NEWS -  Alfa Romeo smashes TransPac race record

NEWS - Alfa Romeo smashes TransPac race record

Alfa Romeo and Neville Crichton crossed the finish line just after midnight on Saturday 11 July Hawaii time, with an elapsed time of 5 days, 14 hours and 36 minutes, beating the previous race record by one day, one hour, 27 minutes and 51 seconds. Indeed, so quick was Alfa Romeo’s completion of the 2225 nautical mile race from Los Angeles to Hawaii, she came tantalisingly close to beating the multihull record – an amazing feat for a monohull.

The only issue faced by the crew was the problem of ocean debris. Six times they had to stop – or back down – and take down all the sails so that fishing nets, sheets of plastic and seaweed caught up in floating debris could be removed from the keel and the rudder. Each time they stop it cost more than 30 minutes, or more than three hours in total, around the same time Alfa Romeo came within the multihull record.

But Alfa Romeo has added the two prizes that really matter – her 141st line honours and a new race record to – her race record.

“It was a very good race, no problems, other than having back down to clear litter from the keel and the rudder,” said Skipper Crichton at the finish. “The highlight? Crossing the line in Hawaii, winning the race and smashing the race record. Alfa Romeo performed faultlessly, taking everything that the race threw at her in her stride. At the start we decided to steer a course north of the rest of fleet to look for more consistent wind and then come back down with a good push behind us: in fact the boat sailed at speeds of up to 25 knots, only a little under 50 kmh. The tactics paid off and the yacht and her crew responded as they always do, in other words giving their all.”

For Crichton it was also a form of home coming, with the Kiwi businessman living and working in Hawaii from 1977 to 1982 and competing in the TransPac 30 years ago, when he promised to come back – and win.

“I have waited 30 years to come back and do the TransPac and the team and I have enjoyed this event at every level, from the welcome we have had from the people running event, as well as the spectators and the public, to the professionalism of the event team, which has been excellent,” says Crichton. “It has exceeded all our expectations and I am honoured to be added to the winners list – and to have laid down a new challenge for future yachts to try and beat.”

On board with skipper and owner Neville Crichton were some of the top names in sailing: from Olympic champion Ben Ainslie to members of the Ericsson Ocean racing team and Stan Honey, the great TransPac expert who dictated the tactics for the race.

This edition of Transpac will go down in the history of the event with maxi yacht Alfa Romeo as the undisputed star for the whole of the race. She received a huge send off in Los Angeles from crowds of well-wishers and hundreds of thousands of American sailing fans following her progress via internet. Neville Crichton's début in US waters certainly lived up to his many supporters' expectations: he crossed the line first, smashing the record set in 2005 by Morning Glory.

And so in her first race of the 2009 season, sailed in relatively unknown waters against many opponents she had never met before, Alfa Romeo won her 141st Line Honours, underlining once again that she really is the fastest maxi in the world and preparing the ground for the 2009 Rolex Sydney Hobart.

“The Rolex Sydney to Hobart is very different race to the TransPac and although this win must place us as the front runner in December, there are still some five yachts that could reach Hobart first,” says Crichton. “However, we have just completed some four times the distance of the Sydney to Hobart with total reliability, with a crew who now have a vast range of experience in a wide range of conditions. In a race as tough as Rolex Sydney Hobart that is extremely significant and important. I can’t wait to be at starting line with Alfa Romeo for the Rolex Sydney Hobart. I think it will be one of the best races the event has ever seen.”