Kevin Escoffier’s Swiss-flagged team won the opening leg with a battle behind for second place with 11th Hour Racing Team and Team Malizia…

Skipper Kevin Escoffier, a veteran of The Ocean Race who is now leading Team Holcim-PRB, steered his boat over the finishing line off Mindelo, Cabo Verde just after 01:00 local time on Saturday morning, to win Leg One of The Ocean Race.

Team Holcim - PRB finished at 02:01:59 UTC for an elapsed time on the leg of 5 days, 11 hours, 1 minute and 59 seconds.

Escoffier and his team led for the majority of Leg One. The winning move came in the midst of an intense tacking duel on the second day and night of the race, with Holcim-PRB and 11th Hour Racing Team zig-zagging their way along the Spanish coast, beating into the teeth of a fierce westerly that had already caused some damage on Holcim-PRB.

Then, 11th Hour Racing Team reported a torn headsail during one of the manoeuvres that forced them to slow to recover the sail and rig a replacement. That small moment was all Escoffier and his crew needed to make the pass.

As the first boat into the Atlantic, Holcim-PRB was able to leverage that tiny advantage into a lead the team would never relinquish. In the fast downwind sailing conditions towards Cabo Verde, the team was invincible, sailing fast and low. Escoffier kept his boat positioned between the opposition and the finishing line and there was no possibility to pass.

It was a masterful performance after those worrisome first hours in the Mediterranean where the team had to confront damage to their boat.

“The repairs we made have held,”Escoffier said on the last day of the leg. “There are some small details that we will have to review. We will check the boat at the finish, especially the fittings, because of the strong wind conditions we had to deal with in the Mediterranean, but nothing serious. We will have plenty of time to fix everything in Cape Verde.”

Behind, Charlie Enright and his 11th Hour Racing Team are well-positioned between Team Malizia and the finishing line. There is less than 20 miles between the two boats, certainly under one hour of sailing at these speeds, but with the finish less than three hours away, a second place position for the American team is on the cards.