Please select your home edition
Edition
upffront 2024 September sale Leaderboard

Powerful maxi fleet may cause records to fall in Aegean 600

by James Boyd / International Maxi Association 4 Jul 22:14 BST 7-13 July 2024
Argo v Zoulou during this spring's Antigua 360 © RORC / Tim Wright

Rapidly becoming a 'classic' among the world's 600 mile offshore races, the Hellenic Offshore Racing Club's Aegean 600, supported by Olympic Marine and with Rolex as official timepiece for the very first time, has this year attracted a stronger than ever maxi yacht entry within its record-sized overall fleet of 69.

Setting sail at 1400 on Sunday, this year's Aegean 600 is again the penultimate event in the International Maxi Association's 2023-24 Mediterranean Maxi Offshore Challenge. This year it also kicks off the IMA's inaugural Mediterranean Maxi Multihull Challenge.

As usual the 605 mile course winds its way round an anti-clockwise lap of the Aegean Sea. From beneath the Temple of Poseidon on Cape Sounion, it heads southeast to its southwesterly turning mark of Kasos, then rounds the north of Rhodes, meanders its way up to the northeast turning mark of Agathonissi, before returning west to the Cape Sounion finish. On the way the course passes numerous landmarks of great beauty, history and mythology, including Santorini Caldera and Mykonos.

Match racing for line honours will be two turboed MOD70 trimarans - Argo of American double Melges 32 World Champion Jason Carroll and Zoulou of France's Erik Maris, a former Mumm 30 World Champion and Swan 45 European Champion. Both Argo and Zoulou have evolved with foil packages now allowing them to fly.

This year, Argo has had the upper hand in both the RORC Transatlantic Race and the RORC Caribbean 600. "The Aegean is an interesting race course - we hadn't done it before so we agreed with Zoulou to give it a try," explains Argo's program manager Chad Corning, racing on board with an Anglo-Aussie-US crew including multihull legends Brian Thompson and Paul Larsen (Zoulou's crew includes Loick Peyron). "We try not to repeat races too often to keep things fresh for Jason."

Three days from the start, the weather models are starting to agree, showing strong winds for the course's southern section. "There are big acceleration zones there. We are definitely preparing for some big stuff but we expect to have at least two restarts too. The routing is reasonably fast - about 36 hours..." continues Corning. 36 hours would demolish the race record of 45 hours 5 minutes 25 seconds set last year by Joost Schuijff's 100ft monohull Leopard 3.

The brisk north to northwesterly Meltemi wind may allow Bryon Ehrhart's 88ft Lucky to break the record too. For Lucky (ex-Rambler 88) this will be her first outing with her new rig since dismasting in last autumn's Rolex Middle Sea Race.

"I think it is a great event for geography and a beautiful course," commented Joca Signorini, who is standing in on tactics for Brad Butterworth, who is tied up on America's Cup duty. "Looking at the forecast - there will be tricky moments with not much wind and windy bits that have to be managed, plus the complication of all the islands to round. We have the chance to break the record, but the forecast has to be right and we have to sail the boat well." Lucky's routing indicates a lighter section in the lee of Rhodes, says Signorini, who previously spent many months in Greece in the build-up to the Olympic Games in 2004 when he represented Brazil in the Finn.

Signorini's former Volvo Ocean Race winning skipper Torben Grael is also a fan of Greece. In 2004 he scored his fifth Olympic medal and his second Star gold here. The Brazilian legend is skippering his former America's Cup boss Patrizio Bertelli's 20m 1972 Sangermani sloop Ulisse, with many other crew from their first America's Cup campaigns.

"He [Mr Bertelli] comes to Greece occasionally and enjoys sailing around here so he decided to do the race last year and again this year - but on a 'smaller Ulisse'," explains Grael. The experience on the heavyweight classic will be different to Lucky, with the well-appointed Italian classic even having its own chef. "This is a very comfortable displacement boat, but I think it is going to be fun anyway."

There will be an interesting race between the former Volvo Ocean Race yachts including the VO65 Sisi and Jens Dolmer's heavily turboed VO70 L4/Trifork. However all eyes will be on local favourite and Aegean 600's chief supporter George Procopiou and his VO70 Aiolos (ex-I Love Poland - see photo below). The VO70 is an interim step before his new 54m superyacht is launched in 2026.

Procopiou's busy multi-boat sailing program has recently included winning the Spetses Classic Yacht Regatta on Flamingo and then the Cyclades Cup on his 37m Sea Joy. His campaign is run by Panagiotis Mantis, Greece's Rio 2016 470 bronze medallist. "Mr Procopiou wants to build a strong team. He chose the VO70 to get his sailors used to a boat with a lot of power, with hydraulics, etc," explains Mantis of the largely Greek crew, which also comprises two from I Love Poland, including navigator Konrad Lipski.

Mantis won his class in the Aegean 600 last year and is a fan: "It was a great experience. This race is something that everyone will talk about increasingly in the future. You never get bored! You pass island after island with all the wind changes and lots of history behind every place we pass."

However the VO70 is a step-up. "It is a beast. There is no limit on how fast you can go. The limit is ourselves."

Under IRC corrected time also to watch is Guido Paolo Gamucci's canting keel Mylius 60 Cippa Lippa, which competed here last year and has already raced two events in the IMA's MMOC this season. Then there is Rainer Anders' Ker 63 La Pecadora with a crew all the way from Costa Rica and Philip Rann's Swan 80 Umiko with a largely South African crew including singlehanded round the world sailor JJ Provoyeur.

A warm-up race is scheduled for tomorrow Friday 5 July.

More information on the Aegean 600 here.

Related Articles

Palermo-Montecarlo line honours for Black Jack
The windiest and most competitive Palermo-Montecarlo races concluded for the maxi yachts One of the windiest and most competitive Palermo-Montecarlo races concluded for the maxi yachts today with Remon Vos' 100ft Black Jack claiming line honours and setting a new race record. Posted on 22 Aug
Record under threat in the Palermo-Montecarlo?
While the race is typically a light wind affair, this year it may not be so The 19th Palermo-Montecarlo yacht race sets sail from Sicily's capital tomorrow, concluding the International Maxi Association's 2023-24 Mediterranean Maxi Offshore Challenge, which started with last autumn's Rolex Middle Sea Race. Posted on 19 Aug
New World Championship for Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup
September's event will feature the very first World Championship for 'Maxi 1' Taking place out of Porto Cervo over 8-14 September as part of the main event, the Rolex IMA Maxi 1 World Championship will be open to maxi yachts with an IRC TCC of 1.700-2.200 and up to 30.51m (100ft) in length. Posted on 1 Aug
Greek first timers claim Aegean 600 Maxi victory
In the process Aiolos also receives maximum points for this event in the IMA Maxi Offshore Challenge In a race as tough as the Aegean 600 you would not expect first timers to collect much silverware - however Greece's George Procopiou, aboard his newly acquired VO70 Aiolos, defied the odds to win the race's Maxi class. Posted on 11 Jul
Lucky claims Aegean 600 monohull line honours
As MODs match race to new record MOD70s may now be flying machines, well outside of their original one design configuration, but you would not have known that, given the multiple lead changes and tightness of their racing in this year's Aegean 600. Posted on 9 Jul
Spirit of Lorina crowned top IRC maxi
Loro Piana Giraglia's offshore finale from Saint-Tropez into Genoa Jean-Pierre Barjon has already enjoyed much success with his Botin 65 Spirit of Lorina having won the International Maxi Association's Mediterranean Maxi Offshore Challenge in 2021-22. Posted on 14 Jun
Black Jack first home in Loro Piana Giraglia
Finishing 15 minutes outside the race record After Wednesday's ultra-light start on the Golfe de Saint-Tropez to relatively benign conditions following a thunderstorm before arriving into Genoa, it was hard to believe that thanks to a big breeze sleigh-ride in between - to the Giraglia rock & beyond Posted on 13 Jun
Jethou and Wallyño reign supreme
In Loro Piana Giraglia inshore races, offshore race starts Wednesday A second 20 mile coastal race, this time from Saint-Tropez down to a turning mark off L'Escalet and back, rounded off the inshore series for the maxis competing in Loro Piana Giraglia. Posted on 11 Jun
Loro Piana Giraglia Day 3
Spectacular conditions for day three of maxi coastal racing After two days of windward-leewards on the Bay of Pampelonne, day three of inshore racing at Loro Piana Giraglia saw a change with 19 of the 24 strong maxi fleet racing a single coastal course, starting and finishing in the Golfe de Saint-Tropez. Posted on 10 Jun
Loro Piana Giraglia Day 2
Lumpy conditions on the second day of inshore racing in Saint-Tropez While conditions at this time of year in Saint-Tropez are renowned for being light and thermal, today competitors at Loro Piana Giraglia were treated to easterlies into the high teens combined with a short violent chop. Posted on 9 Jun
Lloyd Stevenson - AC INEOS 1456x180px BOTTOMHyde Sails SIBS 2024RS Sailing 2021 - FOOTER