Get XS Daily News  

Posts in category Article

America’s Cup: Ainslie set for Ineos split

Wednesday
Jan 22
2025
Posted by XS Editor

After Ineos Britannia lost to New Zealand 7-2 in the 37th America’s Cup, skipper Ben Ainslie confirmed his team would return for the next edition, but he was less certain about his funding. Three months on, this report by The Times notes how Ainslie is close to a split with his primary sponsor

It is understood that relations between Ainslie, the four-times Olympic champion, and Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the Ineos chief executive and Manchester United co-owner, have deteriorated as plans for another campaign have been discussed.

Ratcliffe and Ineos have plowed about £240million into the America’s Cup project, but both he and Ainslie made it clear they did not want Ineos to be the sole sponsor for the next attempt, which is likely to be in 2027. – Full report

Details: https://www.americascup.com/

Defender New Zealand will work with the Challenger of Record from Great Britain to organize the 38th America’s Cup. Anticipated to be held in 2027, the two teams have agreed on some details with the venue to be confirmed by June 2025 after Barcelona declined hosting another edition.

Read more on Scuttlebutt




Earliest videos of the New York Boat Show

Sunday
Jan 19
2025
Posted by XS Editor

With the 2025 edition of the Show about to start in a few days, lets see how far back in time our video archive can go, with footage from early shows. The best we can do is 1937…

Read more on Sail-World




Tom Slingby’s Flying Roo has sailed to victory

Sunday
Jan 19
2025
Posted by XS Editor

The ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix came to a dramatic close with an Australian win on rival waters. After delivering a racing master class across the weekend, the Flying Roo claimed a well-deserved victory.

Read more on Sail-World




Vendée Globe Sunday 19th January Update

Sunday
Jan 19
2025
Posted by XS Editor

Climbing the 29 mast on on an IMOCA yacht is a daunting task, but when repairs need to be made it’s an essential job for the skippers in the Vendée Globe. Both Sam Goodchild and Jean Le Cam had to go up the rig on Saturday.

Read more on Sail-World




SailGP Diary: Race Day 1 – Racing spectacular

Saturday
Jan 18
2025
Posted by XS Editor

A High that won’t go away provided a day beyond words for the first race day of SailGP in Auckland…

Read more on Sail-World




Boris Herrmann is back in Northern Hemisphere

Tuesday
Jan 14
2025
Posted by XS Editor

This Monday evening, Team Malizia’s skipper Boris Herrmann crossed the Equator and returned to the Northern Hemisphere, ticking off one of the last milestones along the Vendée Globe race course.

Read more on Sail-World




Charlie Dalin wins Vendée Globe 2024-25

Tuesday
Jan 14
2025
Posted by XS Editor

(January 14, 2025; Day 66) – After one long, cold final night fighting through light winds off the Brittany coast, Charlie Dalin, the French skipper of MACIF Santé Prévoyance, crossed the Vendée Globe finish line this morning at 07:24 UTC to take victory.

Dalin has been the most regular and consistent leader of the solo non stop race around the world, heading the fleet for a total of 42 days, including an unbroken run since December 30, taking victory in the tenth running of this iconic offshore test.

By winning in an incredible time of 64 days, 19 hours, 22 minutes and 49 seconds, Dalin smashed the previous record set in 2016-17 by Armel Le Cléac’h (74 days and 3 hours) by an incredible 9 days, 8 hours, 12 minutes and 57 seconds.

The 40-year-old skipper, who grew up in Le Havre in the north of France, achieved the pinnacle result of his career after leading the 2020-21 race at the finish, but dropping to second after Yannick Bestaven received redress time for his part in the rescue of Kevin Escoffier.

“I am the happiest man in the world today, for sure,” shared Dalin. “With the team I have been working for four years on this edition, building this new boat, preparing this boat and upgrading the boat and now it is done.

“When I crossed the finish line, I felt things I never ever felt before, definitely the best finish line crossing of my career. By far… there was so much emotion, I am so really happy to be back in Les Sables d’Olonne after 66 days of ultra fast sailing, I am just really happy.”

Following his finish, Dalin will have to wait for the tide to rise early this afternoon before ascending the legendary Les Sables d’Olonne channel, to step on to land for the first time since leaving Les Sables d’Olonne on start day, November 10, and to now fully savour his incredible victory.

Knowing well that any kind of mishap or accident could still happen, it still took Dalin some considerable composure to live through the final nervous hours of his race while making a long descent from the Point of Brittany to Les Sables d’Olonne in light airs.

Even if the final miles of his course allowed him to sail through his home waters, off Concarneau and the Glenans islands, enjoying a fly-by from France’s Marine Nationale, seeing coaches from his race training group, Dalin had to remain cool and focused until his finish gun sounded this morning off Les Sables d’Olonne’s famous Nouch Sud finish line.

While Dalin covered the theoretical course of 23,905 miles at an average speed of 15.37 knots, his actual course of 27,668 miles translates to an average speed of 17.79 knots.

Race updates – Tracker – Ranking – Arrival times – Facebook

Attrition:
Nov. 15: Maxime Sorel (FRA), V and B – Monbana – Mayenne, ankle injury, mast damage
Dec. 4: Louis Burton (FRA), Bureau Vallée, rigging failure
Dec. 15: Pip Hare (GBR), Medallia, dismasted
Dec. 16: Szabolcs Weöres (HUN), New Europe, broken D2 shroud
Dec. 30: Yannick Bestaven (FRA), Maître CoQ V, steerage damage
Jan. 12: Éric Bellion (FRA), STAND AS ONE – Altavia, broken J2 forestay pin

The Vendée Globe, raced in the 60-foot IMOCA, is the elite race round the world, solo, non-stop, and without assistance. On November 10, 40 skippers started the 2024-25 edition which begins and ends in Les Sables d’Olonne, France.

Armel Le Cléac’h, winning in 2017, previously held the record for the 24,300 nm course of 74 days 03 hours 35 minutes 46 seconds. Only one sailor has won it twice: Michel Desjoyeaux in 2001 and 2009. This is tenth running of the race.

Source: VG2024, SSN

Read more on Scuttlebutt




the man

Tuesday
Jan 14
2025
Posted by deleteme

After one long, cold final night fighting through light winds off the Brittany coast, Charlie Dalin, the French skipper of MACIF Santé Prévoyance crossed the Vendée Globe finish line this Tuesday morning at 07:24 UTC to take victory. Dalin has been the most regular and consistent leader of the solo non stop race around the world, heading the fleet for a total of 42 days, including an unbroken run since 30 December, takes victory in the most prestigious solo sailing race in the world.

By winning in an incredible time of 64 days, 19 hours, 22 minutes and 49 seconds, Dalin has smashed the previous record set in 2016 by Armel Le Cléac’h (74 days and 3 hours) by an incredible 9 days, 8 hours, 12 minutes and 57 seconds! The 40-year-old skipper, who grew up in Le Havre in the north of France, has achieved the pinnacle result of his career after finishing a close second in 2020-2021. He will now be able to relax and fully enjoy his victory day.

Dalin will have to wait for the tide to rise early this afternoon before ascending the legendary Les Sables d’Olonne channel, to step on to land for the first time since leaving Les Sables d’Olonne on start day, Sunday 10th November, and to now fully savour his incredible victory. More.

Read more on Sailing Anarchy




Vendée Globe 11th January Update

Saturday
Jan 11
2025
Posted by XS Editor

Benefiting from being slightly further west than Vendée Globe leader, Charlie Dalin (MACIF Santé Prévoyance), Yoann Richomme has remained slightly faster and so has continued to shave a few more miles off his deficit to the leader.

Read more on Sail-World




505 Pre-Worlds at Adelaide overall

Wednesday
Jan 01
2025
Posted by XS Editor

Day 2 of the Sir James Hardy 505 pre-worlds brought picture perfect conditions for a day at the beach. It also brought pretty good sailing conditions. The courses were two-lap windward leewards…

Read more on Sail-World




five daze

Wednesday
Jan 01
2025
Posted by deleteme

Five days in the Tasman, two-handed, in this. We take our hats off to them. Oh and for most of the race, the self-steering was held together by a vice grip, string, and sail ties!

Read more on Sailing Anarchy




Sydney Hobart triumph and tragedies, Vendee Globe

Wednesday
Jan 01
2025
Posted by XS Editor

Looking back, 2024 has been year that can be metaphorically bookended by mighty Ultims and tiny Alma Globe 5.80s…

Read more on Sail-World




Moth Worlds – Mattias Coutts sets pace at World’s pre-event in Manly New Zealand

Wednesday
Jan 01
2025
Posted by deleteme

Day 1 of the International Moth Class – Oceania Championship was dominated by Kiwi pair, Mattias Coutts and Jacob Pye…

Read more on Sail Web




Vendee Globe Race – Leaders breakfree from Cape Frio cold front off Rio

Wednesday
Jan 01
2025
Posted by deleteme

The two leaders of Vendée Globe, Charlie Dalin and Yoann Richomme, may finally have extricated themselves from cold front off Cabo Frio by Rio…

Read more on Sail Web




Vendee Globe: Richomme passes Cape Horn

Monday
Dec 23
2024
Posted by XS Editor

Vendee Globe have advised in the latest update that at 2327hrs UTC on Dec 23 that Yoann Richomme was the first Vendee Globe competitor to round Cape Horn…

Read more on Sail-World




off and running

Monday
Dec 23
2024
Posted by deleteme

Please click the above pic to read the entire article.

For those of us who race as impoverished amateurs, or just watch from the shore, there’s always a bittersweet taste to the start of the Hobart race every Boxing Day.

Sure, it is still one of the greatest spectacles in world sport as the yachts charge down the unique scenic runway of Sydney Harbour. But in terms of ‘fair play’ it’s only the largest few boats that get a genuinely equal chance as they sprint towards the Heads and turn South. All the others have to then battle through the maxi’s choppy wakes and disturbed air. Even the high-performance TP52s can struggle to reach maximum speed and height.

The organizers – and let’s give them their due – have tried hard over the decades to reduce this problem. The fleet is now divided into four groups based on size, each starting from their own staggered line set further back down the Harbour. That’s a prudent safety measure but can often be unfair because the Summer breeze in Sydney is usually stronger the closer you are to the Heads.

To lessen congestion and stop foolhardy skippers from trying to cut the corner on the southern headland (which has a bombora), all yachts must navigate two laid clearance marks. These also compensate for the extra distance traveled by the boats that started further behind the first line.

That’s all well and good, but the secondary effect is to again slow the smaller boats while the maxis are already off and running down the 180° rhumbline towards Tasmania. There’s usually a lot of bash-and-barge as the frustrated back-markers converge on these marks – often on opposite tacks – and they struggle to make decent speed in the souped-up water and bad gas. It’s never a nice way to begin a 628-mile race.

So, is there a solution to this unfair scramble at the start of every Sydney-Hobart? One suggestion might be for the four classes to set off at half-hour intervals with the smallest yachts going first and the largest last. Elapsed times could then be adjusted after the finish. That could certainly help give everyone an equal chance in clear conditions, but it’s doubtful whether Rolex would agree. Marketing people don’t like complexity. Nor, apparently, fairness – ed.

– anarchist David

Read more on Sailing Anarchy




Only USA entry in Rolex Sydney Hobart

Monday
Dec 23
2024
Posted by XS Editor

The 2024 Sydney Hobart Race extends 628-nautical miles from Sydney Harbour to Hobart, the state capital of Tasmania. The start on December 26 takes place in the heart of the Australian summer, with 105 yachts set to take on the 79th edition. Kimball Livingston reports on one of the entrants for the NY Times:


A slow epiphany brought Ron Epstein and his boat to Australia as the only U.S. entry in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, starting Thursday (Dec. 26).

“I’m not the poster child of who should be doing this,” he said.

Growing up sailing casually with family in Southern California, Epstein, a patent attorney, carried on the tradition when he relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area, bought a J/133 yacht and sailed with family and friends. He shared the experience of sailing under the Golden Gate Bridge, looping around Alcatraz or lazily drifting past the downtown towers.

Competition was not on his mind, Epstein said, until a guest said that his 43 footer was as much a race boat as a cruiser. “I told him, ‘I don’t think so. Look at all that wood down below.’”

That one comment, however, sparked two years of cautious experimenting as Epstein discovered that he could succeed at racing, and that he liked it, and that he might like it even more with a boat that did not have all that wood down below. – Full report

Event details: https://rolexsydneyhobart.com

Read more on Scuttlebutt




Vendee Globe – Goodchild forced to stop after headsail failure

Sunday
Dec 22
2024
Posted by deleteme

Sam Goodchild (VULNERABLE) suddenly lost his headsail during the night and was forced to stop to untangle the sail from the keel. He stopped the boat and found the 180sq m sail partly wrapped around his port foil. Fortunately he managed to get it all back on board without any damage to it and it…

Read more on Sail Web




Sydney Hobart – Tasman in 20 hours

Sunday
Dec 22
2024
Posted by XS Editor

Four days out from the big race is always a perilous time to be making weather predictions. The advanced computer models we have today do make it more approachable than ever, however…

Read more on Sail-World




Abandoning a perfectly good boat

Sunday
Dec 22
2024
Posted by XS Editor

by Peter Swanson, Loose Cannon
The sailing world was abuzz with skepticism recently as the U.S. Coast Guard reported rescuing three men in a sailboat that wasn’t sinking. Why? According to the Coast Guard, they were experiencing up to 20-knot winds and 10-foot seas and feared the boat would capsize.1

On December 12, the trio abandoned a 2005 Beneteau Oceanis 523 that was 150 miles southeast of Cape Hatteras—sails furled, a $225,000 purchase left to drift toward Scotland.

The wind and seas were as reported by the Coast Guard at the time of rescue.

“Capsizing seems unlikely in those stated conditions, but we weren’t there,” wrote Tad Roberts, a Canadian naval architect. “Cape Hatteras in December is too late in the year. Big, fat, snap-rolling boat with short crew, the one experienced person gets exhausted after four days, and they give up.” – Full report

Read more on Scuttlebutt




Sailing (on purpose) into a hurricane

Sunday
Dec 22
2024
Posted by XS Editor

The 2024 hurricane season, predicted to be “above-normal,” began with the earliest-ever category 5 hurricane in the Atlantic, Hurricane Beryl, in early July, and ended with Rafael, the westernmost major November hurricane on record. Saildrone sailed into both.

“In a lot of ways, this was the most successful hurricane mission that we’ve ever had,” said Greg Foltz, an oceanographer at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)’s Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory (AOML) and one of the principal investigators on the mission.

In 2021, NOAA and Saildrone launched a multiyear mission to deploy Saildrone Explorer uncrewed surface vehicles (USVs) into tropical storms and hurricanes to measure near-surface atmospheric and upper-ocean data to better understand how ocean-atmosphere interaction affects hurricane intensity and improve hurricane prediction models. – Full story

Read more on Scuttlebutt




Cape Horn records set to tumble

Sunday
Dec 22
2024
Posted by XS Editor

At six weeks into the Vendée Globe, with the leading duo Yoann Richomme (PAPREC ARKÉA) and Charlie Dalin (MACIF Santé Prévoyance) set to round Cape Horn late tomorrow, fatigue is the constant, gnawing, universal presence..

Read more on Sail-World




Yoann Richomme is new Vendee Globe leader

Tuesday
Dec 17
2024
Posted by deleteme

]Yoann Richomme is back on top of the Vendée Globe fleet, overhauling long time leader Charlie Dalin earlier this morning…

Read more on Sail Web




forward thinking

Tuesday
Dec 17
2024
Posted by deleteme

Weirdly enough, we received a “media plan” for the 2026 J/24 Worlds in Melbourne. 2026?  I mean, sure, you have to plan for such an event, but 2026? And the pic they sent doesn’t exactly inspire!

Read more on Sailing Anarchy




control freaks

Tuesday
Dec 17
2024
Posted by deleteme

What the hell is wrong with these people? We all know plenty of uptight, sphincter-clenched yacht clubs (STFYC in ‘Frisco comes to mind), but these clowns take the cake. Paranoid and clearly trying to control every narrative that comes out of CYCA, this sort of clampdown is censorship, plain and simple. 

And we have no doubt that the investigative reporting from Sailing Anarchy is the primary reason for this nonsense. It makes us both lol and disdainful of a club that thinks this okay. We are also fairly certain of who the individual behind all this is.
Thin skin much?

“The Cruising Yacht Club of Australia (CYCA) would like to remind Members of the Club’s protocol regarding media interviews. To ensure consistent and accurate communication, only the Club Commodore or approved representative is authorised to speak to the media on behalf of the Club.

Recently a Member of the Club was interviewed after a sailing incident that occurred on Sydney Harbour. The information that was shared during this interview was inaccurate, leading to potential misunderstandings about what had transpired. This highlights the importance of ensuring that all information shared with the media is accurate and comes from an authorised source.

This policy regarding our media communications is in place to maintain a unified voice and to protect the integrity of CYCA’s reputation. Members approached by media for comments or interviews relating to the CYCA are kindly requested to direct all inquiries to Club’s Media and Communication team.”

Read more on Sailing Anarchy




The new SUNBEAM 29.1 GT: Less weight, more sport!

Tuesday
Dec 17
2024
Posted by XS Editor

SUNBEAM Yachts is never satisfied with the status quo. This is also the case with the SUNBEAM 29.1. Based on the current SUNBEAM 29.1, a GT model has been developed that focuses even more on performance and sportiness.

Read more on Sail-World




Szabolcs Weöres retires from the Vendée Globe

Tuesday
Dec 17
2024
Posted by XS Editor

Because of irreparable damage to the D2 shroud on his IMOCA, New Europe, Hungarian skipper Szabolcs Weöres has made the difficult decision to retire from Vendée Globe 2024-25…

Read more on Sail-World




Mini Globe Race, Vendee Globe, and US Sailing news

Tuesday
Dec 17
2024
Posted by XS Editor

While the eyes of the sailing world are rightfully glued to the Southern Ocean-exploits of the ongoing Vendée Globe sailors (see below), another round-the-world race is beginning to capture my imagination…

Read more on Sail-World




Charlie Dalin at the gateway to the Pacific Ocean

Thursday
Dec 12
2024
Posted by XS Editor

On this 32nd day of racing, the skipper of MACIF Santé Prévoyance continues his express ride on the Vendée Globe after having engulfed the Cape of Good Hope / Cape Leeuwin section in 9 days and 22 hours. A record!

Read more on Sail-World




International Moth Worlds head to New Zealand for a late 2024 championship

Thursday
Dec 12
2024
Posted by deleteme

2024 International Moth World Championships open in Manly, New Zealand, 30 December 2024 to 9 Jan 2025…

Read more on Sail Web




Eight Bells: Dan Delave

Thursday
Dec 12
2024
Posted by XS Editor

Dan Delave (68) passed away peacefully at his home in Long Beach, CA surrounded by friends and family on December 8, 2024 after a one year battle with cancer.

Dan’s journey on the water started with surfing and then later onto sailing where he was a test pilot for the Hobie tri-foiler and a competitor in many fleets including the F18 catamaran class. He was always looking to go faster and create friends, whether it was a new class on the starting line or through his proud leadership as Commodore of Alamitos Bay Yacht Club.

Most recently his passion was wing foiling that challenged him the most, and while getting old sucks, he ignored it being a young man’s sport. Dan was forever young at heart.

In his wake he left his loving wife Eileen, his brother and sister, extended family and many friends from a lifetime in and around the water. Sail on Dan!

Read more on Scuttlebutt




Vendée Globe Twists and Turns, Thrills and Spills

Wednesday
Dec 11
2024
Posted by XS Editor

I need to start with an admission… I’m addicted to the Vendée Globe. When I wake in the morning, I look at the tracker, and at each sched (it updates every four hours) I take a look…

Read more on Sail-World




machette not included

Wednesday
Dec 11
2024
Posted by deleteme

Laurent Martinez is 68 years old, he is passionate about sailing and has started building a 13-metre long and 4-metre wide sloop. The boat is currently in his garden, all it needs is its rigging, its fittings, and some interior fittings, so that it can finally set sail. But Laurent no longer has the energy to take care of it, and wants to give it to those who will take care of his dream, to make it their reality.

The story of its owner is for the readers of the magazine.

Read more on Sailing Anarchy




19 classes set for Foiling Week Pensacola 2025

Wednesday
Dec 11
2024
Posted by XS Editor

Excitement is building for the first-ever Foiling Week Pensacola 2025, the premier international foiling regatta and World Sailing Special Event, taking place in less than three months in Florida’s Panhandle…

Read more on Sail-World




Sam Davies just had an “interesting” night . . . We ended up tacking, sails against, boat lying at almost 90 degrees

Wednesday
Dec 11
2024
Posted by deleteme

Sam Davies – Hello! I just had an interesting night. And there, don’t panic. I no longer have a pilot, no more electronics, I can’t even tilt the keel to help straighten the boat…

Read more on Sail Web




Louis Burton has had to abandon the Vendee Globe

Thursday
Dec 05
2024
Posted by deleteme

At around midday UTC Wednesday, Louis Burton (BUREAU VALLÉE) informed the Vendée Globe race management that he had to abandon the race…

Read more on Sail Web




Vendée Globe leaders racing storm

Thursday
Dec 05
2024
Posted by XS Editor

(December 5, 2024; Day 26) – The Vendée Globe story continues to be how the leaders in the Indian Ocean – Charlie Dalin and Sébastien Simon – are outrunning a monster low pressure system as they pass the Kerguelen Islands. While Louis Burton’s issue has proven race ending, Dalin and Simon are thriving where others dared not.

Dalin seemed to be almost enjoying his race which right now is not against his rivals but against the low pressure system. At the back of the center of the low there are ten metre waves and brutal 60 knots gusts, but if he and Simon can succeed in staying ahead of the worst of the voracious system, the gains will be significant.

“I am feeling a bit tired, I need to get a bit of rest,” admitted Dalin. “But apart from that I am all good. I am racing this monster of a low pressure. It is not going too bad and I am managing to keep up with my routing, which is good.

“I am in a pretty good place right now, making good progress towards the east, every little gain towards is pure gold, it means we will be caught by the low pressure further east which means I will have a smaller sea state and less strong winds, which is good. So I am fighting hard to stay ahead for as long as possible. I will get caught eventually that is for sure. But the later, the better.

“The GRIB files are working pretty well, at the moment regarding wind speed and direction and then I am looking at satellite imagery through Windy (weather forecasting website) and so I am monitoring the progress of these two weather systems in these two ways.”

He describes the process which brought him to decide to stay south and challenge the big system.

“It is true I was the south most boat at the time but nonetheless I still had an opportunity to shift north, but it would have cost me, it would probably have been more costly for me than the others. But in terms of decision making, I spent ten hours in front of the computer, running hundreds of routings, trying to work out what choice was good and for what reason.

“I still don’t know if it is a good choice. We will find out in a bit more than 24 hours. But it took me a long time to come up with this decision. And it has been fun, it has been fun to sail against this monster. I try not to watch “him” too much on Adrena (routing software program) because if you look too much you see the red arrows of 60kts and I say to myself ‘I don’t want to be there’. I am like a horse only looking forwards at the course with the blinkers on.

“I try to sail fast to the east, every metre is important. What is great is these fast foilers are letting us do new things which before you could do only with multihulls.”

Race updates – Tracker – Ranking – Facebook

Attrition:
Nov. 15: Maxime Sorel (FRA), V and B – Monbana – Mayenne – ankle injury, mast damage
Dec. 4: Louis Burton (FRA), Bureau Vallée – rigging failure

The Vendée Globe, raced in the 60-foot IMOCA, is the elite race round the world, solo, non-stop, and without assistance. On November 10, 40 skippers started the 2024-25 edition which begins and ends in Les Sables d’Olonne, France.

Armel Le Cléac’h, winning in 2017, holds the record for the 24,300 nm course of 74 days 03 hours 35 minutes 46 seconds. Only one sailor has won it twice: Michel Desjoyeaux in 2001 and 2009. This is tenth running of the race.

Source: VG2024, SSN

Read more on Scuttlebutt




Both Ultim 3 foiling trimarans aborte their Jules Verne Trophy record attempts

Thursday
Dec 05
2024
Posted by deleteme

The Ultim foiling trimarans of Thomas Coville’s Sodebo and Francois Gabart’s SVR-Lazartigue have both aborted their Jules Verne Trophy record attempts…

Read more on Sail Web




house of pain

Thursday
Dec 05
2024
Posted by deleteme

1,700 miles behind the leader, the night was even more painful for Louis Burton. For the skipper of Bureau Vallée, who suffered serious damage to his rigging, there was no miracle this time. Even MacGyver can’t fight when mechanical fate is relentless! After his structural repairs in the North Atlantic, the experienced sailor who has completed two round-the-world races, this time without a solution, had to announce, with a broken heart, his retirement. The sailor who was in 16th position at the time of his breakdown should take 36 hours to reach Cape Town, close-hauled , in strong sea and wind conditions. More here.

Title inspiration is, unsurprisingly, thanks to House of Pain.

Read more on Sailing Anarchy




Dalin ready to face first violent southern storm

Wednesday
Dec 04
2024
Posted by XS Editor

She has been making headlines in the Vendée Globe since the beginning of the week. The immense depression, 1,800 km long and high, is already beginning to cross the head of the fleet, sweeping the Indian Ocean with gusts of more than 40 knots…

Read more on Sail-World




« More XS Stories

Newer XS Stories »

Follow Us!

Follow Us on FacebookFollow Us on TwitterFollow Us on E-mail

World News click here

Enter the Border Run

XS Chat

XS Poll

RSS Sailing World

RSS SA Forums

  • Admirals Cup Geeking.
  • New X-Yachts ORC racer
  • Vakaros
  • Improbable
  • Buy a drink for the US Coast Guard

Sponsors

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Archives

  • March 2026 (5)
  • February 2026 (5)
  • January 2026 (3)
  • December 2025 (16)
  • November 2025 (2)
  • October 2025 (3)
  • September 2025 (5)
  • August 2025 (5)
  • July 2025 (8)
  • June 2025 (13)
  • May 2025 (8)
  • April 2025 (17)
  • March 2025 (25)
  • February 2025 (26)
  • January 2025 (33)
  • December 2024 (30)
  • November 2024 (29)
  • October 2024 (28)
  • September 2024 (43)
  • August 2024 (82)
  • July 2024 (29)
  • June 2024 (22)
  • May 2024 (18)
  • April 2024 (34)
  • March 2024 (5)
  • February 2024 (32)
  • January 2024 (43)
  • December 2023 (48)
  • November 2023 (82)
  • October 2023 (105)
  • September 2023 (55)
  • August 2023 (58)
  • July 2023 (80)
  • June 2023 (59)
  • May 2023 (97)
  • April 2023 (80)
  • March 2023 (120)
  • February 2023 (95)
  • January 2023 (85)
  • December 2022 (94)
  • November 2022 (134)
  • October 2022 (124)
  • September 2022 (69)
  • August 2022 (122)
  • July 2022 (140)
  • June 2022 (154)
  • May 2022 (160)
  • April 2022 (196)
  • March 2022 (160)
  • February 2022 (108)
  • January 2022 (101)
  • December 2021 (141)
  • November 2021 (183)
  • October 2021 (122)
  • September 2021 (129)
  • August 2021 (175)
  • July 2021 (154)
  • June 2021 (194)
  • May 2021 (178)
  • April 2021 (210)
  • March 2021 (47)
Free Web Counter
Website Hit Counters

EvoLve theme by Theme4Press  •  Powered by WordPress XS Sailing