STOPOVER: The Ocean Race, Episode 7

Published on June 18th, 2023

The Ocean Race 2023 is featured in STOPOVER, a documentary series following the five IMOCA teams in this crewed round the world race. Produced by the IMOCA class, the series spans eight episodes filmed at the start and at each stopover, exploring the repercussions of the previous leg and anticipate the next.

Just a few days after leaving Aarhus, Denmark, where the entire fleet finally set sail on June 8, the seventh episode catches up with the five IMOCA teams in The Hague, Netherlands. After a fast and very close race, the sailors were tired after three days at sea with little sleep.

The stopover was short, but the stakes were high as the top two teams in the rankings are just two points apart. We followed Mark Towill, team manager of 11th Hour Racing Team, winner of leg 6 and current leader in the overall rankings, and Benjamin Schwartz, skipper of Team Holcim PRB, in second place – just two points behind the first. The pressure is on and both teams are doing their utmost to get off to the best possible start on the seventh and final leg.

But then disaster struck on June 15, just 17 minutes after the start of leg 7, as the IMOCA fleet was about to finish the coastal course before extending offshore. GUYOT Environnement – Team Europe and 11th Hour Racing Team collided, and while no one injured, both boats incurred significant damage.

The American team’s chances of winning the race were diminished, but they didn’t give up and did their utmost to join the fleet in Genoa at all costs….


IMOCA: Boat, Design, Skipper, Launch date
• Guyot Environnement – Team Europe (VPLP Verdier); Benjamin Dutreux (FRA)/Robert Stanjek (GER); September 1, 2015
• 11th Hour Racing Team (Guillaume Verdier); Charlie Enright (USA); August 24, 2021
• Holcim-PRB (Guillaume Verdier); Kevin Escoffier (FRA); May 8, 2022
• Team Malizia (VPLP); Boris Herrmann (GER); July 19, 2022
• Biotherm (Guillaume Verdier); Paul Meilhat (FRA); August 31 2022

The Ocean Race 2022-23 Race Schedule:
Alicante, Spain – Leg 1 start: January 15, 2023
Cabo Verde – ETA: January 22; Leg 2 start: January 25
Cape Town, South Africa – ETA: February 9; Leg 3 start: February 26 or 27 (TBC)
Itajaí, Brazil – ETA: April 1; Leg 4 start: April 23
Newport, RI, USA – ETA: May 10; Leg 5 start: May 21
Aarhus, Denmark – ETA: May 30; Leg 6 start: June 8
Kiel, Germany (Fly-By) – June 9
The Hague, The Netherlands – ETA: June 11; Leg 7 start: June 15
Genova, Italy – The Grand Finale – ETA: June 25, 2023; Final In-Port Race: July 1, 2023

The Ocean Race (formerly Volvo Ocean Race and Whitbread Round the World Race) was initially to be raced in two classes of boats: the high-performance, foiling, IMOCA 60 class and the one-design VO65 class which has been used for the last two editions of the race.

However, only the IMOCAs will be racing round the world while the VO65s will race in The Ocean Race VO65 Sprint which competes in Legs 1, 6, and 7 of The Ocean Race course.

Additionally, The Ocean Race also features the In-Port Series with races at seven of the course’s stopover cities around the world which allow local fans to get up close and personal to the teams as they battle it out around a short inshore course.

Although in-port races do not count towards a team’s overall points score, they do play an important part in the overall rankings as the In-Port Race Series standings are used to break any points ties that occur during the race around the world.

The 14th edition of The Ocean Race was originally planned for 2021-22 but was postponed one year due to the pandemic, with the first leg starting on January 15, 2023.

Source: IMOCA

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