Tuesday, January 31, 2012

VOR / CAMPER are now focused on pulling back the miles to the top three boats (video)

They might be facing gale-force winds and huge seas but confident CAMPER reckon they are sailing into their comfort zone.



Chris Nicholson’s team spent so long bashing upwind during their training for the Volvo Ocean Race that the 35-knot winds forecast to pummel the fleet within the next 24 hours as they race through the South China Sea are little worry for them.

“We’ve done a lot of sailing upwind in big seas,” CAMPER with Emirates Team New Zealand helmsman Adam Minoprio told volvooceanrace.com. “It’s what we’re used to, we feel we’re ready for it.”

CAMPER’s first real challenge after launching their brand new boat came with a race around New Zealand, their early campaign base.

“When we did the sail round New Zealand it seemed the wind and tide were always against us, and we regularly had winds over 30 knots,” Minoprio added.

Once in the northern hemisphere in the build-up to the race there was still no let-up for CAMPER.

After a month-long break while their Volvo Open 70 was shipped from New Zealand to the UK, the team’s return to the water saw them fight their way through atrocious conditions in the English Channel en route to Alicante.

Now, locked in battle with Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing for fourth place in the second stage of Leg 3 to Sanya in China, CAMPER are banking on the punishing conditions they faced during training paying off.

We’ve got upwind sailing which is what we’re used to, and we’ve made good gains on Abu Dhabi so things are looking up,” Minoprio said.

We were behind them but over the last eight hours we took the left and got a nice shift and got ahead of them.


“There’s a good 1,000 miles left to China and even further if you choose to hug the coast of Vietnam. There will be four knots of tide and loads of fishing nets and lots of wind shifts. There’s still a lot of race left and anything could happen.

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From : Volvo Ocean Race