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Solo sailors go Around Alone
NEW YORK -- Thirteen solo sailors set sail from New York, expecting to take more than eight months to circumnavigate the world in the Around Alone race. The first leg started on Sunday from a line off Ground Zero on Manhattan Island and takes the sailors 2,885 nautical miles across the Atlantic to Torquay, England. Subsequent stopovers on the 28,775-mile five-leg race are Cape Town, South Africa, Tauranga, New Zealand and Salvador de Bahia, Brazil, before returning to Newport, Rhode Island in April 2003.
The Around Alone brings together a unique mixture of fully sponsored professional skippers and under-funded amateurs in a fleet of custom built monohulls from 13m to 18.28m (40 to 60ft). Based on previous races, one third of the entries are likely to fail to complete. All are following in the wake of Canadian sailor Joshua Slocum who is recognised for the first solo circumnavigation in 1885 in his 12m (37ft) Spray. He took three years, including stops, to complete. Since the British Oxygen Corporation sponsored the first Around Alone in 1982, the race has been held every four years. The first race attracted 17 entries and was won by Frenchman Philippe Jeantot in the 18m (56ft) Credit Agricole in 156 days. After winning the second race, Jeantot declared that he did not like the stopovers and went on to establish his own non-stop single-handed race for monohulls, the Vendee Globe. The Around Alone is now considered the poor relation to the high-profile Vendee Globe which attracts the top professionals who prefer the shorter non-stop version. There are also more glamorous non-stop events for unlimited multihulls that can circle the planet in a little over 60 days, such as the Jules Verne and The Race. Skippers like Michel Desjoyeaux and Ellen MacArthur, first and second in the 2000/1 Vendee, have chosen the single-handed Route du Rhum this autumn from St Malo to Guadeloupe in preference to the Around Alone to further their careers and gain exposure for their sponsors. As a consequence there is only one British and one French entry in the 2002 Around Alone in a sport dominated by these countries. The Around Alone race was purchased by Sir Robin Knox-Johnston's Clipper Ventures in 2001, but in the current economic climate Clipper Ventures has failed to attract a major sponsor. The main changes have been in the stopover ports with the first ever stop in the UK in Torquay, missing out Australia for the first time and a return to Newport, Rhode Island for the finish. Around Alone race schedule Leg 1 (Newport to Torbay, UK 2,885 nautical miles) September 15 Leg 2 (Torbay to Cape Town 6,880nm) October 13 Leg 3 (Cape Town to New Zealand 7,125nm) December 1 Leg 4 (New Zealand to Salvador, Brazil 7,850nm) January 26 Leg 5 (Salvador to Newport 4,015nm) March 23 The first boats are expected to finish in Newport, Rhode Island around April 14 2003 Around Alone competitors Class 1 Open 60 Bobst Group-Armor Lux Bernard Stamm (Switzerland) Garnier Patrick de Radigues (Belgium) Hexagon Graham Dalton (New Zealand) Ocean Planet Bruce Schwab (USA) Pindar Emma Richards (UK) Solidaires Thierry Dubois (France) Tiscali Simone Bianchetti (Italy) Class II Bayer Ascensia 50ft John Dennis (Canada) BTC Velocity 40ft Alan Paris (Bermuda) Everest Horizontal 50ft Tim Kent (USA) Spirit of Canada Derek Hatfield 40ft (Canada) Spirit of Yukoh 40ft Kojiro Shiraishi (Japan) Tommy Hilfiger/Freedom America 50ft Brad Van Liew (USA) |
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Emma Richards to sail Around Alone
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July 18, 2002 Around Alone in U.S. sea tribute April 10, 2002 Around Alone gets NZ stopover April 10, 2002 Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
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