Monday, October 31, 2011

GOR / The Fields and BSL take first place in Leg 1 (video)

At 05:13:25 GMT on Friday 28 October, Ross and Campbell Field took first place in Leg 1 of the double-handed, Class40 Global Ocean Race (GOR) crossing the finish line in Cape Town after 32 days 17 hours 13 minutes and 25 seconds and 7,300 miles of racing from Palma, Mallorca, on their Verdier-design Class40 BSL averaging 9.3 knots. Campagne de France take second place.



Following a final sail change off Lion’s Head, swapping from spinnaker to jib, BSL beat on port tack passed Signal Hill and across the finish line off Cape Town shortly after sunrise. GOR Race Organisation officials boarded the Class40 to congratulate the duo and check that the engine seals installed pre-start were in place before the Fields dropped their sails and motored into Victoria Basin, through Alfred Basin and into the GOR Race Base at North Wharf in the V&A Waterfront Marina.

Clearly exhausted, showing signs of significant weight-loss, but on characteristically good form, Ross and Campbell Field admitted that they had little left to give: “We’re absolutely stuffed, I’ll be honest,” said Ross shortly after berthing at North Wharf. “It’s all due to Halvard and Miranda as they’re clever sailors and know where to position their boat,” he continues. “We knew that we’d have a chance to peg them back once we got into the Southern Hemisphere and the reaching conditions suited our boat, but we had to push really hard – it’s absolutely crucial. If you don’t push 120 per cent, you’re gone and – fortunately – Campbell did excellent work on the weather.” Campbell Field reckons that if Campagne de France had extended over 40 miles ahead, the door would have shut: “There’s always more pressure when you’re chasing,” he believes. “At times we were hanging on by our fingernails.

Prior to the delivering the boat to the GOR start in Palma from Lymington on the South Coast of England, the Fields had raced BSL once in the Rolex Fastnet Race and GOR Leg 1 was an eye-opener for two highly-experienced sailors, but newcomers to Class40: “It’s a really startling boat, quite amazing,” says Ross. “Sometimes, it just kept going faster and faster and you had to wonder when the limit would be reached.” There was one major crash that the duo will always remember when they feared the mast would be lost, but there is no major damage. “The boat is immensely strong and the only breakage has been due to our errors,” confirms Campbell. “Nothing has failed on board.”

Other than work on the sails and strengthening up some pieces on the boat, there’s little preparation before the start of Leg 2 to Wellington, New Zealand, on Sunday 27 November. “The main objective is getting some rest,” he continues. “We were getting weaker and weaker and although our muscles weren’t atrophying, we just had less and less strength.” Despite the fatigue and potential recovery time, there are no regrets: “It’s just a fantastic event and a brilliant concept,” adds Ross of his sixth circumnavigation race. “It’s disappointing that boats pulled out just before the start, but they’re missing out on the best sailing in the world and we’re loving it!

The father-and-son team from New Zealand led the six Class40s in the GOR fleet immediately after the start until they left the Mediterranean after three days of racing following the start on Sunday 25 September in Palma. Having exited the Strait of Gibraltar, the Franco-British duo of Halvard Mabire and Miranda Merron on Campagne de France overtook BSL as the fleet encountered light airs, forcing the six Class40s close to the coast of Africa before heading south-west across the North Atlantic.

Credit : Trevor Wilkins

The Fields chased hard as the North East Trade Winds arrived, pushing the leading duo through the middle of the Cape Verde Islands, stalling briefly in the archipelago. Heading south-west towards the Fastnet Marine Insurance Scoring Gate off the Brazilian island of Fernando de Noronha, the Fields crossed the Doldrums swiftly, passing through the scoring gate 14 miles behind Mabire and Merron on Campagne de France after 15 days of racing. Having dropped south sharply to avoid a high pressure system north of the Falkland Islands that threatened to shut the door and prevent a fast, downwind ride across the South Atlantic, the New Zealanders overtook Campagne de France on 22 October, bringing to an end Mabire and Merron’s grip on the front of the GOR fleet.

BSL has scored a total of 35 points for Leg 1 (5 points for crossing the Fastnet Marine Insurance Scoring Gate in 2nd place + 30 points for 1st place in Leg 1).


Campagne de France (Mabire - Merron) second in Leg 1 of the GOR
In light airs of around six knots under a waxing crescent moon with floodlit Table Mountain as a backdrop, Halvard Mabire and Miranda Merron with their Pogo 40S², Campagne deFrance, crossed the Cape Town finish line completing Leg 1 of the double-handed, Class40 Global Ocean Race (GOR) at 19:43:40 GMT (21:43 local) on Friday evening. The Franco-British duo took 33 days 07 hours 43 minutes and 40 seconds, securing second place in the GOR’s fleet of six Class40s, arriving in South Africa just over 14 hours behind the Leg 1 winners, Ross and Campbell Field with Class40 BSL.

From : Global Ocean Race