The four IMOCAs charging towards Cape Horn are approaching Point Nemo on Tuesday.

Defined as the most isolated, remote place on earth, Point Nemo is a spot in south Pacific Ocean, 2,688 kilometres from the nearest land. In fact, the closest sign of civilisation is the International Space Station, orbiting just over 400 kilometres above the sailors.


The Ocean Race 2022-23 Leg 3 Tracker – photo © The Ocean Race

But it is unlikely the crews on The Ocean Race are feeling lonely. To the contrary, the race is as close as one could imagine. After more than three weeks of racing, the spread from first to fourth is still just 10 miles on the race tracker leaderboard, but on Tuesday there is a new leader – Team Malizia.

“It’s an historic day today,” said skipper Boris Herrmann. “The battle of Point Nemo!! We can see all the boats here through our windows. They are just a few boatlengths away and we’re all racing towards Point Nemo. It’s amazing to be sailing so close to our friends!”

The crew on long time leader Team Holcim-PRB has come to terms with how the vagaries of the weather has meant a lead of nearly 600 miles has disappeared. But sailor Abby Ehler says they’ve been prepared to see the rest of the fleet catch them for some time now.

“The writing was on the wall a week ago that the fleet would catch us up so it was only a matter of time, that’s just how the weather systems roll,” she wrote. “It’s actually nice to be back in the fleet, it intensifies things and we’re definitely more on guard. Not to say we got lazy, more that it’s harder to benchmark speed and angles when you are flying solo.

“We have another couple of days of moderate downwind conditions and then we’re in for some heavy air downwind sailing… We’ve tried to plot a route around Cape Horn that keeps us in less than 35kts but that has proved impossible so here goes!”

The Ocean Race 2022-23 Leg 3, Day 22 onboard Team Holcim – PRB. Skipper Kevin Escoffier on deck © Julien Champolion | polaRYSE / Holcim – PRB / The Ocean Race

The forecast does get quite aggressive for the rest of the week. Westerly winds build to 35 knots and the sea state – especially further south – is predicted to be over 6 metres.

“The wind will increase – we’re expecting 30-40 knots of wind and a big sea state – maybe up to 8 metres,” said Paul Meilhat on board Biotherm. “We’ll have to manage the routing to avoid the worst and still arrive as fast as we can.”


The Ocean Race 2022-23 Leg 3, Day 22 onboard Biotherm. Anthony Marchand and skipper Paul Meilhat trimming the sails in the cockpit – photo © Ronan Gladu / Biotherm / The Ocean Race

The ETA at Cape Horn remains Sunday night UTC and at the finish in Itajaí, Brazil on April 1/2. The latest position are on the Race Tracker

Follow the racing at www.theoceanrace.com and www.eurosport.com/sailing

by The Ocean Race

YachtBoatNews

Recent Posts

Range Rover Sardinia Cup 2026

The Royal Ocean Racing Club has won the 2026 Range Rover Sardinia Cup, claiming the…

4 days ago

Brisbane to Bundaberg Offshore Yacht Race

Beginning on 18 June at Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron, the inaugural Brisbane to Bundaberg Offshore…

4 days ago

SailGP’s NYC event

SailGP's foiling circus arrived in the Big Apple last weekend for the Mubadala New York…

1 week ago

Luna Rossa win – Louis Vuitton 38th America’s Cup Preliminary Regatta

It was a day that a Hollywood script writer would find hard to write, but…

3 weeks ago

La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec

After being split apart, the two fleets are coming back together. It is a situation…

3 weeks ago

IMA Maxi European Championship

A dramatic anti-clockwise lap of Capri launched the opening day of inshore and coastal racing…

3 weeks ago