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Unfurling their big headsail first, Green Dragon benefited from good speed in her position down to leeward of the fleet, while some of the other teams struggled to manage these huge, unwieldy sails.
GRAEL's Ericsson 4, flying a more conservative fractional gennaker, was sucked up under Telefónica Blue (Bouwe BEKKING/NED) in the big chop, whipped up by the wind and the armada of spectator boats. PUMA, however, made the right choice of sail and almost laid the first mark before the crew furled the sail shortly before rounding the first of three marks on the triangular course set in Table Bay.
PUMA, continued to streak away, in 15 - 20 knots of wind, opening up a healthy lead, while GRAEL took Ericsson 4 outside a large container ship sailing hot and fast with slightly eased sheets. PUMA judged the lay-line perfectly, sailing just four boat lengths on port tack before rounding the mark. Green Dragon lost a lot of ground going into the shore early, as PUMA, flying just a mainsail and heavy air jib, made a perfect hairpin turn at the mark, eased their sheets and shot off like an express train.
There was a big gap to third place, which was snatched from Green Dragon by BEKKING and Telefónica Blue, who made a big gain. A great manoeuvre by Team Russia allowed them to jump ahead of Telefónica Black (Fernando ECHAVARRI/ESP) at the mark, but then a terrific battle followed as Telefónica Black took revenge and passed them to windward. In the approach to the mark, Ericsson 3 (Anders LEWANDER/SWE) ripped the leach of their headsail when they tacked, catching on the radar dome and wiping it off the mast.
But, instead of leaving the fleet standing as promised, halfway down the final leg, PUMA came to almost a complete standstill as the wind dropped and the fleet compressed, surfing up behind in typical Cape Town fluky conditions.
Code Zeros were hastily unfurled as wind dropped to almost nothing and it was a frustrating time for the crews who were very aware that whoever found the breeze first would make a huge gain. This race has been won and lost in this bay before, and to be first out of Cape Town can make all the difference.
The race became a drifting match, with the fleet desperate to find any breeze at all. PUMA ran into problems trying to unfurl their Code Zero, needing three men on the bow to fix the problem and, in the end, dropping the sail to the deck.
Delta Lloyd, to leeward of the fleet, looked well placed for the new breeze, and might well have picked the right path through the glassy calm. Ericsson 4 led PUMA and Green Dragon, but were not safe at all. PUMA was furthest off shore, but Telefónica Blue was rock-hopping along the shore, hoping to sneak round the fleet, but the forecast is for strong southwesterly breeze offshore, which means creeping along the coast may not pay off.
The first point scoring opportunity on this leg will be when the fleet crosses from west to east - the line of longitude 58 degrees E, anywhere south of the latitude 20 degrees S.
Volvo Ocean Race Leaderboard
(After Leg One)
1. Ericsson 4 (Torben GRAEL), 14 points
2. Puma Il Mostro (Ken READ), 13 points
3. Green Dragon (Ian WALKER), 11 points
4. Telefónica Blue (Bouwe BEKKING), 10 points
5. Telefónica Black (Fernando ECHAVARRI), 7 points
6. Ericsson 3 (Anders LEWANDER), 5 points
7. Delta Lloyd (Ger O'ROURKE), 4 points
8. Team Russia (Andreas HANAKAMP), 4 points
Go here for all the news on the Volvo Ocean Race 2008-09
Volvo Ocean Race - www.volvooceanrace.org