Team Sanya emerges last after storm clears; Groupama takes lead
Franck Cammas’ crew on Groupama read the weather scenario to perfection at the start of Leg 7 from Miami to Lisbon, gybing away from the storm earliest before setting off on a blistering downwind ride to the east.
Having at one point built a lead of nearly 70 nautical miles, this morning Groupama’s advantage was down to 22 nm, as the chasing pack, led by PUMA Ocean Racing powered by BERG, emerged bruised but unbowed from Alberto’s clutches.
At 1300 UTC Groupama sailing team were 18 nm ahead as the leg leaders slowed in softening winds which looked likely to re-compress the fleet over the coming day.
Despite closing down Groupama, Ken Read’s second placed PUMA were also having to fight to hold off Iker Martínez’s Team Telefónica, the overall race leaders, just seven nautical miles back.
Abu Dhabi skipper Ian Walker explained how the entire fleet, minus Groupama, were caught out.
"We were trying to ride the extra wind just to the south of it but a violent wind shift headed us straight into the eye of the storm," said the Briton.
"There then followed a chaotic 12 hour period as we ended up on the wrong side of it beating upwind in 35 knots. All of a sudden instead of a fast ride east to the south of the storm we were right in it and in survival mode with three reefs and a heavy weather jib.
"We came off some terrible waves but most worrying of all was the lightning. crashing all around right down to the water. It didn’t seem possible our carbon mast could avoid a direct strike."
CAMPER went on to suffer most from Alberto’s effects, surviving the battering before tumbling from second to fifth after becoming trapped in light winds near the storm’s centre.
"At one point we lost 25 nm in one sched,” said skipper Chris Nicholson. “What was worse was that PUMA and Telefónica, who were behind us, saw us get swallowed up by one very bad cloud and were able to take the high road up and around it.”
"It’s frustrating but everyone on board knows how easily these sort of things happen. Now we are clawing back some of those miles and we just need to stay in touch enough and wait for another opportunity.”
CAMPER navigator Will Oxley was similarly philosophical and said the team had already refocused on the next meteorological hurdle to be faced.
"The rest of us were a bit slow in gybing across and are now playing catch-up," he said. “Now, the main thing is that we need to pick up the (next) front developing to the east — otherwise Groupama will get a real jump on everyone. It’s going to be an interesting leg.”
Sanya skipper Mike Sanderson described Alberto as "a pretty nasty low pressure".
"We saw up to 40 knots upwind and some horrendous rain and hail," added the New Zealander. "It was very tricky, very tough on the guys, no sleep — from the beautiful organisation of Miami to total chaos on the first day.”
At the head of the fleet, Cammas said he was delighted with his crew’s performance since leaving Miami.
"Things have been going well for us since the beginning of the leg,” Cammas commented. “We did well in the tropical storm by gybing before we got trapped. Thanks to that we avoided the unstable area in its middle.”
However, Cammas said Groupama’s jump on the fleet was likely to continue to be eroded as they encountered a light air zone over the next 24 hours.
The weather forecast for the next hours indicates the wind is dropping a lot,” he said. “We hope that it won’t be a total calm as the ones behind still have good wind and are coming back on us.
"The fleet will compress for sure, unfortunately,” he added.
Just 14 points separate the leading four teams in the overall standings with three offshore legs to complete. Telefónica have 165 points, followed by Groupama on 158, CAMPER on 152 and PUMA on 151.