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VOR Finishes Leg 6 in Auckland

After more than 20 days at sea, Team AkzoNobel sailed into Auckland, New Zealand, just 2 minutes and 14 seconds ahead of race-long rival Sun Hung Kai/ Scallywag to claim victory in Leg 6 of the Volvo Ocean Race. In what was one of the closest finishes in the history of the VOR, the two boats paced each other all the way from Hong Kong — more than 6,500 nautical miles — including when both boats made a gutsy navigational call to head north, making negative VMG while off the eastern coast of Taiwan.

Bright lights, medium-sized city. Turn the Tide on Plastic heads into Auckland after a devastating fifth-place finish.

© 2018 Volvo Ocean Race

Just twenty minutes astern of the two leaders, the racing was no less close and ferocious as third through fifth place — MAPFRE, Dongfeng and Turn the Tide on Plastic, respectively — were separated by just six minutes, with Team Brunel finishing in sixth place, still less than two hours behind the leg winners.

"It’s been a 6,500-mile match race; it’s unreal," said AkzoNobel skipper Simeon Tienpont. "I’ve never sailed a race like this in my life. We’ve always been in each other’s sights. They were always there. It’s been neck and neck. Huge respect to Scallywag, they never stopped fighting and we never stopped defending. I’m so proud of our crew. They never flinched."

Leeward weight! Leg 6 wasn’t all full-speed drag racing.

© 2018 Volvo Ocean Race

While the Dutch skipper was clearly elated with the team’s first win in this edition of the Volvo Ocean Race — especially given the controversial manner in which their VOR started — Briton Dee Caffari was almost surely heartbroken watching her Turn the Tide on Plastic team slip from third to fifth in the final moments of the race. Having been some 60 miles ahead of Dongfeng and MAPFRE with less than 24 hours to the finish, her team remained helpless when the fleet ran into a ridge of high pressure on the approach to the finish, allowing Dongfeng and MAPFRE to come roaring back, gaining ground at every check-in. "We’re gutted; I don’t even know what to say. We had a good race, and we thought we were going to have a better result. But those pesky red boats always seem to get it their way," said Caffari at the dock.

Team Dongfeng eases their way into New Zealand.

© 2018 Volvo Ocean Race

Now that the fleet is in Auckland (and ready to head back into the Southern Ocean), they will undergo their most extensive maintenance cycle of the entire race, with the boats being essentially rebuilt over the next two and a half weeks. Halfway around the world and with a showdown with Cape Horn scheduled for Leg 7, no stone will be unturned in the quest to keep every boat operating at 100%. Now in Auckland, Vestas/11th Hour Racing is scheduled to rejoin the fleet after their tragic collision upon approach to Hong Kong. Despite scoring no points in the last two major legs (and the brief, 1-point ‘transitional’ Leg 5), the Danish/American team remains in a tie for fourth place on the leaderboard and is just three points astern of third place Sun Hung Kai/ Scallywag.

The light-air action saw professional sailors providing the most expensive leeward rail meat in the history of the sport.

© 2018 Volvo Ocean Race

The next leg will take the fleet 7,600 miles from Auckland to Itajai, Brazil, and is one of the three legs in this race that is a "double-points" leg, creating a "make-or-break" scenario for teams such as Vestas/11th Hour Racing, who are desperately hoping to gain back some valuable points on the fleet. Leg 7 of the Volvo Ocean Race will start on 18 March.

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The cruising division of the San Diego to Puerto Vallarta Race will start tomorrow, with additional starts on Friday and Saturday.
Putter about in a small boat or two or three — or as many as you can squeeze in — this Saturday, March 3, at Richmond Yacht Club’s Sail a Small Boat Day.