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Excitement builds ahead of SATT

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MUSCAT: Crews are assembling in Muscat, and boats are being prepped as the countdown to the start of the 2017 edition of EFG Sailing Arabia — The Tour, the only annual event in the world that offers a mix of inshore and offshore competition, sets nautical nerves jangling with one week to go. On February 14, eight teams from around the world will line up against one another in their identical Farr 30s with two weeks of offshore and in-port racing action across a 763nm course poised to produce a new EFG Sailing Arabia — The Tour champion.


First points are up for grabs in the in-port curtain raiser in Muscat next Tuesday, with all teams determined to make an early impression before heading north on the opening stage to Sohar up the Omani coast before rounding the Musandam Peninsula to Khasab on the second leg. Stamina and endurance will be the name of the game as the fleet clocks up the miles weaving between ships, oil platforms and fishing nets in the Straits of Hormuz on the way to stopover 4 in Abu Dhabi.


Points will have soared in value by the time the second in-port race in Doha takes place on the 25 February and will be ruthlessly protected during the final leg to Dubai though the closing in-port races in the Emirati city have the potential to make or break a campaign. Skippers were eyeing up a more level playing field this year after hearing that experienced French campaigner Sidney Gavignet, three times EFG Sailing Arabia — The Tour champion, had been forced to sit out the race with a knee injury.


His place has been taken by French duo Thierry Douillard and Mathieu Richard so EFG Bank Monaco (Monaco) starts out as favourite once again since the crew, Gavignet apart, is unchanged and more determined than ever to defend the 2016 title.


It will be close, says Libby Greenhalgh, the world-renowned British meteorologist racing on all-female boat DB Schenker (Germany) with Dutch Olympic sailor Annemieke Bes, who is standing in as skipper for Dee Caffari. The crew is half Omani and half European and aside from the all-important hunt for points, DB Schenker has a mission to raise awareness of women’s sailing in the Middle East. “Each leg will have different tempos and the challenge will be to pace yourselves so that you are still strong on the final approaches and able to pick up the all-important wind shifts,” said Greenhalgh, who was meteorologist on Volvo Ocean Race contender Team SCA.


“The start of the race could be interesting because having had a year of dry weather, Oman is experiencing some big storms with heavy rain and from what I see, the start day will either be a very light breeze or some pretty stormy conditions which will makes things interesting.”


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