America's Cup rival and
training partner Luna Rossa has been in Auckland for a
fortnight but rather than look ahead to next year's big
series of races in San Francisco, the priority for Grant
Dalton is getting more speed out of Camper in the Volvo Ocean
Race.
Emirates Team NZ chief executive Dalton, who has sailed the
gruelling ocean race six times and won it twice, is
determined to improve Camper's performance and is putting
more resources into doing so.
Camper is second behind Team Telefonica, but a lack of boat
speed, shown up most obviously in the 106 nautical mile
sprint first section of the third leg from Abu Dhabi to
Sharjah, where it was in a good position but finished fifth,
is concerning Dalton.
"Most of my attention has been focused on Camper and the
Volvo Ocean Race," Dalton wrote in a blog. "Honestly, we
aren't going well enough," he said. "Some of that is a boat
which is beating its numbers but under-performing [against
the opposition] at certain angles.
"We have improved but the reach down the coast a few days
ago, especially in flat water, showed we aren't fast enough.
"We need to turn our attention to maximising points where we
can - like the in-port races and offshore, when the
conditions favour the boat," he said.
"What I can say is as an organisation this is being treated
as a priority," Dalton said. "The boys on board are doing a
good job but as Emirates Team New Zealand we are now trying
to bring more resource to the party.
"Telefonica was the only boat that had a worse result than us
in the Abu Dhabi in-port then the run down the coast. At
least we netted a point back on them, now [we are] seven
behind in second place."
The race was scheduled to re-start at 9pm yesterday (NZ
time), from an undisclosed location, due to the risk of
piracy. The finish is the Chinese city of Sanya and the
six-strong fleet will race more than 3000 nautical miles
across the Indian Ocean, through the Strait of Malacca and
into the South China Sea to get there. The leg is expected to
take about two weeks to complete.
Camper skipper Chris Nicholson will probably feel under more
pressure with the news that Dalton is looking more closely at
all levels of the boat's performance but said this second
stage of the third leg could favour Camper.
"There'll be a bit more upwind which we're comfortable with
and just keep chipping away at where we're weak," he said.
"I don't think the next leg will be won by boat speed. It
will be won with being smart and keeping the boat in one
piece and going the right way."
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