facebook

  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • NEWSLETTERS
  • SUBMIT NEWS

Nautilus Marine Insurance Magazine

British Steel Challenge and Global Challenge at the London Boat Show

british steel round the world yacht race

Related Articles

british steel round the world yacht race

Sir Chay Blyth

Adventurer, businessman – an inspiration.

Sir Chay Blyth

Creating challenges

Offshore racing and ocean sailing that had opened up to Chay Blyth were previously closed to most ordinary people.

In 1988 he decided he would like to create a new round the world yacht race that would be open to men and women of any background with no yachting experience required. Together with Andrew Roberts and Helen Wybrow he developed a plan for a race following the classic west to east route. He would build the yachts and call for crew volunteers from all walks of life who would be thoroughly trained to compete in this great adventure.

Following discussions with British Steel Corporation who agreed to sponsor the race it was decided to set a route against the prevailing winds and currents from east to west to mark the 21st anniversary of Chay’s single handed non stop circumnavigation.

The British Steel Challenge was announced at the London Boat Show in January 1989 and volunteers were invited to come forward at a cost of nearly £15,000. Within a month 350 applicants had applied and by the end of the year over a 1,000 had been turned away.

Challenge Business had its first event. In the next 17 years the company would build two fleets of steel ocean racing yachts and organize four around the world races with hundreds of ordinary men and women coming forward to take up the challenge.

All who participated in these races were encouraged to raise money for charity as a way of giving back. As a result over £3.5million was given for Save the Children. Many other charities also enjoyed significant benefit.

Challenge Business created other events including the Atlantic Rowing Race and the Transat for Open 60s. The Challenge fleet was also used for exciting shorter races around Britain and Ireland as well as adventure sailing to a variety of destinations including the Arctic.

Challenge Business also owned World Cruising who organised the annual Arc Race (Atlantic Rally for Cruisers) from the Canary Islands to St Lucia.

Read more about:

  • Global Challenge
  • The Transatlantic rowing race

Tributes to legendary round-the-world sailor behind one of Wales' 'finest yachting venues'

Richard Tudor sailed the world but his impact was keenly felt in his home town of Pwllheli

  • 17:53, 2 JAN 2024

Veteran sailor Richard Tudor, with wife Falmai, received a Lifetime Contribution award from Pwllheli Sailing Club in 2021

The best stories from across Gwynedd

We have more newsletters

A legendary Gwynedd sailor has died at the age of 64. Richard Tudor twice sailed around the world the “hard way” and he also led expeditions to the Artic Circle while competing in regattas around the world.

In 1993 he formally opened the new marina in Pwllheli harbour and then pushed for its further development, later opening a marine engineering college there. Mr Tudor was brought up in the seaside town having been born in Llandrindod Wells, Powys . He died on New Year’s Eve and leaves wife Falmai.

Tributes have poured in from the sailing community and beyond, including politicians and poets. Clwb Hwylio Pwllheli Sailing Club (CHPSC) said it had lost a former commodore and president who had made an “incredible impact” on members’ lives.

READ MORE: ITV drama featuring North Wales postmaster's real-life battle leaves viewers shocked

READ MORE: People warned to avoid going into sea at three Anglesey beaches

In 2021, Mr Tudor received a Lifetime Contribution award from the club. Among those paying tribute then was Sir Chay Blyth, the first sailor to circumnavigate west around the world single-handed, who described him as a “truly remarkable and outstanding sailor”.

Mr Tudor was always destined for the sea, his father Huw also being a former Commodore. He built his first mirror dinghy in the living room of his parents' home, and travelled to competitions with the red boat, Madryn, on top of his mother’s Mini.

After leaving school at the age of 17, he worked for a Pwllheli company making sails and covers for boats. Later, he bought out the business and ran it as Tudor Sail Makers for 20 years.

In a tribute, to mark his Lifetime Contribution award, the club wrote: “His white waterproofs were the height of sailing fashion, for a while, and his sailing kit bags are still seen and cherished by many. He designed and built some fancy spinnakers for winners. A few of his sails are still in use today.”

Richard Tudor was a 'truly remarkable and outstanding sailor'

Mr Tudor completed Fastnet races in 1977 and 1981, but his dream was long-distance offshore racing. He wanted to compete in the round-the-world Volvo race but instead he landed a much sought-after gig as a skipper in the inaugural British Steel Global Challenge in 1992-93.

This was a 28,000-mile test of endurance, circumnavigating the world the “hard way”, travelling west against prevailing winds and currents, just as Chay Blyth had done on board British Steel in 1971. Renowned as the “World’s Toughest Yacht Race”, Mr Tudor skippered the 67ft flagship vessel, British Steel II.

The competition would be remembered for his skill and heroics. Having won the first leg to Rio, where he met Ronnie Biggs, the Great Train Robber, disaster was to follow when his yacht was dismasted in the Antarctic Ocean as it rounded Cape Horn.

Sign up now for the latest news on the North Wales Live Whatsapp community

Ahead of the 13-man crew lay a 3,000-mile struggle to Tasmania. Chay Blythe wrote: “They suffered one of the ultimate misfortunes in a yacht race of losing their mast in the Southern Ocean at a point virtually the furthest from land of anywhere on the planet.

“In adversity, the true mettle of people comes out. When the rigging needed cutting from the yacht, it was Richard who went over the side with bolt cutters to free the debris from the yacht. Richard had the technical expertise to know what had to be done.”

Nuclear Electric skipper Richard Tudor (centre) in Southampton for the start of the 1996 BT Global Challenge round-the-world race

He spent hours in the water, cutting the rigging that was endangering the boat. Back under motorsail, fuel was replenished from a passing ship en route. At the Chatham Islands he was given a replacement mast - on condition he dug it up from scrub land.

This was lashed to the remains of the boom that had been retrieved from the ocean. On reaching Hobart in Tasmania, British Steel II was re-rigged in time to rejoin the race for the next leg to Cape Town.

Undeterred, Mr Tudor competed in the next Global Challenge in 1996-97. Again he skippered a boat, Nuclear Electric, bringing it to Pwllheli where a pontoon nearly sank under the weight of people wanting to see it.

Before setting off, he planned everything, down to the form of service he would use for a burial at sea. After 171 days at sea, Nuclear Electric returned to Southampton in seventh spot.

Pwllheli Marina

More misfortune was to follow, however. In 2000, he joined the crew of the Team Phillips, an experimental trimaran aiming to sail around the world in record time.

During a freak storm in the mid-Atlantic in December, when 130kmph winds and 33ft waves pounded the hull, cracks appeared in the crew’s central safety pod. A mayday signal was issued, the ship was abandoned and the crew were rescued by a passing ship. The trimaran broke up several days later.

Sign up for the North Wales Live newsletter sent twice daily to your inbox

After overseeing the opening of Pwllheli marina in 1993, he lobbied for its development as a director of Porth Pwllheli, a consortium of local people wanting improvements. Hafan Pwllheli is now regarded as "one of the finest yachting venues in western Britain".

Plas Heli, the Welsh National Sailing Academy and multi-functional event centre at Pwllheli marina

Mr Tudor also campaigned for a new marine college in Pwllheli, and was later asked to set it up at the marina. He subsequently worked at Grŵp Llandrillo Menai Hafan Centre as a marine engineering lecturer.

More innovations followed when, as a qualified race officer, he helped set up CHPSC’s “famous” automated race-starting system. This involved a computerised voice giving competitors a countdown to the start.

He worked tirelessly to help establish Pwllheli’s Welsh National Sailing Academy, subsequently developed into a £9m multi-functional event centre . He remained an active board member of Plas Heli, the community enterprise which runs it.

Mark H Thompson, commodore of Pwllheli Sailing Club, said Mr Tudor was a key figure in the club’s history. Expressing "deepest condolences", he said: "Richard, who has sailed around the world and is a former commodore of the club and an active member of the committee, had such an incredible impact on all our lives.”

Find news local to you

  • Grwp Llandrillo Menai
  • Llyn Peninsula
  • Most Recent

british steel round the world yacht race

Yachting World

  • Digital Edition

Yachting World cover

Legendary yachts set off on ‘retro’ round the world race as Ocean Globe Race starts

Helen Fretter

  • Helen Fretter
  • September 10, 2023

Fourteen teams, racing on iconic yachts such as Maiden and Pen Duick VI, start the crewed ‘retro’ around the world race, the Ocean Globe Race

british steel round the world yacht race

Amost exactly 50 years to the day since the first Whitbread Round the World Race, the latest ‘retro’ race, the Ocean Globe Race , set off today from Cowes, UK.

Fourteen teams racing in three classes set off on a single start from the famous Royal Yacht Squadron line, with fluky conditions in the Solent granting the fleet a brief window of 10-15 knot breezes to get over the line and make for spectacular scenes, though shortly after the breeze faded to zephyrs as the fleet made their way west.

british steel round the world yacht race

The Ocean Globe Race fleet, with Pen Duick VI nearest camera, shortly after starting from the Royal Yacht Squadron in Cowes

The Ocean Globe Race is the latest ‘retro’ race to pay homage to the ground-breaking ocean and offshore races of yesteryear, this one a crewed around the world with-stops, which is intended to capture the spirit of the first Whitbread Round the World Race, and is organised by Don McIntyre, who is also the man behind the Golden Globe Race modern editions.

This week marked the 50th anniversary of the Whitbread Round the World Race, which first set out from Portsmouth, UK on 8 September 1973.

Thanks to an anonymous donor, the support of MDL Marinas, and a lot of tireless work behind the scenes, the Ocean Globe Race (unlike the Golden Globe Race, which moved to France for its reincarnation) started once again from the Solent, with the race village hosted in Ocean Village, Southampton, before the fleet set off from the Royal Yacht Squadron line off Cowes today.

british steel round the world yacht race

A busy pre-start for the Ocean Globe Race fleet leaving Cowes, UK

Despite some unforcast rain shortly before the start, an impressive and eclectic spectator flotilla gathered to see the fleet off, with a slightly authentic Whitbread-era air of chaos as the 14 race yachts milled around pre-start amongst RIBS, race yachts, classics, spectator ferries, and a vintage steam ship.

Nevertheless, all fourteen got away cleanly without incident and were swiftly demonstrating some old-school boat handling skills: Galiana WithSecure hoisting her blooper sail shortly after the downwind start, while L’Esprit d’Équipe demonstrated a twin-pole gybe.

Iconic Ocean Globe Race entries

The Ocean Globe Race has attracted some truly legendary yachts. Most famous on this side of the Channel – and certainly attracting the greatest spectator flotilla – is Tracy Edwards ’ Maiden . The Bruce Farr-designed 58-footer, which twice competed in the Whitbread Round the World Race, is the only all-female team in the race, repeating the history of Tracy Edwards’ famous 1989 race, and is skippered by Heather Thomas.

After falling into near total disrepair, Maiden was rescued by Edwards and had a major refit in 2017/18 ahead of a world tour to raise funds and awareness for girls’ education. In order to bring her back into race trim additional bunks have been added, as Maiden will race with a crew of 12, a new sail wardrobe, additional heating for the Southern Ocean stages.

Thomas said: “We’ve really pitched her towards winning the race, performance wise we’ve got four different headsails, four different spinnakers, so we’re really going to be pushing her to her limit to try and beat Marie [Taberly] and Pen Duick , and Neptune and Translated and all of them! So we’re really trying to push as hard as we can.”

Whilst Maiden has broken many glass ceilings, an all-female team has never won a crewed around the world race, so that is the team’s ultimate goal.

british steel round the world yacht race

The iconic Ocean Globe Race yacht Pen Duick VI, skippered by Marie Tabarly, is one of the hardest raced entrants in recent years, here competing in the Rolex Fastnet Race. Credit: Kurt Arrigo/Rolex

Maiden is racing in the highly competitive Flyer class, which also includes the iconic French yacht Pen Duick VI , led by Marie Taberly, daughter of French sailing legend, Éric Tabarly. Like Maiden , Pen Duick VI had been on a world tour, the Elemen’Terre project, raising awareness of environmental and social issues through activities including art and performance.

At 73ft Pen Duick VI was designed by André Mauric and built for the 1973/4 Whitbread Round the World Race and had a major refit ahead in 2011/12 as well as updates for her round the world project. It has retained many of its original features, including industrial hatches, coffee grinders, and twin cockpits.

Also in the Flyer class is another Mauric design, the 1977 Neptune , which raced in the 1977-78 Whitbread Race to 8th place. The French team includes Bertrand Delhom, who aims to become the first sailor with Parkinson’s disease to race around the world.

british steel round the world yacht race

Translated 9, previously raced in the 1977 Whitbread Round the World Race as ADC Accutrac by British skipper, Clare Francis, training ahead of the 2023 Ocean Globe Race.

Another famous British woman skipper’s yacht is now racing as Translated 9 in the Flyer class, having originally sailed as ADC Accutrac , skippered by Clare Francis, to 5th place in the 1977/78 Whitbread Round the World Race.

Translated is a Swan 65 which has been impressively refitted with a lengthy build up campaign to the race, and is likely to be a strong contender. The crew is primarily made up of amateur sailors who applied to take part, but includes experienced Italian skipper/owner Marco Trombetti and his son Nico as First Mate. It also includes 2022 Golden Globe Race veteran, Simon Curwen, who took line honours in the race and was first in the Chichester Class.

The fifth boat to make up the Flyer class is another Whitbread class winner, the Briand-designed L’Esprit d’Équipe , which won class in the 1985/86 edition of the race. L’Esprit d’Équipe is skippered by pro racer and boat builder Lionel Regnier.

british steel round the world yacht race

The 14 Ocean Globe Race yachts, including seven former Whitbread entrants, assembled in Ocean Village, Southampton. Credit: Aida Valceanu / OGR2023

Adventurous entrants

Nine other teams are competing in the Adventure Class (for yachts 47ft-56ft) and Sayula class (56-66ft). They include the Baltic 55, Outlaw , another Whitbread Race veteran, having raced in the 1985-86 edition as Equity and Law ; the sole American entry, a Swan 51, Godspeed , which is crewed by US military veterans; the Olin Stephens designed Explorer , which is skippered by by 2018 and 2022 Golden Globe Race veteran, Australian Mark Sinclair ; and Evrika , the Swan 65 formerly owned by Pink Floyd’s Rick Wright. Evrika is now skippered by French sailor and boat builder Dominique Dubois after the yacht he originally entered, a Swan 651 called Futuro , was blown from its cradle during Storm Gérard in February this year and written off.

The smallest yacht in the fleet is Galiana , the 1970 Swan 55 skippered by Golden Globe Race veteran Tapio Lehtinen . Lehtinen has a young crew that he carefully selected over several years of trials, as one of his key goals is to bring on young Finnish sailors, having himself competed in the 1981-82 Whitbread Race at the age of 23.

Lehtinen is well known as a classic yacht aficionado and Galiana has been lovingly restored, but was dismasted at the start of this year’s Rolex Fastnet Race. The team worked swiftly to preserve all the sails and hardware, and Galiana has a fully repaired – though less aesthetically pleasing – rig.

british steel round the world yacht race

The Ocean Globe Race fleet heading west out of the Solent, Galiana (far right) flying a blooper downwind.

Down below the refit for the Ocean Globe Race took inspiration from yachts such as Kialoa 3 , with classic white panelling where new bunks have been added, and practical touches including air-dryers for wet kit and boots. The aft companionway was also closed off to create a drier entranceway to the living quarters and nav station, while the main saloon now has a smaller table from Lehtinen’s previous boat, his Gaia 36 Asteria – which famously sank in the Southern Indian Ocean last November.

However, it’s Galiana’s sail plan which is most remarkable, including a traditional blooper. Lehtinen admits that while it might not help her rating, he had to choose an authentic sail wardrobe from the ‘70s “Because I’m a romantic.”

Follow the Ocean Globe Race at oceangloberace.com

Queen hails 'brilliant' all-female yacht crew after round-the-world race victory

The Maiden crew became the first all-female outfit to triumph in the race earlier this month.

Monday 29 April 2024 22:08, UK

british steel round the world yacht race

The Queen has praised the endeavours of a "brilliant" all-female yachting crew after they won a global race in a world first.

The Maiden team from the UK crossed the finish line at Cowes, Isle of Wight, earlier this month having sailed for 153 days in the Ocean Globe Race.

They had passed through South Africa, New Zealand and finally Punta del Este, Uruguay, before making a beeline back to British shores.

Camilla welcomed the crew to Clarence House, saying: "You're doing a brilliant job, keep on doing it - that's really important."

Captain Heather Thomas, one of the five Brits on board, said: "It was incredible after we'd found out we'd won.

"It's a pretty historic moment for women's sailing, I'm really happy with the result, the girls all worked really hard for it - so we're proud of ourselves."

The winning yacht was sailed by an international crew that included women from South Africa, Costa Rica and the Caribbean.

More on Queen Camilla

british steel round the world yacht race

King and Queen present royal title to a goat

Queen Camilla

'False alarm' results in King and Queen being briefly pulled away from engagement in Jersey

british steel round the world yacht race

King and Queen visit the Senedd to celebrate 25th anniversary of Welsh devolution

Related Topics:

  • Queen Camilla

british steel round the world yacht race

As well as the triumph, the women are part of a project promoting the education of women and girls in countries where access is difficult.

Najiba Noori, who admitted to having no experience of sailing, told Sky News's Mark Austin one of the main reasons she joined Maiden was because she could give "a voice" to the women of her country, Afghanistan , as she also captured the voyage on camera for a documentary.

Ms Thomas told Sky News of the Maiden relying on traditional sailing methods of celestial navigation instead of using GPS, as modern technology is banned according to the race's rules.

She added: "The biggest thing for the crew is that we didn't have any digital music so we had to use cassettes instead," confessing ABBA's greatest hits album was their go-to.

british steel round the world yacht race

Read more from Sky News: Queen meets father's regiment for first time as patron 'Hardest Geezer' finishes challenge to run length of Africa

Be the first to get Breaking News

Install the Sky News app for free

british steel round the world yacht race

Maiden was the brainchild of veteran yachtswoman Tracy Edwards, who skippered the boat during the 1989-90 Whitbread global yacht race with an all-female crew.

The 58-foot yacht had been abandoned in the Indian Ocean until Ms Edwards launched a campaign to resurrect it as part of the Maiden Factor Foundation, which was completed in 2018.

Ms Edwards said the organisation's patron Whoopi Goldberg had challenged her to find a diverse crew.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Tracy Edwards: All female crew prepare to set sail

She said: "For me, this is the end of a 45-year fight for the equality of women within sailing and sport generally and actually women's empowerment.

"And when Whoopi Goldberg became our patron, she looked me square in the eye, and when she went 'change it'. I went 'okay' so we did. So we put this incredible crew together because we want to change the face of sailing."

The 2023-24 Ocean Globe Race, marks the 50th anniversary of the first edition of the Whitbread round-the-world race, and featured 14 boats representing eight countries.

Related Topics

You are using a very outdated website browser. Upgrade your browser or install Google Chrome to better experience this site.

Latest News: 2023 McIntyre Ocean Globe Prize giving!

days hrs mins secs

2023 Ocean Globe Race announces Ocean Village Southampton UK as start port

british steel round the world yacht race

  • UK start for the 50th anniversary celebration of the first 1973 Whitbread Race saved by anonymous corporate partner and MDL Marinas bringing this iconic sailing race home to Southampton
  • Tracy Edwards and her Maiden team, the only UK entrant in the OGR, are excited to relive their Whitbread dream once again and race around the world
  • 15 yachts including six previous Whitbread entrants and one Whitbread winner confirmed for the September 10th OGR start

When Don McIntyre decided in 2015 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the first ever Whitbread crewed race around the world, it had to start in the UK. That’s where the Whitbread story began.

He did the same thing when deciding to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the original 1968 Sunday Times Golden Globe Race which also started from the UK. Sadly no support came from British ports so the 2018 GGR went to Les Sables d’Olonne in France (home of the Vendee Globe) where it was welcomed with open arms and strong investment that generated US$185m in media returns. The third edition GGR2022 is due to finish there in a few weeks.

Until now it looked like the Ocean Globe Race was going the same way. In an October 2022 press release announcing Cape Town, Auckland and Punta Del Este as the OGR stopover ports and after years of trying, OGR announced that ‘sadly UK ports are not interested in hosting the start and finish of this epic adventure and historic occasion’. Final discussions were underway with European ports for the hosting rights.

Fortunately that statement was picked up by a large corporate entity with UK connections. They felt strongly that the OGR should stay in the UK. At the same time MDL Marinas wanted to save the event for the UK as a celebration of their own 50th anniversary. They were passionate about bringing this iconic sailing race back to Southampton and their Ocean Village Marina , the home of so many previous Whitbread races. A deal was struck with both parties and now Ocean Village Southampton is the home of the OGR! This is a huge win for the UK that has seen other significant events move to Europe.

I am absolutely thrilled to have MDL onboard for the 2023 Ocean Globe Race and starting from Ocean Village in Southampton is a personal dream for me. Now, in September, the UK public and sailors everywhere will be able to celebrate an important part of their maritime culture with a true recreation of those first amateur sailors racing into the unknown! Don McIntyre, Ocean Globe Race Founder & Owner of McIntyre Adventure

british steel round the world yacht race

On 10 September 2023, over 160 sailors will depart Ocean Village onboard the 15 yachts to complete the four leg, 30,000 mile race around the world via the three great capes; Africa’s Cape of Good Hope, Australia’s Cape Leeuwin, and South America’s notorious Cape Horn. Onboard the privately-owned, pre-1988 classic sailing boats, the international, mixed-gender crews will have no GPS, no high-tech equipment and no computers. They will navigate using only a sextant, paper charts and the stars with all communications by HF SSB radios. They will return in April 2024.

british steel round the world yacht race

Six of the yachts competing have taken part in one or more of the Whitbread races (including the first French yacht to ever win the Whitbread) to which they are now paying homage. One of the most notable is Tracy Edwards ’ Farr 58 Maiden . In 1990, Tracy triumphantly brought home the first ever all-female Whitbread crew onboard Maiden to Ocean Village Marina. At the time, it was estimated that almost 50,000 people came to witness this momentous event, which helped to turn the tide on women’s participation in sailing.

british steel round the world yacht race

What better way to celebrate MDL Marina’s 50th anniversary than to join forces with Don McIntyre to bring the Ocean Globe Race to life to celebrate the iconic Whitbread Round the World race as it also turns 50. By hosting the start of this retro edition of the historic race at our Ocean Village Marina, we’re hoping to recreate the jubilant atmosphere of the early races, welcoming crowds of supporters, capturing the imagination of visitors and inspiring the next generation of round the world sailors. Working closely with Southampton City Council and McIntyre Adventure it’s an honor and privilege to be part of this event, building on Southampton’s already proud maritime heritage. And there’s plenty of opportunities for businesses, both marine and non-marine, to be front and centre of all the action at the Race Village. Tim Mayer, Sales and Marketing Director at MDL Marinas

The Race Village at Ocean Village Marina will open on 26 August 2023, two weeks prior to the start of the race on 10 September. During the run up to the start, the Race Village will host speakers, pre-race activities, past race screenings, hospitality and entertainment as well as the media centre and sailors’ briefing area.

british steel round the world yacht race

This is very good news indeed! I am delighted to hear that the 50th anniversary celebration of the first Whitbread is starting out of Ocean Village. This OGR will be a great race and huge adventure and tribute to all those original Whitbread sailors. Sir Chay Blyth OGR Patron and Official Starter

british steel round the world yacht race

This is a chance for all UK sailors and yacht clubs to show they want and support these major events by heading out to the start, visiting the race village or volunteering to help the organisers make the event even bigger!

Any business interested in getting involved and partnering with this historic event in Ocean Village should contact Tim Mayer via [email protected] . For more information on the Ocean Globe Race visit https://oceangloberace.com . For more information on MDL and its marinas visit www.mdlmarinas.co.uk .

avatar

Don McIntyre OGR Chairman and Founder

Don McIntyre is the founder and underwriter of the goldengloberace.com the oceangloberace.com and the minigloberace.com . Follow him at mcintyreadventure.com .

  • ← Prev Post
  • Next Post →

O°G°R Latest News

british steel round the world yacht race

Crew Stories

british steel round the world yacht race

Join our mailing list

Get all the latest McIntyre Adventure news delivered to your email.

Technical Partners

Official suppliers.

Range Global Services Logo

Associations

Royal Ocean Racing Club Logo

Yachting Monthly

  • Digital edition

Yachting Monthly cover

Kirsten Neuschafer wins 2022 Golden Globe Race and makes history

  • Katy Stickland
  • April 27, 2023

Kirsten Neuschafer has become the first woman to win a solo, round the world yacht race after winning the 2022 Golden Globe Race

Kirsten Neuschafer made it very clear from the start that she was aiming to win the 2022 Golden Globe Race . And now the South African skipper has achieved her goal, and made history in the process.

After just over 235 days at sea, the sailor crossed the finish line off Les Sables d’Olonne in France at 9pm CEST on 27 April 2023 and became the first woman to win a solo, round the world yacht race.

After a painfully slow final few miles as she ghosted towards the finish, Neuschafer actually crossed the finish line around 10 hours behind competitor, Simon Curwen, but a previous stop for repairs for the British sailor had already relegated him to the Chichester class (for those who make a single landfall).

No wind, meant it took hours for Kirsten Neuschafer to sail the Minnehaha over the finish line. Credit: Katy Stickland

No wind, meant it took hours for Kirsten Neuschafer to sail the Minnehaha over the finish line. Credit: Katy Stickland

Second-time Golden Globe Race competitor, Abhilash Tomy will be the next boat across the finish line, lying some 100nm astern of Neuschafer. That these three will finish within the space of a couple of days after 235 days at sea speaks to the high level of competition between these front runners.

Tired but jubilant, the focussed 39-year-old, who throughout much of the race had no idea she was leading, celebrated a hard-fought victory. Her Cape George 36 cutter, Minnehaha was then towed up the channel to the pontoon as thousands of people cheered and applauded her incredible achievement.

Among them were 2022 Golden Globe Race skippers Ian Herbert-Jones, who had just arrived from Cape Town, having been rescued from his dismasted boat just weeks before, and French sailor Damien Guillou , whose race ended after windvane steering failure on approach to Cape Town.

‘I feel very emotional and honoured,’ said Neuschafer after finishing the race. ‘I am never going to forget the welcome. I want to thank my fellow skippers as without them, there would have been no race. Simon was very difficult as he was always in front of me and I knew Abhilash was close, and this encouraged me to navigate as quickly as possible.’

Kirsten Neuschafer - the winner of the 2022 Golden Globe Race and the first woman to win a solo round the world yacht race. Credit: Katy Stickland

Kirsten Neuschafer – the winner of the 2022 Golden Globe Race and the first woman to win a solo round the world yacht race. Credit: Katy Stickland

1997 Vendée Globe veteran Catherine Chabaud, the first female sailor to race solo non stop around the world without assistance, and the winner of the 2018 Golden Globe Race, Jean-Luc van den Heede, were there to greet Neuschafer as she stepped off her boat after nearly 8 months at sea.

Her official finishing time was 233 days, 20 hours, 43 minutes and 47 seconds. This takes into account the 35 hour time compensation and 30 litre fuel allowance given to her following her role in the rescue of fellow race skipper, Tapio Lehtinen,

Neuschafer said she was driven to keep going, even in calms and the doldrums on the way up the Atlantic, where she regularly went swimming to deal with the frustration.

‘I never thought I would give up; there was no reason to think this as I had full confidence in the boat. I never doubted I would get to the finish line.’

Catherine Chabaud, the first female sailor to race solo non stop around the world without assistance was there to greet Kirsten Neuschafter on. her arrival. Credit: Katy Stickland

Catherine Chabaud, the first female sailor to race solo non stop around the world without assistance was there to greet Kirsten Neuschafter on. her arrival. Credit: Katy Stickland

Throughout the 2022 Golden Globe Race , Kirsten Neuschafer has fought to be at the front of the fleet, her ambition to win driving her more than many of the other entrants.

She deliberately chose a boat that she believed could win the race and survive the Southern Ocean.

Speaking to Yachting Monthly from Prince Edward Island, where she was refitting the boat, she said: ‘From the outset it wasn’t a question of taking any boat that was available and in my price range; it was to choose a boat that I believe can win and can survive the Southern Ocean , and then get that boat at any cost, no matter how much work.’

Kirsten Nesuschafer up a mast

Kirsten Neuschafer in the lead, in early March 2023. Credit: Kirsten Neuschafer/GGR 2022

Her choice of the Cape George 36 paid off. Minnehaha has the longest LWL in the fleet, and with a generous cutter rigged 806sq ft sail plan, the boat achieved slightly higher speeds than her counterparts.

As a result, she holds the 2022 Golden Globe Race records for the best 4 hour speed average (9.80 knots), best 24 hour distance (218.9nm) and best 7 day distance (1,216.2nm).

The boat’s performance was evident after her average start in the race, but she constantly pushed, choosing to hand steer the boat rather than just rely on her Hydrovane windvane steering to make up for lost ground. Her disappointment coming 6th through the first race gate at Lanzarote was evident, but her motivation was stronger.

Kirsten Neuschafer is preparing her Cape George Cutter, CG36 Minnehaha on Prince Edward Island.

Kirsten Neuschafer prepared Minnehaha on Prince Edward Island. Credit: Patricia Richard

Having exited the Bay of Biscay in 10th place, she was soon climbing the leader board. Coming down the Atlantic, she chose a more coastal route to keep the island of Trinidade to port; a strategy to make the most of the current and receive weather information via her weather fax so she could identify the location of the South Atlantic High.

She took the longer, southern route with a more comfortable point of sail to reach the race’s second gate at Cape Town; a strategy that paid off when she was second through the gate behind the then race leader Simon Curwen .

Article continues below…

Sailor Kirsten Neuschafe up her mast with Table Mountain in the background

Kirsten Neuschafer: Golden Globe Race 2022 skipper

Kirsten Neuschafer has plenty of Southern Ocean experience, which she hopes will be an advantage as she takes part in…

Kirsten Neuschafer wearing sunglasses while helming her boat which has a white hull

Golden Globe Race: Kirsten Neuschafer: ‘I’ll give it my best shot but I’m pretty disillusioned’

Third place Golden Globe Race skipper Kirsten Neuschafer has been left frustrated by the lack of wind, which has also…

By this time, Curwen was extending his lead as he began crossing the Indian Ocean. Days after leaving Cape Town, Kirsten Neuschafer diverted from her race route to rescue fellow entrant Tapio Lehtinen, after his Gaia 36, Asteria sank around 450 miles south east of South Africa.

At the time, Neuschafer was 105 miles from Lehtinen’s position; she hand steered through the night, posting speeds of 7 knots to reach him the following morning. Once safely onboard, they waited for the arrival of the Hong Kong-flagged bulk carrier Darya Gayatri , which would take Lehtinen to port.

Kirsten Neuschafer and Tapio Lehtinen share rum after rescuing the Finnish skipper from his liferaft. Credit: Kirsten Nesuchafer/GGR 2022

Kirsten Neuschafer and Tapio Lehtinen share rum after the rescue of the Finnish skipper from his liferaft. Credit: Kirsten Nesuchafer/GGR 2022

Neuschafer was awarded a 35 hour time compensation and a 30 litre fuel allowance by the Golden Globe Race organisers.

Back in race mode, she pushed hard across the Indian Ocean, gaining 500 miles on Curwen and arrived just 29.5 hours behind him in Hobart. She briefly took first place when passing through Tasmania but then became trapped in no wind zones around New Zealand for several days.

This allowed Curwen to extend his lead by 900 miles; by this time, he was also sailing in a different weather system to Neuschafer and her nearest rival, Abhilash Tomy .

Neuschafer and Tomy swapped second and third place positions across the South Pacific, Neuschafer often frustrated by the calms, and her inability to find the better wind, which was often in the race’s Pacific exclusion zone.

She dived for 8 hours to remove the barnacles from the boat’s hull to improve her speed.

Kirsten Neuschafer/

Kirsten Neuschafer/ rounded Cape Horn on Day 164 of the race. Credit: Kirsten Neuschafer/GGR 2022

Curwen, who had a 1,200 mile lead, then reported the failure of his Hydrovane self-steering gear , which forced him to make a 1,000 mile detour to Chile to make repairs; this also put him in the Chichester Class for entrants who make one stop.

This meant both Neuschafer and Tomy were back in the race for first place.

After 150 days of racing, Neuschafer took the lead and was the first to round Cape Horn on 15 February 2023.

But her routing decision up the Atlantic allowed Tomy to make gains in his Rustler 36, Bayanat , despite battling problems with his Wind Pilot windvane steering, his rig, rigging, and having to hand-stitch his mainsail after it ripped in two.

It has been a frustrating week for Kirsten Neuschafer as she makes her way towards the equator

Kirsten Neuschafer took a more easterly route up the Atlantic. Credit: Kirsten Neuschäfer/GGR2022

Unlike Tomy, who stayed close to the rhumb line, Kirsten Neuschafer, who was sailing more conservatively due to a bend in Minehaha’s bowsprit, decided to take a more easterly route.

At the time she said: ‘I read up in  Ocean Passages for the World what is the best route for this time of year and the route is to pass 80 miles south of the Falklands and make for a point to the east of 35°S and 30°W at this time of year, and this is what I’ve been doing. I don’t know if it was a good idea to follow the suggestions or not.’

Doubting her easterly route, she took a more northerly route; it was a decision which would prove incredibly frustrating for Kirsten Neuschafer, who sailed through more light winds than any other 2022 Golden Globe Race sailor while sailing up the Atlantic, and meant she crossed a very wide doldrums.

This allowed both Tomy and Curwen to make gains on her position before Curwen in his Biscay 36, Clara , took the lead and become the first of the 2022 Golden Globe Race fleet to cross the finish line.

Positions of the Golden Globe Race 2022 skippers on 27 April 2022 at 2100 CEST

Kirsten Neuschafer, (South Africa), Cape George 36 cutter, Minnehaha – FINISHED 1st Abhilash Tomy , (India), Rustler 36, Bayanat – 100nm to the finish Michael Guggenberger , (Austria), Biscay 36, Nuri – 1800nm to the finish

Chichester Class:

Simon Curwen , (UK), Biscay 36, Clara – FINISHED 1st (Chichester Class) Jeremy Bagshaw , (South Africa), OE32, Olleanna – 2600nm to the finish

Edward Walentynowicz , (Canada), Rustler 36, Noah’s Jest Guy deBoer , (USA), Tashiba 36, Spirit Mark Sinclair (Australia), Lello 34, Coconut Pat Lawless , (Ireland), Saltram Saga 36 , Green Rebel Damien Guillou , (France), Rustler 36, PRB Ertan Beskardes , (UK), Rustler 36, Lazy Otter Tapio Lehtinen , (Finland), Gaia 36, Asteria Arnaud Gaist , (France), Barbican 33 Mk 2, Hermes Phoning Elliot Smith ,  (USA), Gale Force 34, Second Wind Guy Waites (UK), Tradewind 35, Sagarmatha Ian Herbert-Jones (UK), Tradewind 35, Puffin

Enjoyed reading Kirsten Neuschafer wins 2022 Golden Globe Race and makes history?

A subscription to Yachting Monthly magazine costs around 40% less than the cover price .

Print and digital editions are available through Magazines Direct – where you can also find the latest deals .

YM is packed with information to help you get the most from your time on the water.

  • Take your seamanship to the next level with tips, advice and skills from our experts
  • Impartial in-depth reviews of the latest yachts and equipment
  • Cruising guides to help you reach those dream destinations

Follow us on Facebook , Twitter and Instagram.

IMAGES

  1. British Steel Gets ready for the round-the-world yacht race Photograph

    british steel round the world yacht race

  2. The crew of PRIDE OF TEESSIDE, competing in the 1992/3 British Steel

    british steel round the world yacht race

  3. Royal Docks Finale Celebration: Clipper Round the World Yacht Race

    british steel round the world yacht race

  4. Round the World Yacht race sets sail

    british steel round the world yacht race

  5. Coppercoat Partnership with Clipper Round The World Yacht Race hailed a

    british steel round the world yacht race

  6. Clipper Round the World Yacht Race Photograph by Ash Sharesomephotos

    british steel round the world yacht race

VIDEO

  1. The Journey To Europe Has Begun

  2. Ocean Globe Race 2023: Start Highlights

  3. Round the Island Race 2023

  4. The Highway South

COMMENTS

  1. Global Challenge

    Global Challenge. The Global Challenge (not to be confused with Global Challenge Award) was a round the world yacht race run by Challenge Business, the company started by Sir Chay Blyth in 1989. It was held every four years, and took a fleet of one-design steel yachts, crewed by ordinary men and women who have paid to take part, round Cape Horn ...

  2. Sunday Times Golden Globe Race

    In 1970-1971 he sailed a sponsored boat, British Steel, single-handedly around the world "the wrong way", against the prevailing winds. He subsequently took part in the Whitbread Round the World Yacht Race and founded the Global Challenge race, which allows amateurs to race around the world. His old rowing partner, John Ridgway, followed a ...

  3. Chay Blyth: 50 years since his Impossible Voyage

    The plan began in earnest to sail the 'wrong way' round the world in 1969. It was not until 18 October 1970 that Chay Blyth departed from Southampton on board the 59ft ketch, British Steel. His voyage had never been done before: to sail single-handed, non-stop, westwards around the world. Blyth returned to a hero's welcome 292 days later.

  4. Chay Blyth

    This event allowed novices to sail around the world in a professionally organised race. After the British Steel Challenge, Global Challenge organized other Round the World yacht races. The British Steel Challenge was followed by two successive BT Global Challenge races in 1996/97 and 2000/01. However, a downturn in the sponsorship market meant ...

  5. Global Challenge race

    Global Challenge - a round the world yacht race for ordinary men and women led by a professional skipper. Bringing together sailing with business and charities. ... from around the world visited the ports of call and tracked the event on the race website and through coverage in the world's media. The British Steel Challenge took place in ...

  6. Chay Blyth round-the-world yacht race reunion

    200 to attend 20th anniversary reunion for Chay Blyth's '92-93 'wrong way' round-the-world British Steel Challenge yacht race. Photo: Skippers on parade in 1991 at St Katherine's Dock - in ...

  7. British Steel Challenge and Global Challenge at the London Boat Show

    Over 200 people have signed up to attend a 20th anniversary reunion this Saturday for skippers and crew from Chay Blyth's 1992-93 'wrong way' round-the-world British Steel Challenge yacht race, plus the four subsequent Global Challenge races. The event will take place at the Tullett Prebon London Boat Show on Saturday 19th January, with ...

  8. Challenge Business

    The development of Challenge Business starting with the round the world race - British Steel Challenge. ... In 1988 he decided he would like to create a new round the world yacht race that would be open to men and women of any background with no yachting experience required. Together with Andrew Roberts and Helen Wybrow he developed a plan for ...

  9. Tributes to legendary round-the-world sailor behind one of Wales

    Renowned as the "World's Toughest Yacht Race", Mr Tudor skippered the 67ft flagship vessel, British Steel II. The competition would be remembered for his skill and heroics.

  10. Ocean Globe Race

    The Ocean Globe Race (OGR) is a fully crewed retro race in the spirit of the 1973 Whitbread Round the World Race. It marks the 50th anniversary of the original event. It's an eight-month adventure around the world for ordinary sailors on normal yachts. Racing ocean-going GRP production yachts designed before 1988, there will be no computers ...

  11. Legendary yachts set off on 'retro' round the world race as Ocean Globe

    Amost exactly 50 years to the day since the first Whitbread Round the World Race, the latest 'retro' race, the Ocean Globe Race, set off today from Cowes, UK. Fourteen teams racing in three ...

  12. Queen hails 'brilliant' all-female yacht crew after round-the-world

    The 2023-24 Ocean Globe Race, marks the 50th anniversary of the first edition of the Whitbread round-the-world race, and featured 14 boats representing eight countries. Related Topics Queen Camilla

  13. The Ocean Race

    The Ocean Race is a yacht race around the world, held every three or four years since 1973. Originally named the Whitbread Round the World Race after its initiating sponsor, British brewing company Whitbread, [1] in 2001 it became the Volvo Ocean Race after Swedish automobile manufacturer Volvo took up the sponsorship, [1] and in 2019 it was ...

  14. Ocean Globe Race

    Credit: Ocean Village Southampton. On 10 September 2023, over 160 sailors will depart Ocean Village onboard the 15 yachts to complete the four leg, 30,000 mile race around the world via the three great capes; Africa's Cape of Good Hope, Australia's Cape Leeuwin, and South America's notorious Cape Horn.

  15. Kirsten Neuschafer wins 2022 Golden Globe Race and makes history

    Kirsten Neuschafer made it very clear from the start that she was aiming to win the 2022 Golden Globe Race. And now the South African skipper has achieved her goal, and made history in the process. After just over 235 days at sea, the sailor crossed the finish line off Les Sables d'Olonne in France at 9pm CEST on 27 April 2023 and became the ...

  16. ROUND THE WORLD YACHT RACE 1992 THE BRITISH STEEL CHALLENGE S, An

    The ROUND THE WORLD YACHT RACE 1992 THE BRITISH STEEL CHALLENGE S trademark was assigned an Application Number # 585544 by the Australia Intellectual Property Office (IP Australia). Trademark Application Number is a Unique ID to identify the ROUND THE WORLD YACHT RACE 1992 THE BRITISH STEEL CHALLENGE S mark in IP Australia.