 Rolex
China Sea Race 2010
Hong Kong - Subic Bay, Philippines
2009/10 AY Grand Prix
Championship
Event
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Day
4 - HI FI REPEATS LINE HONOURS WIN AT 2010 ROLEX CHINA SEA RACE
From
regattanews.com
April
4, 2010: Neil Pryde’s Welbourne 52, Hi Fi was a familiar
sight leading the fleet again and taking the Line Honours victory, crossing
the finish line off Subic Bay, Philippines at 07:36:11 local time. Hi
Fi’s elapsed time of 67hrs, 26mins shaved close to four hours off
their previous record, set in the 2008 race. This is a new benchmark for
the Rolex China Sea Race harbour start, a change in 2008 to allow for
the start off the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club in Victoria Harbour. Hi Fi
has also won the overall IRC Racing A division on corrected time.
Hi Fi crew - Neil Pryde, Ryan
Vallena Betonio, Samuel Hunt, Ian Davis, Ben Costello, Philip Houghton,
Silas Nolan, Mitchell White, Nicolas Partridge, Kevin Costin, Majbritt
Lang, William Oxley, Willy Roberts and Julian Salter.
At
a dockside presentation at the Subic Bay Yacht Club, owner/skipper Neil
Pryde was presented with a Rolex Yacht-Master timepiece for his Line Honours
win. He was the Line Honours winner in the 2008 edition as well.
Pryde recounted Hi
Fi’s race, “We had a game plan which we stuck to pretty well
and that’s the way it played out. We put the boat in the right place,
at the right time, and got the right wind angles and that was it.
“We were always concerned
about Evolution Racing, the TP 52, as the boat to beat and we got a big
gap on them the first night. We just split apart and we lost them. We
sailed a lot lower course out of Hong Kong, and we got into clear air
and they sailed high. Later in the night, he sailed away from us in a
very divergent course and we weren’t sure what he was up to, and
we lost him, and after that we were on our own.
“We’ve got to pay tribute to Will Oxley, who’s our navigator,
he nailed it right on, he had every wind angle spot on, it was just perfect.
We were a bit nervous last night, we got down to 2-3 knots of boat speed,
but we never actually stopped. As it started to die, and the new breeze
filled in off the land, we were away again. We never had more than 20-22
knots, it was never really windy, but we were fully pressured up because
of the angles we were sailing…the boat was really trucking".
Pryde is ever the experimenter
– he essentially rebuilt Hi Fi in 2007 by cutting the deck off and
building a totally new hull, keel, and rudder. Since then it seems he
can’t help himself and he’s been at it again, Pryde said,
“We have a new keel, new rudder, new rig, new cabin top. I get a
kick out of that actually. If I could sell it, I would sell it and start
all over again with another one. That’s part of the fun of it all.”
Hi
Fi’s navigator, Will Oxley is a veteran of the 2008/9 Volvo Ocean
Race as back-up navigator for Puma Sailing. It was his first time competing
in the Rolex China Sea Race, but he was not unfamiliar with the area,
having done a lot a research on the course for the Volvo Race. However,
he didn’t have all of the electronic amenities that many Volvo and
offshore sailors take for granted now. Oxley
said, “We only had an Irridium phone, so afraid I’m used to
being spoiled and having access to a whole lot of information; this time
the gribs (weather files) were okay for the first little while.
Rolex China Sea Races are won
and lost as boats approach the Philippine coastline, and that was not
lost onboard Hi Fi. Oxley said, “As we came to the coast, the breeze
came into the north and it was about 12 knots, and as it got dark the
thermal breeze goes, so it rotated back into the northeast and we, without
gybing or anything, just rotated around and changed down through the sails.
We thought we could afford to go further in(shore), since we thought it
was going to go into the east a bit further, but then we got a position
report for Evolution, and they were outside of us and so the only thing
that could go wrong was that we could get caught inshore with no wind.
So we bore away a bit, even though we realized that probably meant we
were going to be on the wind to finish, but it protected us; that’s
the way it panned out, so we were very pleased.
“We
knew if we could get in before like 10:00, then we had a good chance of
finishing in the land breeze rather than ending up in the sea breeze transition.
That’s going to be quite tricky this afternoon. And hopefully we’ve
managed to get our time on boats like Subic and Ambush. Apart from being
able to come in(shore) a little closer last night, which might have given
us an extra half hour, we didn’t lose any time on the race track,
so that was great.
Oxley
was quick to praise the crew and owner Neil Pryde, “The crew work
is exemplary, so it made it easy -- and Kos did a great job of calling
the tactics. It was just fantastic to see how passionate Neil is and he
was up all night and drove all night. Once he could smell the finish line,
there was nothing to stop him, and he’s a fantastic driver. It’s
really nice to see someone so passionate about their sailing and so actively
involved and enjoying it.”
Next to finish were the TP52’s
Ray Roberts’ Evolution Racing, crossing the line four hours behind
Hi Fi at 9:39:48, followed by Strewth at 12:40:33; Ffreefire 52 is due
at 16:30. The rest of the fleet is expected in through the night and tomorrow.
Monday night, there will be an informal dockside presentation for the
1st – 3rd place finishers, in each division. The official Rolex
China Sea Race prizegiving will be held on Wednesday, April 14th at the
Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club branch at Kellet Island, Hong Kong.
Full results at: http://www.rhkyc.org.hk/chinasearace/results.htm
High resolution images
at: http://www.regattanews.com/photos.asp?eventid=242&groupid=0
Photo credit to Rolex/Daniel Forster.
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