Glasgow: Scotland with style Clipper just one mile off lead in race to Singapore - Media
Glasgow: Scotland with style Clipper just one mile off lead in race to Singapore
02 January 2008
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2 January 2008
Glasgow: Scotland with style Clipper is lying in joint second place with current overall race leaders Durban 2010 and Beyond after the first full day of racing out of Fremantle, Australia. At 1200 GMT on Wednesday, the Glasgow entry was just one mile behind the race leaders Hull & Humber with 2,200 miles to the finish off Singapore.
On Tuesday as the team made its way up the Australian coast, Skipper Hannah Jenner said: “After two weeks off in Fremantle, it was a crazy race start with some very close racing and spinnakers up. It was all very lively with lots of new crew onboard for this leg. After no sleep overnight, I’ve been dealing with lobster pots everywhere. There’s never a dull moment and it’s good to be back racing.”
The Glasgow: Scotland with style Clipper team is currently lying in second place overall in the Clipper 07-08 Round the World Yacht Race with 26 points. Only one point separates Hannah and her team from the current overall leaders, Durban 2010 and Beyond, topping the leader board with 27 points. The pressure is on with Hull & Humber breathing down their necks just one point behind with 25 overall after five of the 14 races, so the Glaswegians will have their sights firmly set on a podium position.
The start of Race 5 from Fremantle, Western Australia, to Singapore took place at 1400 local time (0500 GMT) on New Year’s Day, with Durban 2010 and Beyond, Glasgow: Scotland with style Clipper and Uniquely Singapore the first three boats to cross the line as the cannon fired. Huge crowds turned out to see the event and were entertained with some close tactical light wind racing in Fremantle’s Inner Harbour.
The local sea breeze known as the Fremantle Doctor failed to blow as predicted, and although Durban 2010 and Beyond made steady progress towards the first of three marks in the harbour, they were hampered by patches of wind shadow. Following them round the first mark was the home-port team, westernaustralia2011.com, who with tactical positioning moved into second place.
The light winds played havoc with the whole fleet as they concertinaed at the far end of the harbour and positions changed as each mark was rounded. With some of the closest racing seen so far in the Clipper 07-08 Race, the excitement built as the boats raced back out of the harbour and past Fremantle’s iconic Maritime Museum. To the delight of the home crowd, the Western Australian team managed to sneak ahead of Durban 2010 and Beyond as they headed out to sea.
Speaking ahead of the race start, westernaustralia2011.com’s skipper Martin Silk said: “I’m fairly optimistic about our chances on this race as we have some good local knowledge onboard. I hope we can do Western Australia proud by gaining another podium position in Singapore.”
Heading out of the harbour, the teams readied their spinnaker poles for the downwind leg of the course and, despite rounding the harbour mark first, westernaustralia2011.com struggled to set their spinnaker and Durban 2010 and Beyond took advantage and reclaimed the pole position. Battling it out for third place were Glasgow: Scotland with Style Clipper and Hull & Humber, closely followed by Liverpool 08. New York, Nova Scotia and Qingdao were tightly packed as they headed into the downwind section of the course with Jamaica and Uniquely Singapore bringing up the rear due to problems with their kite hoists.
The pressure will be on for the team from Singapore, as they race the 2,430 miles to their home port. The two-week stopover in Fremantle saw some big crew changeovers amongst the teams and Uniquely Singapore was no exception. “We have 12 new crew onboard for this race which will make it tricky at first,” explained skipper Mark Preedy ahead of the race start. “The plan is to build the team’s confidence early and have a successful race into our home port.” The crew includes a group of young people drawn from the ASEAN nations and are sponsored by Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs to commemorate Singapore’s chairmanship of ASEAN (the Association of South East Asian Nations).
However it was the homeport team, westernaustralia2011.com who rounded the final mark in first place and a successful kite hoist saw them extend their lead as the fleet headed north to Singapore at the end of a successful two-week stopover Fremantle.
Western Australia’s minister for Tourism Sheila McHale was present at the race start and spoke of their pride in hosting the Clipper Race. “Fremantle is the perfect location for the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race,” said Ms McHale. “Through sponsoring the event we are able to promote the harbour, the city and the region around the world. It is a magnificent event and money can’t buy this sort of publicity.”
The fleet has a two-and-a-half week race ahead of them to Singapore and it is one of the most complex courses within the whole round the world race. With strong winds predicted as they race up the Western Australian coast these will be followed by lighter winds and squalls as they approach the monsoon trough and the Indonesian islands. Added to this there is the ever-present danger of a tropical cyclone and the crews have to remain alert. The yachts will then enter the confines of the Java Sea through the Sunda Straits before crossing the finish line off the coast of Indonesia.
The boats are due to arrive in Singapore on 19 January after a short stopover in Batam, Indonesia to ensure the fleet arrives together for the grand opening of the Marina at Keppel Bay where they will be hosted for the duration of the Singapore stopover.
ENDS/
NOTES TO EDITORS
- A low-resolution image of Glasgow: Scotland with style Clipper and westernaustralia2011.com entering Fremantle’s Inner Harbour at the start of Race 5 is attached. Hi-resolution images available upon request.
- Images from the Clipper 07-08 Round the World Yacht Race are hosted by World Wide Images on their online media gallery at http://www.w-w-i.com/clipper_0708_race/. They are free for editorial use.
- The Clipper 07-08 Round the World Yacht Race began in September 2007 in Liverpool. The race lasts ten months and takes in 35,000 miles of ocean racing. The overall race is divided into seven legs and a total of 14 individual races. Points are accumulated according to each race position, and the yacht with the highest total at the finish wins the race trophy.
- For media information or to arrange interviews, please contact:
Heather Ewing, Communications Coordinator Tel: +44 (0) 2392 526000
Mobile: +44 (0) 7792 408 695 Email:
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