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The outimage dot net external ocean yacht racing banner signifies that the article on this page has been published with resources provided from an external provider to Outimage Publications. The image within this banner is one of Roger Sturgeon's Transpac 65 Rosbud from the United States, working up Hobart's Derwent River into the late afternoon to take out an overall win of the 2007 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race. The photograph was taken by Peter Andrews.
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The official banner for the Rolex China Sea Race 2008.
Rolex China Sea Race 2008
Hong Kong - Philippines
March 20 - 24, 2008.
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Neil Pryde's Hi Fi takes line honours win in the Rolex China Sea Race
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by Rolex China Sea Race Media Team
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An increase in wind strength off the West coast of the Philippines overnight gave the lead boats exactly what they needed to close in on the finish line off Grande Island at the entrance to Subic Bay, Philippines on Easter Sunday. Neil Pryde's Wellbourn 52 Hi Fi crossed the finish line just before noon local time with an elapsed time of 71 hrs 35mins 42 secs.

Hi Fi held off Fortis Mandrake, 20 miles behind, which had a shot at the overall corrected win. In the end, Mandrake finished at 1438hrs today, missing the win by a mere 13 minutes.

That leaves only a few suspects who could upset Hi Fi for the overall corrected win if the wind in fact holds, the first of which, Full Metal Jacket, would need to cross at 1819hrs tonight. Others include Subic Centennial, Australian Maid, and Moonblue II, which are due in by 2000hrs tonight.
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Neil Pryde's Welbourn 52 Custom HI FI from Hong Kong takes line honours in Subic Bay for the Rolex China Sea Race 2008. Photo copyright ROLEX and Carlo Borlenghi.
Neil Pryde's Welbourn 52 Custom HI FI from Hong Kong takes line honours in Subic Bay for the Rolex China Sea Race 2008.

Photo: © ROLEX / Carlo Borlenghi.

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Dockside at the Subic Bay Yacht Club, skipper Neil Pryde was presented with a Rolex Yacht-Master timepiece by John de Luna from Rolex Philippines for Hi Fi's line honours win.

Hi Fi completed the course with an average speed of 7.6 knots over the 565-nautical mile course from Hong Kong to the Philippines. Not a bad speed considering the boat "parked up" yesterday morning for five hours with no wind at all. A long, hot wait for a boat that could be excused for wondering then if its' game plan had gone wrong.

Pryde said, "We had planned to always go the south side of the rhumb line, we figured we'd get the shift, which we did, but we didn't plan on the big park up yesterday when Mandrake went inshore and gained about ten miles on us. We went from 30 miles ahead to only 13 miles (in one sked). Mandrake had their strategy, and we stuck to our game plan, and in the end that's what yacht racing is all about."
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A fisheye view of line honours winner, HI FI in Subic Bay during the Rolex China Sea Race 2008.

Photo: © ROLEX / Carlo Borlenghi.

A fisheye view of line honours winner, HI FI in Subic Bay during the Rolex China Sea Race 2008. Photo copyright ROLEX and Carlo Borlenghi.
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The Rolex China Sea Race line honours win was a first for Pryde, who has previously won the race before on overall corrected time. The boat was launched in January and the crew had only competed in the Royal Langkawi and Singapore Straits regattas. This was the first offshore test, which was an impressive showing. Pryde commented, "We had a lot more time to settle down and get organized. Most of the races we had done were short, round the cans. This time we've been on the boat a long time, we had a chance to really sort things out. We had an excellent crew on the boat, some very good technicians, who were able to put the boat together."

Pryde, an internationally known sail maker whose specialty and success has been as a designer and manufacturer of windsurfers, is a natural tinkerer, known to always be tweaking his boats to make them faster. Hi Fi is a completely new boat, though it was born from the ashes of a previous boat he owned.

Pryde described the process: "We couldn't sell the boat for a realistic price, so I figured out that the residual value in hardware, equipment, electronics, and everything else, was worth more than I could get for it second-hand. We decided to take a chain saw to it, literally cut it up and salvage all the equipment out of it and start all over again."
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Kinmonth and Burns' Mills 51 Custom from Hong Kong, Fortis Mandrake, in Subic Bay during the Rolex China Sea Race 2008. Photo copyright ROLEX and Carlo Borlenghi.
Kinmonth and Burns' Mills 51 Custom from Hong Kong, Fortis Mandrake, in Subic Bay during the Rolex China Sea Race 2008.

Photo: © ROLEX / Carlo Borlenghi.

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"We got Hugh Welbourn in the UK to design the hull, fin, keel, rudder. Hugh's a non-conformist designer anyway, he pushes the edges, so when you give him a freehand to come up with a pretty radical boat, he did that. The boat is pretty radical! It's a totally new hull, keel and rudder. The front part of the deck is the old deck, but the aft end is totally new. It's a meter narrower in the middle and a lot, lot wider in the back, so it's like a wedge. So it's a very different boat from a Farr one-design.

Talking about the innovative hull shape, Pryde said, "We've got hard chines which control the water flow over the side of the boat, making it theoretically drier. It's got very big flare in the aft sections of the boat, which means you can get the crew a lot further outboard, so you can get a lot of leverage. It's actuallya very efficient setup.it looks a little radical, but it's actually very practical."

Meanwhile in IRC Racing A, Chris Meads' Corby 43 Full Metal Jacket headed inshore where there was breeze as well, sailing at seven knots with 18 miles to the finish; further offshore Sam Chan's TP52 Ffreefire was making the same speed with 25 miles to finish. It remains to be seen if one tactic will trump the other and if the wind holds for anyone.

In IRC Racing B, Australian Maid improved their position overnight and leads their division with 27 miles to go and an ETA of 1900hrs. IRC Premier Cruising leader, Moonblue 2, is due in at 2000hrs and has 32nm to go. Shahtoosh and Jaywalker are another 20nm further back followed by Imagine, Dream, Imagine, Walawala and Stella.

Approximately 190nm behind the leader, in the HKPN Division, James Kong's Bavaria 39 Harmony was sailing at 6.5 knots with an ETA of midnight on Monda (March 24), followed by Guy Dickinson's Larabella. Leon Chan/James Lau's Tipsy Frenz has retired and is due to arrive in Subic Bay on Monday.
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New Zealand's Chris Meads' Corby 43, Full Metal Jacket, at the finish line in Subic Bay during the Rolex China Sea Race 2008.

Photo: © ROLEX / Carlo Borlenghi.

New Zealand's Chris Meads' Corby 43, Full Metal Jacket, at the finish line in Subic Bay during the Rolex China Sea Race 2008. Photo copyright ROLEX and Carlo Borlenghi.
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Shore-based fans can follow the action online at www.rolexchinasearace.com as they are using PurpleFinder technology to provide satellite positioning from each boat, which will be updated every two hours during the race.

This Asian blue-water classic has become part of Rolex's distinguished portfolio of international offshore races under a long-term partnership between Rolex and the RHKYC that commenced in 2007. The Rolex China Sea Race joins other prestigious Rolex-sponsored 2008 events including the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup, Rolex Swan Cup, Rolex Middle Sea Race, and the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race.
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Skipper Sam Chan's TP52, Ffreefire from Hong Kong in Subic Bay at the end of the Rolex China Sea Race 2008. Photo copyright ROLEX and Carlo Borlenghi.
Skipper Sam Chan's TP52, Ffreefire from Hong Kong in Subic Bay at the end of the Rolex China Sea Race 2008.

Photo: © ROLEX / Carlo Borlenghi.

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