ADOR excited by UAE VOR celebrations

Sport360 staff 16:11 11/06/2015
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  • Abu Dhabi were impressive throughout the series.

    Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing skipper Ian Walker “cannot wait” to celebrate the team’s Volvo Ocean Race victory with their UAE fans after claiming historic glory by finishing the punishing eighth leg from Lisbon, Portugal to Lorient, France in third place.

    The result means the Abu Dhabi Tourism & Culture Authority (TCA Abu Dhabi)-backed team will be crowned winners of the Volvo Ocean Race at the end of the ninth and final leg to Gothenburg in Sweden – irrespective of their finishing position.

    Skipper Ian Walker – now the first Briton to win the Volvo Ocean Race – was quick to praise the entire ADOR team, both afloat and ashore.

    “I can’t thank everyone enough,” Walker said.

    “We put this team together with a plan to hire the best people we could and to let them do their job. Nothing has derailed that plan and that’s why we’re where we are today.

    “I can’t wait to speak to the people in Abu Dhabi. They give us so much support and I bet they are going crazy about this result.” 

    ADOR began Leg 8 with a six-point lead over their closest rivals and with a chance of sealing victory if they could beat both Team Brunel and Dongfeng Race Team by more than one place.

    Although the shortest in the race so far at 647 miles, Leg 8 proved to be a brutal challenge for the ADOR sailors who had next to no sleep for the entire three and a half days of the penultimate leg.

    ADOR left Lisbon in fifth position but soon caught up with the leaders as snakes and ladders tactics prevailed on a predominantly windless first night at sea. Azzam emerged in third place the next day as the fleet tacked along the Portuguese coast in a steadily increasing wind.

    Galician sailor Chuny Bermúdez took charge of tactics on the second day as ADOR rounded Cape Finisterre and headed east, leading a breakaway group along the northern Spanish coast past Bermúdez’s home near La Coruña.

    When the fleet converged again in gale force winds and huge seas in the Bay of Biscay, ADOR was still in third, but only narrowly ahead of Dongfeng and Brunel – making for a nerve-wracking final 150 miles.

    Crucially, as ADOR began the last 50 miles to Lorient on the moonlit final night, Spanish crew MAPFRE overtook Brunel to give Walker’s men the extra point they were hoping for.

    “It’s been the toughest leg of the race in many ways,” said ADOR navigator Simon Fisher. “Constant sail changes and lots of tacks meant we have hardly slept. The last night was pretty stressful holding off MAPFRE in the dark. But none of that matters now.”

    Abu Dhabi’s  sailors have just three days to rest before they are back in action for the Lorient In-Port Race on Sunday, June 14 and the start of the final leg to Gothenburg, Sweden  two days later.

    Despite having put the overall result beyond doubt, UAE Olympian Adil Khalid said the Azzam crew would be going all out for a good result in Sunday’s one-hour sprint and the final leg.

    “This is a crew of incredibly competitive people who don’t know how to hold back,” said Khalid who will rejoin ADOR for the final In-Port Race after missing Leg 8 due to sickness.

    “They want to win every race they sail and the Lorient in-port and final leg will be no different.”

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