After 16 days at sea and more than 5000 nautical miles Team
New Zealand's Camper has been squeezed out of first
place by just one minute and 57 seconds in a thrilling finish
to stage one of leg two.
The final 24 hours came down to an intense match race between
Camper and Telefonica, with the boats sailing
in sight of each other and often only 100 metres apart. The
lead was exchanged several times in a back and forth battle
but Camper held the advantage for much of the last
day.
However, Telefonica came through in the closing
stages, grabbing the definitive lead with just eight nautical
miles remaining.
The draining close-quarters battle left the crew exhausted,
having had little sleep for days on end, but there was no
chance for rest with everyone on deck to coax the maximum
speed out of the boat.
Camper skipper Chris Nicholson said it has been an
epic leg.
"In a way I'm disappointed in the result because we led for
the majority of this race. We had an amazing battle with
Telefonica these last few days and then we got rolled
about an hour from the finish by one rogue cloud.
"Occasionally the sport can throw that up at you.
Telefonica sailed a fantastic race from start to
finish. They were there to take the opportunities in the end
and congratulations to them.
"This was a seriously tough race and overall I thought we
operated really well as crew and a team. We've certainly came
out of this leg much more battle-hardened and ready to move
things up a notch.
"We've got some work to do there. We've got a few ideas, and
we certainly learned a lot about our boat in regards to that
and we got better as we went on.''
Camper takes 20 points provisionally for second place
in the first of a two-stage, 5,430 nautical mile leg to from
Cape Town to Abu Dhabi. The overall leaderboard sees
Telefonica top with 61 points, followed by Camper on
54.
But the results remain provisional with Camper
protesting an incident towards the end of the race in which
Telefonica failed to respond as required by race rules
to a luffing manoeuvre from Camper and forced the New
Zealand boat to bear away to avoid a collision. The protest
will now be heard by the international jury in Abu Dhabi.
The finish line was set at an undisclosed destination to
protect the six-boat fleet from pirate activity. The boats
will now be shipped to a point off the Sharjah coastline in
the northern United Arab Emirates for a short day-long sprint
to Abu Dhabi in early January for the second stage of the
leg.
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.