Highly decorated sailing veteran, British Olympian Neal McDonald, is to taking the helm as Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing’s Performance Director in the team’s second bid for Volvo Ocean Race glory next year. Emirati star, 24-year-old Adil Khalid, has re-signed as an Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing crew member under the leadership of skipper Ian Walker.
“I am lucky enough to have raced round the world six times and I hope to use my experience to ensure Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing wins this next race. With any offshore race, the next one is full of many varied challenges, some of which will not even be obvious at the start of the campaign. The solutions to each will inevitably involve a series of complex compromises. Getting the right balance in each of these compromises will be a huge part of winning this next race. Particularly with a one design boat playing centre stage in the 2014-15 race, the biggest challenge will be to get the best out of the entire team at all the critical stages of the campaign. Getting the right personnel and planning the campaign properly from the start appear to be the most important parts to getting it right.
“After the last race it was clear to me that, at my stage in life, I was not going to do another Volvo campaign that involved me as a sailor in a manner that I had before. I had never given up on the possibility of getting involved in a more behind the scenes role. When Ian Walker started talking to me I was excited to hear more as I see Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing having a real chance of winning this race.”
Adil Khalid
“Taking part in my first Volvo Ocean Race campaign was a dream, now with a second chance at it, I want to make winning the reality. We are already so much further ahead in this campaign than before and I feel that I have learnt so much, yet have much more to prove. For us, winning the race is the only goal, so we can make everyone at home proud and continue inspiring the many young Arab sailors to reach for the stars, showing them that anything is possible with determination and hard work.”
Guy Barron
“I think as a professional sailor with a wealth of experience across most of the major regattas, I bring a vast amount of knowledge to Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing. I understand what sailors need and what makes a boat go fast. I also know how a team works and how it needs to be motivated.
“The biggest challenge for the shore team will be to make sure the boat doesn’t break down and the sailing team can push her hard and fast. With the new one design, this is going to be a big challenge. We haven’t seen a boat hit the water yet so I will need to learn all about how they will perform and then put together a team that can best support our sailing guys and who can work efficiently with Volvo Ocean Race to streamline our overall offering.”
11th Hour Racing Team has won The Ocean Race 2022-23, the world’s longest and toughest team sporting event - the first time a US team has won in the 50-year history of the Race.
The next edition of The Ocean Race, scheduled to start from Alicante, Spain in October 2021, will visit 10 international cities, including the start port and the Grand Finale finish in Genoa, Italy in the summer of 2022.
The latest edition of the Volvo Ocean Race, which started in Alicante, Spain in October 2017 and finished in The Hague in the Netherlands in June 2018, will be remembered as the closest in race history, as well as a record-breaking event on many levels.
Dongfeng Race Team has won the Volvo Ocean Race 2017-18 in the closest finish in race history.
Skipper Charles Caudrelier led his team to victory on the final leg of the race, a 970-mile sprint from Gothenburg, Sweden to The Hague.
Incredibly, it marked the first leg win for the team — it couldn’t have come at a better time.
Charlie Enright’s Vestas 11th Hour Racing showed great patience and sailed a clean race for a victory in the Gothenburg In-Port Race on Sunday.
But it was Xabi Fernández’s MAPFRE team who rode a third place finish on Sunday to win the overall In-Port Race Series, sailing 11 points clear of their closest pursuers, Dongfeng Race Team.
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The scientific research, using data collected by Race team ‘Turn the Tide on Plastic’, identified over three million micro plastic particles per square kilometre of ocean.
The sub-surface data on micro plastic pollution levels was collected using a state-of-the-art instrument on board their Volvo Ocean 65 racing yacht.
Associé à Éric Drouglazet, Sébastien Josse, vingt-cinq ans, fera partie, le 16 avril prochain, des favoris de la transat en double Lorient - Saint Barthélémy. Jeune professionnel de la course au large, il rêve aussi de monocoque open et de Vendée Globe.
Le premier novembre 2000, un nom est venu s’afficher à la une de tous les journaux : Ievoli Sun. Un nom parmi de nombreux autres, anciens ou récents, a jouté à la longue listes des épaves qui se disolvent doucement à quelques encablures des côtes de France.
Le 26 septembre prochain, le neveu d’Éric Tabarly va participer à sa première transatlantique en solitaire, la Mini Transat. Dans le sillage des grands.
Morvan et Caudrelier-Bénac vainqueurs de la première étape à Porto Santo et du Trophée BPE. Photo : Ch.Guigueno
Le 14 avril prochain, une quarantaine de Figaro Bénéteau s’élanceront en double de Lorient pour tenter de succéder à Karine Fauconnier et Lionel Lemonchois au prestigieux palmarès de la Transat AG2R.
Le K-Challenge est une fusée à trois étages. Lancée lors du salon nautique de Paris, un peu plus d’un an avant les matches de la Coupe de l’America 2003, l’engin spatial va lâcher son premier étage en 2002 par une série d’entraînements orchestrée par l’Américaine Dawn Riley.
The fleet racing in the Volvo Ocean Race will, for the first time, take part in the 630-nautical mile CYCA Sydney to Hobart yacht race as part of the 2,050 nautical-mile leg three to Auckland, New Zealand.
The start will be on Boxing Day, December 26th, in Sydney, Australia and the fleet will start off its own start line, 200 metres in front (…)
Stamm, Bestaven et Parlier : le trio vainqueur ? Photos : Ch.Guigueno
Depuis un mois, vous pouvez élire le SeaSailSurfer de l’année 2001. Après plus de cent votes, deux hommes régatent en tête du classement. Le recordman de l’atlantique et le vainqueur de la Transat 650 sont toujours difficiles à départager.
Le Xbox Pipeline Masters est un des plus prestigieux événements du championnat mondial de surf. A la grande surprise générale, c’est Bruce Irons, 21 ans, qui s’est imposé. En finale à quatre, il a pris le dessus sur le Floridien Kelly Slater, cinq fois vainqueur du Pipeline Master ; son compatriote C.J. Hobgood, tout juste sacré champion du (…)
Sébastien Josse rêve de tour du monde en équipage et même en solitaire. Photo : Ch.Guigueno
Le catamaran Orange, ex-Innovation Explorer que Bruno Peyron compte mener contre le Trophée Jules Verne en début d’année 2002 est toujours en chantier à La Ciotat. S’il doit être remis à l’eau prochainement, son skipper a déjà réuni une équipe de “préparateurs” dont les Figaristes Gilles Chiorri et Sébastien Josse.
Soixante-huit voiliers, soit 250 navigateurs, ont répondu présent à l’appel du CNBPP : la Coupe de Noël / trophée X-Voiles a engendré un sérieux engouement chez les marins d’hiver.