Times of Oman

Oman Air poised to strike on final day of ESS in Madeira

Oman Air’s third place keeps them within seven points of the table-topping Danes, and they will be hoping for more stable racing conditions in the finale to take control and a win in the Madeira Act

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MUSCAT: Action on the penultimat­e day of the Extreme Sailing Series (ESS) in Madeira came down to a single roll of the dice – one which saw the Oman Air team maintain their second place on the leaderboar­d and set up a winner takes all finale on the last day.

With the wind off Funchal patchy, unpredicta­ble and arriving from all points of the compass, race organisers were left with no choice but to postpone point-scoring racing, instead running a series of exhibition races for the crowds lining Madeira’s attractive coastline.

Eventually a single race was run with the top three in the standings — SAP Extreme Sailing Team, Oman Air and Alinghi — all trading places and the lead several times. The high-performanc­e GC32 catamarans were only briefly able to show off their foiling abilities in the occasional gusts of strong wind, before dropping back into the water as the breeze died away.

At the finish line it was the Swiss reigning Extreme Sailing champions Alinghi who took the win, perhaps drawing on the experience of light wind racing on their Lake Geneva home waters, finishing narrowly ahead of the Danish SAP team. Oman Air’s third place keeps them within seven points of the table-topping Danes, and they will be hoping for more stable racing conditions in the finale to take control and a win in the Madeira Act.

“If we get a proper day in with say eight races, seven points is nothing, and the last race is double points as well – we are going to be fighting tooth and nail with SAP and Alinghi the whole way, that’s for sure,” said Oman Air’s experience­d tactician and mainsail trimmer Pete Greenhalgh.

“There’s not a lot between us, SAP and Alinghi — it’s going to be really close all year. Today it was a very tricky race, and it was pretty close for a while — it was unbelievab­le.”

As for the waiting game out on the water, it was all about keeping calm and staying focused, he added, with the close relationsh­ip between the crew — skipper Phil Robertson, Omani bowman Nasser Al Mashari and regulars James Wierzbowsk­i and Ed Smyth — a real advantage.

“We all get on really well, we are all really good friends,” said Greenhalgh.

 ?? – Supplied photo ?? GOING STEADY: Oman Air maintained their second place on the leaderboar­d.
– Supplied photo GOING STEADY: Oman Air maintained their second place on the leaderboar­d.

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