Caribbean

Monohull line honours and new race record for My Song in 2018 RORC Transatlantic Race to Grenada

Monohull line honours and new race record for My Song in 2018 RORC Transatlantic Race to Grenada
Monohull Line Honours and race record for Pier Luigi Loro Piana’s team on the Baltic 130 My Song © RORC/Arthur Daniel

ST GEORGE’S, Grenada — Pier Luigi Loro Piana’s Supermaxi My Song finished the 2018 RORC Transatlantic Race to Grenada on Tuesday, taking Monohull Line Honours. The Baltic 130 owned by Pier Luigi Loro Piana, a member of the International Maxi Association (IMA), has also set a new Monohull Race Record after completing the 3,000 mile race between Lanzarote and Grenada in an elapsed time of 10 days 5 hrs 47 mins 11 secs, shaving 1 hr 19 mins 48 secs off the previous monohull race record set in the 2015 race by Jean-Paul Riviere’s French Finot-Conq 100, Nomad IV.

RORC race officer Steve Cole presented Pier Luigi with the magnificent International Maxi Association Transatlantic Trophy for Monohull Line Honours and congratulated the team for setting a new race record.

“I feel very happy to come to Grenada, but it is too close to Lanzarote! We were enjoying crossing the Atlantic so much and racing My Song at 20 knots was amazing. I am very happy,” Luigi commented. “A little bit of rain at the end was fine, but we hope Grenada will show us some more sunshine.”

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Luigi had a message for his fellow members of the International Maxi Association: “They have to continue cruising and racing if they want to enjoy sailing.”

My Song, the largest yacht in the 2018 RORC Transatlantic Race arrives at the finish in Grenada © RORC/Arthur Daniel

“I’m tasting the Caribbean right now!” said Nacho Postigo, sipping an ice cold beer. “The conditions for the RORC Transatlantic Race were the best I have ever had. Almost every day we had very few squalls, and at night we had brilliant stars, so it was fantastic. After getting through the pressure ridge at the start, the wind was between 16-22 knots, which is perfect and really pleasant. The main objective for us was to safely get the boat to the Caribbean. After the first few days, we were 240 miles behind the record, so we just forgot about it. Then slowly we were cutting it down and in the last three days, every half an hour someone was coming to the chart table wanting to know if we were on record pace. Personally, I love coming to Grenada; the atmosphere of the island, the fantastic sailing, but especially the people who are super, super nice.”

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