For
2013 the Gazprom Swan 60 Class took on a new challenge of racing the full
length of the Baltic Sea in the second edition of the Nord Stream Race. The non-stop 800 nautical mile offshore race
is organised by the Yacht Club of Saint-Petersburg (SPBYC) and the
Norddeutscher Regatta Verein (NRV) and this year celebrated the completion of
the Nord Stream gas pipeline, which now allows gas to flow the full length of
the Baltic Sea.
Five
Swan 60 yachts entered the second edition of the offshore race, which this year
started in Flensburg, Germany and concluded in Saint-Petersburg, Russia. Swan
60 teams competing were Team Russia, Team Germany, Team Europe and newcomers
Team Great Britain and Team Turkey. Crews
crossed the waters of Germany, Poland, Denmark, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia,
Sweden and Finland before finally coming to the finish in Saint-Petersburg,
Russia after five days of non-stop racing.
From
the start, all eyes were on winners of the Nord Stream Race 2012; Gazprom Swan
60 Class Circuit 2013 winners and inaugural World Champions, Team Russia. Tommaso Chieffi from Team Russia commented;
“The Nord Stream Race has gone up a notch in terms of competitiveness; people
are now familiar with the Swan 60 and they know how to race her competitively.
The quality of the teams has also increased and a number of world class sailors
are participating this year. The fleet is now very evenly matched, as shown in the
World Championship during the summer.”
After
a nail biting race, which saw the Swan 60 fleet change race positions a number
of times throughout the 800 nautical mile and five days of action, Team Great
Britain were finally victorious, crossing the finish line with the dawn light.
The team had managed to hold onto their first place position for the final 100
nautical miles of the race and beat previous race winners, Team Russia by just
26 seconds. A fantastic finish to the
Nord Stream Race which saw Team Great Britain and Team Russia battle it out
right to the end, crossing the finish line with less than a boat length between
them. Over a race, even further in distance than the Rolex Fastnet Race, this
is an exceptional finishing situation. The
final few miles were dramatic to watch with the 60ft Nautor’s Swan yachts
tacking and fighting hard for the first place position.
Speaking
dockside as the winning Team Great Britain crew celebrated, Skipper Adrian
Stead who has also represented GBR at the Olympics commented; “The whole race
was very close, the fleet stuck together the whole way. Earlier on we managed
to get quite a good lead but then Team Russia and Team Germany sailed up to us
again, we then got away again and in the last 100 miles we were trying so hard
to keep Team Russia behind us, for most of that time there was only a 2-3 mile
gap between us. We had a fantastic team
who have all been brilliant; they all put in 110%. We were all up on deck for
the last 16 hours of the race, hiking it out and making sure every boat length
worked. We pushed the boat incredibly hard and it all paid off for us, what
brilliant results.”
One
of the most revered navigators in top level yacht racing, Jules Salter,
Navigator onboard Team GBR and a previous Volvo Ocean Race victor spoke about
the Swan 60; “I hadn’t sailed on a Swan 60 prior to the Nord Stream Race. It is
very quiet down below and the fleet are all even in speed; it was great to race
with the other four one-design Swans.”
British
sailor Simon Fisher of winning Team GBR commented; “We had a great close race,
it was good fun, we had much closer racing than I think we were expecting. Sailing
the Swan 60 was good, it was great as it is a one-design Class and everyone was
really equal in speed and it made for a great race. It really was competitive
right to the end, two boats finishing just 26 seconds apart shows that, it made
it a lot of fun for the sailors.”
In
third place came Team Germany, who this year won the Nord Stream Inshore trophy
following two fleet races in Flensburg, Germany in the lead up to the Nord
Stream Race start. They were followed by Team Turkey in fourth and Team Europe
in fifth place. With only five hours between the 1st and 5th
boat finishing, this has highlighted just how competitive the one-design Swan
60 Class has become, a Class which challenges sailors on their sailing ability,
experience and knowledge. Over the 800 nautical miles each Swan 60 had taken
the lead position at some point, a fact which kept race followers guessing
until the final moments and boats fighting it out the whole way.
The
race this year attracted an array of high profile international sailors from
all over the globe such as Jules Salter (GBR), Simon Fisher (GBR), Adrian Stead
(GBR), Michael Muller (GER), Tim Kroger (GER), Magnus Woxén (SWE), Christian
Scherrer (SWI), Marc Lagesse (FRA), Eberhard Magg (GER), Robert Stanjek (GER),
Tomasso Chieffi (ITA), Pietro Mantovani (ITA), Francesco Mongelli (ITA),
Lorenzo Mazza (ITA), Enrico Zennaro (ITA), Alexander Shalagin (RUS), Cenk Tekkaya
(TUR) and Cagdas Artu (TUR).
America’s
Cup and Volvo Ocean Race veterans sailed alongside up-and-coming youth sailors
of tomorrow, creating a brilliant atmosphere onboard each boat. A third of the
crews were America’s Cup sailors, 20% of the Gazprom Swan 60 fleet competitors
have completed Volvo Ocean Races, nearly 10% of the Swan 60 sailors this year
have represented their country at the Olympics and 20 racers have a World
Championship title under their belts.
Newcomers
to the race Team Turkey, sponsored by Bosphorus Gas Corporation took the
opportunity to utilise the Nord Stream Race as a corporate team building exercise,
with Managing Director of Bosphorus Gas Joachim Conrad commenting; “We choose
sailing as our company’s team building project as I thought if we put a team
together on a boat it becomes a matter of survival, and by being a matter of
survival it allows us to achieve a completely new level of bonding and
cooperation between our team.”
The
only crew to consist of both female and male sailors, Team Turkey’s Chief
Helmsman Robert Klein was impressed with the team’s results; “We all celebrated
at the gala dinner after the race; the whole team are extremely happy and very
proud of their achievement. The race was a fantastic team effort and once we
realised we were in with a chance and knew that we could be competitive, the
whole spirit and determination of the team changed, we decided we wanted to
race for a position and fight for it. We all had a great time learning to sail
and race the Swan 60. We will now take this experience and new team dynamic
back to the office; we definitely achieved more than we expected.”
Team
Europe, who took second place in the 2012 edition, may have taken fifth place
this year but all is not lost as Skipper Tim Kroger pointed out; “To begin with
we had a good start, we were happy, we were well placed and we could keep up
with everyone else, at that point we were very much in the race. However, when
we came to the second transition zone, between two weather systems, we just
dropped out of it. But that is yacht racing, it is part of the game, you win
some, you lose some. The other teams all sailed very well and congratulations
go to Team Great Britain on their win.”
A
dazzling gala dinner at the Taleon Imperial Hotel greeted the euphoric sailors
in Saint-Petersburg and guests were treated to an evening of fine dining and
traditional Russian entertainment in the surrounds of a beautiful former palace.
The Nord Stream Race was rounded off perfectly with a final prize giving
ceremony which took place in the Saint-Petersburg’s Maritime Museum, a fitting
venue for such an event.
The
Yacht Club of Saint-Petersburg is proud to have hosted such an event; “We are
getting extremely positive feedback from participants and they are eager to
take part in the next edition which is the best result for us. Organising an
offshore event differs greatly from inshore events; we have to be prepared for
all kinds of surprises and eventualities.
There
were two major highlights of the Nord Stream Race for us, one was ORC boat Outsider
beating the speed record and other was the two Swan 60s finishing the race in
such a spectacular style. The social programmes in both Flensburg and
Saint-Petersburg were also fantastic. We would now like the race to become
really attractive to sailors, offering them a valuable challenge and opening
the race up to different kinds of yachts and yachtsmen.”
The 2014 edition of the Nord Stream Race is set reverse again, and with a route similar to the inaugural race in 2012 teams will race from Saint-Petersburg, Russia to Rostock / Warnemunde in Germany, via a stopover in Helsinki, Finland. The race will also be brought forward next year and is scheduled for the end of May 2014.The long term aim of the Nord Stream Race is for it to sit alongside the other iconic ocean races such as the Rolex Fastnet Race and the Rolex Sydney Hobart Race.
The 2014 edition of the Nord Stream Race is set reverse again, and with a route similar to the inaugural race in 2012 teams will race from Saint-Petersburg, Russia to Rostock / Warnemunde in Germany, via a stopover in Helsinki, Finland. The race will also be brought forward next year and is scheduled for the end of May 2014.The long term aim of the Nord Stream Race is for it to sit alongside the other iconic ocean races such as the Rolex Fastnet Race and the Rolex Sydney Hobart Race.
For
further information on the Nord Stream Race please visit the event website www.nord-stream-race.com.
Video footage from the race can be found here - www.youtube.com/user/NordStreamRace
Follow
the Gazprom Swan 60 Class via the Class website www.gazpromswan60class.com,
Facebook www.facebook.com/GazpromSwan60Class?ref=hl
and Twitter @gazpromswan60
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