a fast first night at sea, making rapid speeds towards Barcelona. Both boats have logged 300 miles in the last 18 hours

Top of the agenda for both crews in this duel across the Atlantic, which is designed to set a reference time for the 3750 miles passage from the New York to Barcelona, is flat out speed. For the immediate future their race is not so much focussed against each other but to simply stay ahead of a cold front which is providing them with perfect wind conditions for fast, blast reaching conditions, but they need to extract every last mile from the good winds while they can.

Meteo specialists concur with co-skippers Pepe Ribes (ESP) and To?o Pires (ESP) in their assertions in today's live link from the boats that they will have around two to two and a half days of fast reaching conditions to make hay, before the weather situation becomes less ideal.

Both of the Farr designed sister-ships have been able to maintain high average speeds in breezes which have topped 30 knots at times. After around 17 hours of racing they had covered around 300 miles, with average boat speeds consistently in the region of 17-19 knots, increasing through the night and early morning.

Estrella Damm, with Pepe Ribes (ESP), Alex Pella (ESP) and Stan Schreyer (USA) as co-skippers maintain the upper hand in the race, leading the 1300hrs UTC poll by nearly six miles from W-Hotels' Pachi Rivero, To?o Pires and Peter Becker (USA). For the American duo, both of whom are new to the high speed, short handed world of IMOCA Open 60 racing, the first 24 hours will have been a real eye-opener, a wet sleigh ride.

Schreyer, whose strong suit is fast inshore Olympic catamarans, has never raced far offshore and admitted that he did not really know what he was letting himself in for. But, according to round-the-world race and America's Cup veteran Ribes, Estrella Damm's American ocean racing rookie was acquitting himself admirably as an integral player on their rolling three hours watch system, and had even finally suppressed the adrenalin rushes to get some much needed rest.

Quotes from the boats:
Pepe Ribes (ESP), Estrella Damm (ESP): " All is going very well. We are really quite blast reaching sailing with the wind at 100 degrees wind angle with 20-25 knots, sometimes 30 knots. We are rocketing along doing averages of 18,19, 20 knots. It is very nice sailing. At the moment Stan is doing very well. He is sleeping right now. We are in a watch system in which he is really one of us, so we have total confidence in him. We have to help him a little bit because these boats are a little bit complicated and to drive these boats at 100% needs a lot of training, and at the moment this is just the fourth day which he has been on the boat, so we are trying to help him a little bit.

But, all is going well, and with Alex we have no problem, we are 100% sailing the boat just trying to reach Barcelona as soon as possible. At the moment everything is going fine, all with the boat is good and we are good. We are riding a pre-frontal wind, so we are trying to stay ahead of the cold front as much as we can, so we try to go fast at our fastest angle which is now 110 degrees, depending on the wind speed, and that is our main goal for the next two or two and a half days until the front passes. After that things a bit fickle at the moment, after the front could be northerlies but we are very close to the high pressure, so we still don't know the plan very well, but at the moment our main goal is to sail as fast as possible to stay in front of the front."

To?o Piris (ESP), W-Hotels (ESP). " Everybody is OK on board. Pachi is resting. We are tracking along nicely. We are very glad to have Peter on board. He is learning a lot and is very motivated. I am not sure (about what the record might be) because it all depends on the high pressure system that we have to cross which will affect the record, but now all we can do is sail with best speed to stay ahead of the front. The high pressure system could make the record go a little slower."

www.ny-bcn.org




by NY-BCN Sailing Record Event




Newsfeed supplied by