MAPFRE Wins Volvo Ocean Race Leg 3 from Cape Town to Melbourne

The Spanish Volvo Ocean Race team MAPFRE wins Leg 3 from Cape Town to Melbourne, a 6,500 nautical mile dive into the fierce challenges posed by the Southern Ocean.

For the second consecutive leg, MAPFRE needed to come from behind to earn the victory. And for the second time in a row, it was Dongfeng Race Team they passed mid-stage, to snatch the win.

“We had to fight very hard for this victory,” skipper Xabi Fernández said moments after crossing the finish line. “There’s so much of the race to go. But for now it’s looking good and we’re very happy of course.”

The Southern Ocean pushed the teams to the limit. Extreme cold, storm force winds for days on end and towering seas posed massive seamanship challenges, let alone allowing for racing and tactics.

“The strongest point for this team is the group of people we have,” Fernandez acknowledged. “They are so good and give us so much and have been working so hard on this leg. It was so tough, but it’s all gone perfect. Now we have a few days for recovery and we can get ready for the next one.

Leg 3, Cape Town to Melbourne, Start. Photo by Ainhoa Sanchez/Volvo Ocean Race. 10 December, 2017.

Dongfeng Race Team, nursing home a boat with a damaged keel system was able to fend off a late charge by Vestas 11th Hour Racing and Team Brunel to secure second place finish. It’s the second consecutive second place finish for skipper Charles Caudrelier’s team and this one will be bittersweet. The team led for much of this hard Southern Ocean leg and were disappointed to see MAPFRE make a pass to take the win

“This was the toughest leg I’ve ever done,” Caudrelier said. “We had this big fight with MAPFRE for most of the race and then a big problem on board just before the finish. A crazy section of gybing around the ice limits, it was a very, very difficult leg. We’re a bit disappointed after leading 80 per-cent of the time to give first place up to MAPFRE, but there are more legs to come and we will do better.”

Vestas 11th Hour Racing grabbed the final spot on the podium. Just after crossing the finishing line, Mark Towill, team director and co-skipper acknowledged the scale of the achievement “It was a tough leg. We’re happy to be on the podium again. It’s great to be in on Christmas and I know we’re all looking forward to getting ashore. It was a difficult leg, hard on the bodies, but everyone has held up well.”

Leg 3, Cape Town to Melbourne, day 5, Morning watch on board Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag. Photo by Konrad Frost/Volvo Ocean Race. 14 December, 2017.

The Vestas 11th Hour Racing crew finished behind Dongfeng Race Team but ahead of Team Brunel. At one point, with about 36 hours to go, the race tracker showed nothing to choose between Vestas and Dongfeng in terms of distance to finish, but in reality, the tactical situation favoured the Chinese/French boat.

“It was looking pretty close for a little while, but they were always ahead,” Towill said. “They were always comfortable. Brunel sailed well too so credit to them. It was challenging conditions and we’re all happy to be here and in one piece.”

In fourth place was Team Brunel, skipper Bouwe Bekking knows it keeps his team in touch with leaders but wants to be challenging the leaders.  hoa

“It’s been a really hard leg. We always expected it would be tough and it lived up to that,” Bekking said. “Plenty of breeze and some awesome sailing as well.

Fifth place in Leg 3 went to Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag who managed to hold off Turn the Tide on Plastic, for the second consecutive leg. Skipper David Witt steered Scallywag across the Melbourne finish line on a sunny boxing day, just in time for lunch. Turn the Tide on Plastic was less than three hours behind, after over two weeks and 6,500 nautical miles of close, hard-fought racing.

“Aussies arriving home after a tough leg. 6th place – shame we couldn’t catch those Scally’s. We tried and it was close. Hopefully next time,” tweeted Turn the Tide on Plastic skipper Dee Caffari as her boat approached the finish line.

Leg 3 of the Volvo Ocean Race represented a return to the roots of the race – a dip down to the Roaring Forties of the Southern Ocean, where storm systems circle Antarctica, unimpeded by land. The result is day after day of cold, strong winds and fearsome seas.

“The Southern Ocean always turns it on,” said Scallywag’s Luke Parkinson as the boat pulled up to the dock. “There are big waves and a lot of wind. This time we probably spent more time further south with day after day of big wind. It certainly can wear you down. When we turned left and headed up to Australia it was pretty special – a very good feeling. We’ve got to rest up now and be ready to leave in a few days.”

It’s an abbreviated stopover in Melbourne, with restrictions on how much work the crews are allowed to do on the boats, ahead of the start of Leg 4, to Hong Kong, on January 2, 2018.

Leg 3, Cape Town to Melbourne, day 06, on board Dongfeng. Rough sailing condition close to the ice gate. Black at the pit. Photo by Martin Keruzore/Volvo Ocean Race. 15 December, 2017.
Volvo Ocean Race Leg 3 – Provisional Results 
  1. MAPFRE – 14 days, 04h:07m:21s
  2. Dongfeng Race Team – 14 days, 08h:10m:16s
  3. Vestas 11th Hour Racing – 14 days, 09h:52m:11s
  4. Team Brunel – 14 days, 11h:36m:27s
  5. Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag -15 days, 13h:06m:31s
  6. Turn the Tide on Plastic -15 days, 15h:52m:50s
  7. team AkzoNobel – still racing
Volvo Ocean Race Leaderboard
  1. MAPFRE – 29 points
  2. Dongfeng Race Team – 23 points
  3. Vestas 11th Hour Racing – 23 points
  4. Team Brunel – 14 points
  5. Sun Hung Kai/Scallywag – 11 points
  6. AkzoNobel – 7 points
  7. Turn the Tide on Plastic – 6 points

Additional reporting, images: Volvo Ocean Race, Martin Keruzore, Jeremie Lecaudey, Konrad Frost, Ainhoa Sanchez

Christmas Eve @ Churchill’s – 24 December, 2017

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Christmas Eve at Churchill’s an English pub in Wanchai: mulled wine, roast turkey n trimmings, mince pies and lots of Christmas cheer.
Click on any photo for the full gallery of images

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Great European Carnival Opening Night @ Central Harbourfront – 21 December, 2017

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The Great European Carnival has returned to the Central Harbourfront complete with a big top circus, concerts and a wide range of new rides, games and food to keep all the family entertained until the 25 February, 2018.

bc was there on opening night to catch all the early fun. Click on any photo for the full gallery of images.

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Shawn Mendes Illuminate World Tour @ AsiaWorld Expo – 13 December, 2017

Shawn Mendes brought his Illuminate World Tour to AsiaWorld Expo this week to the joy of screaming fans of all ages. Mendes performed all his hits and songs from his new album finishing with an encore of

The full set list was:
There’s Nothing Holdin’ Me Back
Lights On
Handwritten Medley
The Weight
A Little Too Much
Stitches
Bad Reputation
Ruin
Life Of The Party
Three Empty Words
Patience
Roses
Bad Reputation Reprise
No Promises
Understand
Don’t Be A Fool
Mercy
Never Be Aone/Hey There Delilah

Encore
Treat You Better

Click on any photo for more images of the concert

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Women’s Rugby Fixtures – 16 December, 2017

Christmas Pizza Anyone?

Looking for something different this festive season? Perhaps Pizza Express’ Christmas menu which includes two festive pizzas and a range of themed dishes might interest you.

The seasonal a la carte menu features a baked cheese melt starter ($65), a turkey Caesar salad ($128), Farfalle con Tacchino ($133, turkey pasta with a white cream sauce) and Pumpkin Cannelloni ($138) – this is ok, the pureed pumpkin, spinach and cheese filling is tasty but it perhaps could have been delicious if the pumpkin had been in chunks to give the filling some texture and substance.

There are two festive pizza: Tacchinao Rosmarino ($153) – a thin crust pizza topped with turkey, cranberry and sweet peppadew sauce, pancetta, mozzarella, tomato sauce, a sprinkle of rosemary and pine nuts.  The Cicciolo e Fontina ($153) features pork, pork shin, fontina, mozzarella, Parmesan with caramelized onions, garlic oil, béchamel sauce and thyme served on a thin crust pizza.

Strange sounding combinations they may seem, but they’re both not bad.  The turkey one, perhaps a little sweet to eat a full pizza yourself. But Pizza Express allows mixing and matching so we sampled a half/half combination which was delicious.

Dessert options are Apple Tortino ($88, a baked apple, cinnamon  and puff pasty combination topped with vanilla gelato) and a Snowy Date Pudding ($88) which is rather nice. The warm pudding in a sauce of honey yoghurt and raspberry coulis topped with vanilla gelato.

The festive menu is available at all Pizza Express outlets until 1 January, 2018

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Tai Po 22-12 Kowloon at Shek Kip Mei

League leaders Tai Po Dragons defeated Kowloon Ladies 22-12 at Shek Kip Mei, while SCAA CWB Phoenix claimed third, seeing off City Sparkle 38-8. In the Women’s Premiership, the two leaders confirmed their positions – Valley Black prevailed 30-15 after being pushed hard by USRC Tigers and Gai Wu Falcons beat HKFC Ice 29-12.

In the contest to top the Premiership Development League it was Kowloon ahead early and looking effective and full of running. On 15 minutes a forwards move was worked across the backline, then on via the forwards again with hooker Yuk Wun Yip finishing off under the posts and converted by Ho Yee Mak.

The Dragons were quick to reorganise and spent much of rest of the first half in Kowloon’s rear quarter, albeit against a determined defence. Just before the break Tai Po leveled the scores, 7-7, taking possession in midfield and passing quickly out to the left wing for Kwong Sau Yan to go over.

Three minutes into the second half and Tai Po took the lead courtesy of a wonderful solo effort by Oyinlola Kim Lee, who secured a turnover at a ruck inside her own 22 and then ran 70 metres, slicing through the Kowloon back line en route to scoring in the right-hand corner.

The rest of the second half saw Tai Po looking to play a territorial game, through sharp kicking and forcing errors and then looking to exploit them. Two similar team tries won the Dragons the game, securing the ball in the centre, working it for a couple of phases, and moving the ball quickly down the right-hand channel, once in the hands of Wong Wing Ying, and then by Chui Tung Yan in the 57th and 74th minutes respectively.

A last-minute try from Kowloon, by Hiu Tung Chan was little more than a consolation score.

Tai Po coach Tsang Hing Hung was understandably pleased with the effort “In the first half, our girls were not really concentrating, we allowed [Kowloon] too much space. But after we lost that first try, we reorganised and got our girls keeping pressure on them, and then we controlled the game through the rest of the half,” said Tsang.

“Throughout the game our ball handling and decision-making were not so good, leaving our attack weak. But our positioning was good and that kept us in control. We played pretty well after the first try.”

For Kowloon, Jonathan Ho saw an important game slip from his hands but he had no complaints about the winners. “We just gave them an early Christmas present today. The result was largely down to unforced errors that we made. Really we just killed ourselves,” he rued before adding. “Our own mistakes kept us inside our own 22, and gave too many opportunities to Tai Po.”

While Ho put the loss down to his own side’s errors, he conceded that Tai Po were on top for most of the game. “Their defence was exceptionally good, and that allowed them to put us under pressure that we couldn’t cope with. We are underperforming as a team. We won three games in a row but losing this means we aren’t good enough. This was a lesson, and we have to go away, re-work and step up again.”

In the Women’s National League 2, SCAA CWB Lammergeier showed why they head that table, retaining possession of the NL 2 Challenge Shield with a 59-5 win over City RFC Twinkles.

Additional reporting/images: hkru

Volvo Ocean Race Sailors Prepare For Rough Re-start in Cape Town

Strong winds are forecast for the start of Leg 3 of the Volvo Ocean Race on Sunday afternoon in Cape Town as the famous ‘Cape Doctor’ – a strong southeasterly wind – pays a visit over the weekend.

On Saturday morning the doctor made a house call bringing a steady 40 knots of wind, and at least one gust of over 60 knots was recorded. This is expected to moderate somewhat for Sunday’s race start, but winds are forecast to remain in the 25 to 35 knot range, with some gusts significantly stronger.

“It’s going to be full-on for the start,” says Vestas 11th Hour Racing navigator Simon Fisher. “Very strong southeasterlies and then when we get offshore it will be a decent sea-state we’re banging into as well. It will soften a bit but then we’re quickly into the westerlies and it’s the proper Southern Ocean. It’s going to be an intense leg in general.”

“It could be very windy for the first week and very high speed,” agreed Charles Caudrelier, skipper of Dongfeng Race Team. “I think it’s going to be a fantastic leg.”

Leg 3, from Cape Town to Melbourne, Australia is a nominal 6,500 nautical miles. The routing takes the teams down into the ‘Roaring Forties’, the area south of 40-degrees latitude where storm systems circle Antarctica, unimpeded by any land mass. Towering waves, steady gale and storm force winds, and ice-cold temperatures are a daily feature here.

“We should remember it’s late spring, just the beginning of summer and the winter has just passed in the Southern Hemisphere so the water is still bloody cold,” said race veteran Bouwe Bekking, the skipper of Team Brunel.

“I think the most frightening thing is that the depressions are still so strong… the amount of pressure that is in the air is just humongous. And of course, the water temperatures – hopefully with the ice limits we don’t encounter any ice – but if the water is just a few degrees above freezing and you get a southerly breeze, you might be having icicles off the mast some times. We’ve experienced it in the past… When we did this leg in the old days, this was the leg when the most damage appeared. The boats today are stronger than before, but still things can break.”

Deciding when to push for speed and when to throttle back to protect crew and equipment is a delicate balance. The stakes are even higher as this is the first double-point leg. The winner of Leg 3 will collect 15 points (7 x 2 = 14 plus a 1 point win bonus).

“I think we have a lot of experience on our boat and we have to trust that experience in the Southern Ocean,” explained Charlie Enright, skipper of Vestas 11th Hour Racing talking about finding the balance of how hard to push. “It not just about the points, it’s the fact we don’t haul-out in Melbourne, it’s the heavy conditions in the Southern Ocean, because you don’t want to break anything…To finish first, you must first finish.”

For Xabi Fernández, the skipper of MAPFRE, the race leader, the stopover in Cape Town provided a much needed opportunity to recharge.

“After the first long leg (Lisbon to Cape Town), it’s always important to be in the front,” he said. “We’re happy as a team. We had a good stopover. The boat is in great shape and the team is as well, so we’re ready to go.”

The start of Leg 3 is scheduled for 2pm in Cape Town, 12:00 UTC, and will be broadcast live on www.volvooceanrace.com.

Additional reporting and images: Pedro Martinez, Volvo Ocean Race