1981–1982 Whitbread Round the World Race
The 1981–82 Whitbread Round the World Race was the third edition of the around-the-world sailing event Whitbread Round the World Race. On 8 August 1981, 29 boats started out from Southampton for the Whitbread Round the World Race.
The maxi yacht Flyer II was designed by Germán Frers and built at the W. Huisman shipyard in 1981 for skipper Cornelius van Rietschoten. In an unusual feat, she won the race both on line honours and on handicap. Only 20 finished the race out of the 29 that started it.
Legs
Leg | Start | Finish | Leg winner elapsed time | Leg winner corrected time |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Southampton, England | Cape Town, South Africa | Flyer II | Kriter IX |
2 | Cape Town, South Africa | Auckland, New Zealand | Flyer II | Ceramco NZ |
3 | Auckland, New Zealand | Mar del Plata, Argentina | Flyer II | Mor Bihan |
4 | Mar del Plata, Argentina | Portsmouth, England | Flyer II | Ceramco NZ |
Race results
Pos | Boat name | Skipper | Country | Corrected time |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Flyer II | Conny van Rietschoten | 119d 1h | |
2 | Charles Heidsieck III | Alain Gabbay | 120d 7h | |
3 | Kriter XI | André Viant | 120d 10h | |
4 | Disque d'Or III | Pierre Fehlmann | 123d 11h | |
5 | Outward Bound | Digby Taylor | 124d 11h | |
6 | Xargo III | Padda Kuttel | 124d 19h | |
7 | Mor Bihan | Phillipe Poupon | 125d 15h | |
8 | Berge Viking | Peder Lunde | 125d 16h | |
9 | Alaska Eagle | Skip Novak & Neil Bergt | 126d 10h | |
10 | Euromarche | Eric Tabarly | 126d 23h | |
11 | Ceramco New Zealand | Peter Blake | 127d 17h | |
12 | Skopbank Finland | Kenneth Gahmberg | 128d 15h | |
13 | Rollygo | Giorgio Falck | 129d 20h | |
14 | Traité de Rome | Antonio Chioatto | 130d 23h | |
15 | Croky | Gustaaf Versluys | 133d 23h | |
16 | FCF Challenger | Leslie Williams | 138d 15h | |
17 | United Friendly | Chay Blyth | 141d 10h | |
18 | Walross III Berlin | Jean-Michel Viant | 143d 19h | |
19 | Licor 43 | Joaquin Coello | 160d 2h | |
20 | Ilgagomma | Roberto Vianello | 160d 9h | |
– | European Uni. Belgium | Jean Blondiau | DNF | |
– | 33 Export | Phillipe Schaff | DNF | |
– | Gauloises III | Eric Loizeau | DNF | |
– | La Barca Laboratorio | Claudio Stampi | DNF | |
– | Save Venice | Doi Malingri | DNF | |
– | Vivanapoli | Beppe Panada | DNF | |
– | Scandinavian | Reino Engqvist | DNF | |
– | Swedish Entry | Mogens Bugge | DNF | |
– | Bubblegum | Iain Mcgown-Fyfe | DNF |
Legend: DNF – Did not finish;
gollark: ```Despite their great size and strength, Celestial Dragons are a peaceful breed named for their spectral, starry appearance. Little else is known about them, as they spend the vast majority of their lives partially phased out of the plane of existence through the use of powerful magic. Celestial Dragons are thought to assume their corporeal form only long enough to reproduce or to die; the rest of the time, they resemble living, breathing constellations, impervious to all physical and magical harm.```
gollark: And don't forget celestials.
gollark: Actually, Bolts can do stun, which might help in a fight.
gollark: I suppose they're mostly just checked for grammar, time-matchingness and slight sanity.
gollark: I expect that in most fights the Guardian of Nature would win though.
References
- "Wayback Machine" (PDF). web.archive.org. 2 March 2012.
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