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The Ocean Race: 11th Hour Racing Team and Team Malizia Continue Their Cat-and-Mouse Duel in Leg 4

7th May 2023
Leg 4 Day 13 (Saturday 6 May) onboard Biotherm, as skipper Paul Meilhat fixes a little halyard problem on top of the mast
Leg 4 Day 13 (Saturday 6 May) onboard Biotherm, as skipper Paul Meilhat fixes a little halyard problem on top of the mast Credit: Anne Beauge/Biotherm/The Ocean Race

The competition level is high on day 14 of Leg 4 of The Ocean Race as 11th Hour Racing Team and Team Malizia continue their duel towards the finish.

“11th Hour Racing Team is just a few miles away and we’re doing everything we can to get ahead of them,” said Malizia skipper Will Harris on Sunday (7 May). “The fight is still on. It’s been an intense fight for the last six days or so — really intense racing…

“We’re very motivated to keep pushing to the end and that’s what this race is about sometimes, just pushing a bit more. We’re going to give it everything we’ve got to beat them to Newport.”

His counterpart on 11th Hour Racing Team, Charlie Enright, is up for the challenge.

“As we’ve seen in the last couple of days, the advantage goes back and forth very quickly,” he said. “[The approach to Newport] looks very complicated. We go upwind, there’s a lot of pressure, some circulation in the Gulf Stream. After that it’s a real dog’s breakfast with a bunch of stuff we’ll have to deal with, but we’ll deal with it and figure it out.

“It’s hard to believe that with less than a thousand miles to go we still have about three days of racing, but that’s the way the cookie crumbles.”

The ETA for the leading IMOCA pair is trending towards 0400 local time 0800 UTC) in Newport on Wednesday morning 10 May. But as Charlie indicated, there is still some uncertainty in the models and complications in the choices available to Malizia and 11th Hour Racing Team which could push this slightly in either direction.

Early on Sunday afternoon, 11th Hour Racing Team made a tack to the west that can only be considered a tactical option to positing the boat better for the weather to come, as it meant sailing slightly south of west, costing miles towards Newport.

As the American boat crossed just one mile ahead of Team Malizia, Harris elected to follow on the same line. The race for the lead couldn’t be closer. The pressure on these crews to sail at maximum potential isn’t going to ease.

Some eight hours behind the leading pair, Biotherm continues to fight through some light weather.

“We just haven’t got much wind,” said Alan Roberts, poking his head on deck, with a glassy sea state all around. “We just passed a little front and now we have quite light winds. We need to get into the northwesterly breeze to keep moving, but it’s quite tricky.”

Meanwhile, on GUYOT envrionnement - Team Europe, Seb Simon celebrated his birthday, complete with candle and cake and calls home.

“It’s a real pleasure to have everyone think about me…all the little things people have done for me today, I’m very happy, thank you,” he said.

What will make him happiest of all is gaining over 50 miles on Biotherm in the past 24 hours. On the 2000 UTC update, the GUYOT team was less than 90 miles behind.

Leg Four Rankings at 2000 UTC, 7 May

  1. 11th Hour Racing Team, distance to finish, 819.7 miles
  2. Team Malizia, distance to lead, 4.2 miles
  3. Biotherm, distance to lead, 147 miles
  4. GUYOT enironnement - Team Europe, distance to lead, 233.7 miles

Find the latest fleet positions on the race tracker at theoceanrace.com.

Published in Ocean Race
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