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Outimage Publications ocean yacht racing coverage of the VOR 2008-2009.
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Sleepless and shattered
Leg 8 Day 5 - 14:36 GMT Wednesday, June 10, 2009.
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It has been a tough 24 hours for the seven boats in the Volvo Ocean Race as they enter the final stages of leg eight from Galway to Marstrand. Ericsson 4 still has a tenuous lead over Green Dragon (+2 nm) and the pair are match racing up the Danish coast. The two leaders are less than a mile off the beach of Thyborøn, a fishing village in Jutland that is famous for being the site of numerous shipwrecks.
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Ericsson 4, skippered by Torben Grael (BRA), earlier during leg 8 Galway to Marstrand, off the Isles of Scilly, Lands End and Lizzard Point.

Photo © Rick Tomlinson / Volvo Ocean Race.

Ericsson 4, skippered by Torben Grael (BRA) during leg 8 Galway to Marstrand, off the Isles of Scilly, Lands End and Lizzard Point. Photo copyright Rick Tomlinson / Volvo Ocean Race.
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However, while the leading pair continues at a steady 11 knots, PUMA (+5) is streaking in from left field and is still managing to average a speed of over 17 knots.

"The big question is will there be enough runway for us to make up the deficit on our competition?" asks MCM Rick Deppe. "We know for sure that we have way more pressure than they do in there on the Danish coast, but our tracks are converging and we only have about 100 miles to the north tip of Denmark, where we make the turn and head for Marstrand."
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Green Dragon, as seen from Ericsson 4, on leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand.

Photo © Guy Salter / Ericsson 4 / Volvo Ocean Race.

Green Dragon, as seen from Ericsson 4, on leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand. Photo copyright Guy Salter / Ericsson 4 / Volvo Ocean Race.
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A smile is back on the faces of the Telefónica Blue crew as they step back into the race after spending some unfamiliar time at the bottom of the ranking yesterday. They have picked off Ericsson 3 and Delta Lloyd and are now in fifth place, but only 10 nm behind the leader.

"We’ve been taken from hell to heaven directly, in a matter of few hours... only thinking about what happened makes my head ache," wrote Gabri Olivo MCM.
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Daryl Wyslang and Xaberi Fernandez counting the boats ahead while having a coffee, on leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand.

Photo © Gabriele Olivo / Telefonica Blue / Volvo Ocean Race.

Daryl Wyslang and Xaberi Fernandez counting the boats ahead while having a coffee, on leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand. Photo copyright Gabriele Olivo / Telefonica Blue / Volvo Ocean Race.
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The relentless conditions, from gales to flat calms, shipping to shallows and ferocious currents, have rendered the crews physically and mentally exhausted.

Brad Jackson from Ericsson 4 explained in a radio interview that this leg is particularly hard physically because the crew is always up and spends a lot more time on deck and therefore more time awake.
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Onboard Ericsson 3, on leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand.

Photo © Gustav Morin / Ericsson 3 / Volvo Ocean Race.

Onboard Ericsson 3, on leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand. Photo copyright Gustav Morin / Ericsson 3 / Volvo Ocean Race.
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"I can hardly recall a race with less sleep," said Telefónica Black’s navigator Roger Nilson. "No hallucinations, but having a hard time to remember certain simple things. The intensity of the racing has been high and has left very little time over for ‘charging our batteries’."

"You can tell when people are really tired, as they don’t bother to try and get in a sleeping bag; they just collapse in their wet kit wherever they can," says Ian Walker, whose crew is running double standby watches which means a maximum of two hours sleep in every eight if they are lucky.
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Telefonica Black, skippered by Fernando Echavarri (ESP), in the Rotterdam Gate Race as the fleet passed by the Netherlands, during leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand.

Photo © Ronald Koelink / foto-nautiek.nl / Volvo Ocean Race.

Telefonica Black, skippered by Fernando Echavarri (ESP), in the Rotterdam Gate Race as the fleet passed by the Netherlands, during leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand. Photo copyright Ronald Koelink / foto-nautiek.nl / Volvo Ocean Race.
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It was a tough night for all onboard PUMA last night before they made their ‘come back’. "It was cold, bumpy and knowing that there is a huge deficit to make up created a sombre mood, the grey skies added the finishing touches to the misery," Deppe said.

PUMA had sailed into third position yesterday, only to blow out their big spinnaker when sailing downwind just after the Rotterdam Gate Race. They were then engulfed in the no-wind centre of the low pressure.

"The team is down right now, but all realise that we can’t quit and need to press on," skipper Ken Read wrote last night, but today, as they bash their way towards the head of the leg leaderboard, morale has, presumably, improved considerably.
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PUMA Ocean Racing, skippered by Ken Read (USA), in the Rotterdam Gate Race as the fleet passed by the Netherlands, during leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand.

Photo © Ronald Koelink / foto-nautiek.nl / Volvo Ocean Race.

PUMA Ocean Racing, skippered by Ken Read (USA), in the Rotterdam Gate Race as the fleet passed by the Netherlands, during leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand. Photo copyright Ronald Koelink / foto-nautiek.nl / Volvo Ocean Race.
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At 13:00 GMT today, with just 131 nm to go to the finish in Marstrand, it was all to play for as the fleet was split 20 nm from Ericsson 4 in the lead and Ericsson 3, who scored the high highest 24-hour run of 249 nm, bringing up the rear. Computer routeing software is predicting a finish in Marstrand during the early hours of tomorrow morning.

As Marstrand is officially a ‘pit-stop’, the shore crews are not allowed to work on the boats and any damage that requires repairing has to be carried out by the sailing crews themselves. Sleep will be low on the agenda.
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A tired Magnus Olsson, on leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand.

Photo © Gustav Morin / Ericsson 3 / Volvo Ocean Race.

A tired Magnus Olsson, on leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand. Photo copyright Gustav Morin / Ericsson 3 / Volvo Ocean Race.
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Leg 8 Day 5 - 13:00 GMT Volvo Ocean Race Positions.
(Boat name / country / skipper / nationality / distance to finish)

1. Ericsson 4 SWE (Torben Grael / BRA) DTF 131 nm
2. Green Dragon IRL / CHN (Ian Walker / GBR) +2
3. PUMA Racing Team USA (Ken Read / USA) +5 4. Telefónica Black ESP (Fernando Echávarri / ESP) +08
5. Telefónica Blue ESP (Bouwe Bekking / NED) +10
6. Delta Lloyd IRL (Roberto Bermúdez / ESP) +10
7. Ericsson 3 SWE (Magnus Olsson / SWE) +20

Team Russia RUS (Andreas Hanakamp / AUT) DNS
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Sailing past wind farms onboard Green Dragon during leg 8 Galway to Marstrand.

Photo © Huang Jian / Green Dragon Racing / Volvo Ocean Race.

Sailing past wind farms onboard Green Dragon during leg 8 Galway to Marstrand. Photo copyright Huang Jian / Green Dragon Racing / Volvo Ocean Race.
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Rotterdam Gate Race.
1. Ericsson 3: in 12 mins 40 secs
2. PUMA: in 14 mins 03 secs
3. Telefónica Black: in 14 mins 55 secs
4. Telefónica Blue: in 14 mins 56 secs
5. Green Dragon: in 14 mins 58 secs
6. Delta Lloyd: in 15 mins 03 secs
7. Ericsson 4: in 15 mins 11 secs
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It's a hard day with many wind shifts and touch decisions. Andre Fonseca left and Nick Bice, still focussed on the race.

Photo © Sander Pluijm / Team Delta Lloyd / Volvo Ocean Race.

It's a hard day with many wind shifts and touch decisions. Andre Fonseca left and Nick Bice, still focussed on the race. Photo copyright Sander Pluijm / Team Delta Lloyd / Volvo Ocean Race.
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Dover Strait Exit Order June 8, 2009.
(as the fleet crossed the latitude of Broadstairs, Kent)
1. Green Dragon
2. Telefónica Black
3. PUMA
4. Delta Lloyd
5. Ericsson 3
6. Telefónica Blue
7. Ericsson 4

Dover Strait Entry Order June 7, 2009.
1. Telefónica Black
2. Green Dragon
3. Ericsson 3
4. Ericsson 4
5. PUMA
6. Delta Lloyd
7. Telefónica Blue
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Phil Jameson grinding his heart out, onboard Ericsson 4, on leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand.

Photo © Guy Salter / Ericsson 4 / Volvo Ocean Race.

Phil Jameson grinding his heart out, onboard Ericsson 4, on leg 8 of the Volvo Ocean Race, from Galway to Marstrand. Photo copyright Guy Salter / Ericsson 4 / Volvo Ocean Race.
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Fastnet Rock Rounding Order June 6, 2009.
1. Green Dragon 22:46:34 GMT
2. PUMA 22:51:51 GMT
3. Telefónica Blue 22:53:15 GMT
4. Ericsson 4 22:55:20 GMT
5. Ericsson 3 22:56:23 GMT
6. Delta Lloyd 23:14:15 GMT
7. Telefónica Black 23:23:50 GMT

Visit www.volvooceanrace.org for all the latest news!
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The Volvo Ocean Race 2008-09 will be the 10th running of this ocean marathon. Starting from Alicante in Spain, on 4 October 2008 with in-port racing, it will, for the first time, take in Cochin, India, Singapore and Qingdao, China before finishing in St Petersburg, Russia for the first time in the history of the race.

Spanning some 37,000 nautical miles, stopping at 11 ports and taking nine months to complete, the Volvo Ocean Race is the world's premier yacht race for professional racing crews.
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The official website: www.volvooceanrace.org
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