It ain’t over til it’s over
The ninth Vendée Globe had promised to be a lightning-fast head-to-head between two or three boats, a sprint around the globe that would surely lower the 74-day record and herald a new era in offshore racing.
In the event, the two big favourites had serious collisions that ended their podium dreams before the race passed Cape Town.
What we were left with was something far more open and arguably far more exciting, a group of nine or 10 boats that stuck together around the world, each successive attempt to break away reeled in by the pack.
And the finish, overnight on 27 January, was as gripping as sport could be, with the closest ever winning margin and a victor that nobody could predict even in the final hours.
Chess match
The global press woke up to the fact that this was likely to be a true epic in offshore racing as the fleet sailed up the south Atlantic towards the equator. Off Rio, on 12 January, there were no more than 120 miles covering the first nine places. The race was effectively reset
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