Global Ocean Race

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The Global Ocean Race (GOR, previously known as Portimão Global Ocean Race) is a yachting race for Class40 yachts which was first held in 2008–09. The second edition took place in 2011–12 and the third edition was scheduled to start in September 2015.[1]

The race was created for single- and doublehanded yachts (Category "Singlehand/Class 40" and “Doublehanded/Class 40") and small budgets. The two former professional yachtsmen Josh Hall and Brian Hancock were the initiators of the race. The GOR is the first Class-40-race leading through the Southern Ocean (Pacific) and around Cape Horn.

History

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2008–09 race

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Six yachts (two solo, four double-handed) started the first edition of the race on 12 October 12, 2008 in Portimão, Portugal. The finish was in June 2009. The race was divided into five legs: The first one leg was from Portimão to Cape Town, the second to Wellington, New Zealand. Leg three ended in Ilhabela, Brazil. The race continued to Charleston, South Carolina, USA and from there back to Portimão. In all, the race covered a distance of about 30,000 nm.

Overall standings

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2011–12 race

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The second edition of the Global Ocean Race featured six double-handed Class40 yachts. It started in September 2011 from Palma, Majorca, Spain and ended in June 2012 in Les Sables-d'Olonne, France. The race was made up of 5 legs with stops in Cape Town, South Africa, Wellington, New Zealand, Punta del Este, Uruguay and Charleston, United States.[2]

Overall standings

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Source:[3]

Rank Yacht Sailors
1 Cessna Citation New Zealand Conrad Colman (all legs)
Spain Hugo Ramon (leg 1)
United Kingdom Sam Goodchild (leg 2)
South Africa Adrian Kuttel (leg 3)
Australia Scott Cavanough (legs 4 and 5)
2 Financial Crisis Italy Marco Nannini (all legs)
United Kingdom Paul Peggs (leg 1)
Spain Hugo Ramon (legs 2 and 3)
Italy Sergio Frattaruolo (legs 4 and 5)
3 Phesheya-Racing South Africa Phillippa Hutton-Squire (all legs)
South Africa Nick Leggatt (all legs)
4 Sec. Hayai Netherlands Nico Budel (all legs)
Netherlands Ruud van Rijsewijk (leg 1)
Netherlands Frans Budel (legs 2 and 5)
Netherlands Erik van Vuuren (leg 4)
Netherlands Yvonne Beusker (50% of leg 4)
(did not compete on leg 3)
Did not finish
Buckley Systems New Zealand Ross Field (legs 1–3)
New Zealand Campbell Field (legs 1–3)
Campagne de France France Halvard Mabire (legs 1–3)
United Kingdom Miranda Merron (legs 1–3)

2015–16 race (Cancelled)

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The third edition of the race has been announced to start in September 2015 and would again feature single- and double-handed categories. The race would start in Southampton, England and end in Portsmouth. There would be only one stop, in Auckland, New Zealand.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "About the Race". globaloceanrace.com. Retrieved 2014-11-09.
  2. ^ "GOR 2011-12 overview". globaloceanrace.com. Retrieved 2014-11-11.
  3. ^ "Global Ocean Race - Final prizegiving in Les Sables d'Olonne". sail-world.com. 2012-06-17. Retrieved 2014-11-12.
  4. ^ "Global Ocean Race moves with the times". globaloceanrace.com. Retrieved 2014-11-13.

Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Ocean_Race
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