14th December 2001, 29 26 09’ N 26 03 49’ W : At 23.00 GMT Alex Bennett, 25-year-old solo yachtsman, abandoned his Open 50 racing yacht ‘One Dream One Mission’ to the elements.
At 20.00 without any warning a sudden squall hit the boat and in a breeze of 20 to 30 knots she heeled over and accelerated to 16 knots in the pitch dark.
Alex : "Then I heard a huge bang. I thought we’d snapped the keel and as the boat pitched up at a crazy angle, I climbed up onto the highest side. With all hell breaking loose, I released as many sails as I could and she came upright again. I winched in the genoa and looked over board. The bulb was OK – it was the starboard ram and the keel was left swingly wildly".
Alex attempted to fix the damage by lashing the rod heads in place to lock the keel, but after two hours of trying and physically exhausted he put out an urgency call. A German freighter 10 miles off responded and made for Alex. With his boat crippled and the threat of gale force conditions coming
through his area within the next 36 hours, he was forced to take the sad decision to abandon his beloved boat.
This was just three weeks after he had tasted victory in his first international race, the 4340 mile Transat Jacques Vabre from Le Havre to Brazil, with co-skipper Paul Larsen. Five days after his win he set sail alone for home to train for the rigours of solo ocean racing and his ultimate goal the Vendée Globe in 2004. He had covered over 2/3 of the distance home when disaster struck.
He is now heading for Trinidad with the German freighter, EWL Central America and is expected to fly home on 21st December.
After leaving Mondello, just north of Palermo, at midday on Tuesday, competition in the Maxi class, part of the 41 boat fleet in the annual Palermo-Montecarlo, was decided on Thursday. The IRC corrected time victory went to a first time winner, while one of the race’s most frequent competitors was again both first home and set a new race (…)
Alexis Loison and Jean-Pierre Kelbert’s JPK 1050 Léon has been crowned overall winner of the Rolex Fastnet Race. No other boat still racing on the 695 nautical mile course can catch the French doublehanded duo for overall honours in this, the 51st edition of the Royal Ocean Racing Club’s offshore classic.
The Royal Ocean Racing Club (RORC) is delighted to announce the Yacht Club de Monaco (YCM) as the winner of the 2025 Admiral’s Cup. After an intense battle during the RORC Channel Race, six inshore races in the Solent and the prestigious finale, the Rolex Fastnet Race, the Yacht Club de Monaco team is victorious. Runner-up for the Admiral’s Cup (…)
Volvo 70 Tschüss 2 (USA), owned by Christian Zugel and co-skippered by Johnny Mordaunt, has taken Line Honours in the West to East Transatlantic Race 2025 in an elapsed time of 07 Day 15 Hrs 29 Mins and 10 Secs. Tschüss 2 Crew : Christian Zugel, Johnny Mordaunt, Al Fraser, Andrew McLean, Campbell Field, Christopher Welch, Edward Myers, Fredric (…)
It has been a long time coming after spending much of the 2024 season finishing second and even continuing this in the recent IMA Maxi European Championship, but finally Guido Paolo Gamucci’s Cippa Lippa X has won a race. On Saturday morning at 1012 off Marina di Punta Ala, the white-hulled canting keel Mylius 60 crossed the finish line of the (…)
The inaugural McIntyre Mini Globe Race (MGR) has officially set sail, and what a start it’s been ! The first leg from Antigua to Panama has already delivered drama, camaraderie, and a masterclass in offshore sailing in these Mighty Mini’s. With 15 ALMA Class Globe 580s battling it out over 1,200 nautical miles, the MGR is proving to be (…)
Le maxi-catamaran Orange a été mis à l’eau lundi veille de Noël et achève en ce moment sa phase de préparation technique au chantier de La Ciotat. Il naviguera pour la première fois demain dans les eaux méditerranéennes afin de réaliser ses premiers essais en mer.
La nouvelle gamme Meridian comprend 4 récepteurs GPS à 12 canaux parallèles mémorisant jusqu’à 500 waypoints et 20 routes réversibles de 30 segments maximum.
Nick Moloney, navigateur australien de 32 ans, vient d’être nommé co-skipper du monocoque Kingfisher. Il prend donc la suite d’Ellen MacArthur à la barre du voilier de 18 mètres que la jeune Anglaise vient de mener à la deuxième place du Vendée Globe.
Petit temps au départ de Sydney. Photo : Oskar Kihlborg Team SEB Electronic Image.
C’est à 3h, heure française, ce matin, (soit 13h heure locale), que les huit bateaux engagés dans la Volvo Ocean Race 2001-2002 se sont élancés pour une troisième étape de 2 050 milles, divisée en deux temps.
VO60 s gather at the start of the Sydney- Hobart race which is part of the third leg in the Volvo Ocean Race from Sydney to Auckland. Photo : Oskar Kihlborg Team SEB Electronic Image.
Today, in the early morning coolness, Darling Harbour, Sydney, was a hive of activity as the crews starting leg three of the Volvo Ocean Race made their final preparations and bade their last farewells.
A presque 24 ans, Ellen MacArthur vient d’inscrire son nom au palmarès prestigieux de la Transat Anglaise. En remportant la course mythique dans la catégorie des monocoques, elle succède à de grands noms de l’histoire de la course au large comme Éric Tabarly et Yves Parlier, ou ses compatriotes Francis Chichester et Geoffrey Williams. Pourtant (…)
Des marins comme Francis Joyon, il n’y en a plus beaucoup. La nouvelle donne de la course au large spectacle favorise l’éclosion de jeunes talents médiatiques, tous aussi à l’aise face à un micro que sur un voilier de course au large ou autour de trois bouées. En remportant la Transat anglaise, au nez et à la barbe des machines les plus (…)
Jean-Marie Liot, vingt-neuf ans, est photographe de mer professionnel depuis cinq ans. Basé à Arradon, dans le Morbihan, il vient de lancer sa galerie virtuelle sur internet.