With more than half the race nautical miles now completed, the Clipper Round The World Race fleet reached the mathematical midpoint when the boats closed out Leg 5 and arrived into Subic Bay between 10–14 February; Team Warrant was first to finish, crossing the line on the evening of 10 February after 20 days, 18 hours and 56 minutes at sea.
Leg 5 (Stage 6) Results — Arrival Breakdown
| Position | Team | Skipper(s) | Arrival / Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Team Warrant | Dylan Kotze, Jade Godler | 10 Feb — 20d 18h 56m at sea |
| 2 | London Business School | — | ~9 hours after leader; suffered boom damage, mainsail dropped for inspection |
| 3 | Yacht Club Punta Del Este | — | ~3 hours after LBS — strong coastal tactics |
How the Leg Played Out
Ez a Asia–Pacific stage started from Airlie Beach and used the tropical trades to power the fleet north. The combination of offshore and coastal routing made this section tactical: island chains create wind shadows and current funnels, so passage planning and split-second decisions mattered. On the Philippines approach, navigators had to thread through shifting winds and island topography — times when the best-laid plans turned into “all hands to the pump” moments.
London Business School’s result was notable because the boat arrived despite sustaining boom damage during a routine manoeuvre; the team prudently dropped the mainsail and rigging for inspection before the final approach. That kind of quick damage control is exactly the sort of seamanship that keeps a circumnavigation on track.
Clipper Race Structure — The Eight Legs
Overview of the Route
- Leg 1: Portsmouth (UK) → Puerto Sherry (Spain) → Punta del Este (Uruguay)
- Leg 2: Punta del Este → Cape Town (South Africa)
- Leg 3: Cape Town → Fremantle (Australia) — Roaring Forties
- Leg 4: Fremantle → Airlie Beach (Australia)
- Leg 5: East Australia → Subic Bay (Philippines) → Qingdao (China)
- Leg 6: Qingdao → Seattle (USA)
- Leg 7: West Coast USA → Panama Canal → East Coast USA
- Leg 8: East Coast USA → Oban (Scotland) → Portsmouth (UK)
Logistics and Port Operations Observed
Across Leg 5 the operational focus was on safe berthing, rigging inspections, and quick-turn provisioning. When a boat like London Business School drops a mainsail for inspection, shore teams and marinas must be ready with craneage, spare parts, and skilled riggers. Those are the backend supply-chain moves that often decide whether a team loses hours or days.
| Port | Main Challenge | Typical Services Required |
|---|---|---|
| Subic Bay | High traffic, shore-side rigging support | Repair yards, craneage, provisioning |
| Qingdao | Customs, crew rotations | Customs agents, crew transport, medical |
| Airlie Beach | Last fuel and provisioning before open Pacific legs | Fuel bunkering, stores, weather briefings |
What This Means for Charter and Yacht Operators
Race logistics ripple through the wider recreational and commercial boating market. Here are a few practical knock-on effects for the charter and boat-rental community:
- Marinas see surges in demand for haul-outs and rigging work during race windows — plan staffing.
- Provisioning and spares become critical: local suppliers can pick up work and sales for sails, winches, and rigging.
- Training opportunities increase; charter captains can refresh offshore and emergency procedures.
- Úti célok on the race route get boosted visibility — a neat marketing moment for yacht charter agents.
What Renters and Captains Should Watch
- Marina congestion during arrival windows — book berths early.
- Insurance and damage-control procedures — know who fixes a damaged boom.
- Local weather patterns around islands and gulfs — they shape safe passages.
- Provision chain resilience — spare parts and local suppliers matter.
All told, Leg 5 showed that race-winning performance is not just about speed; it’s about maintenance, logistics and clever routing. For anyone in the charter or boat rental scene, those same elements translate into smarter operations, from captain training to shore-side service offerings. It’s a small world — the race keeps the marinas busy and the local boating economy humming.
In summary, the Clipper Round The World Race reached its midpoint with Team Warrant leading Leg 5 into Subic Bay, but the story of the leg was as much about logistics — rigging repairs, provisioning and port operations — as it was about pure sailing speed. The eight-leg structure continues to test crews across ocean and coastal conditions, and those pressures influence yacht charter markets, boat rent services, marinas and local sale and repair businesses. Whether you’re a captain, a charter operator or a weekend boater, the race highlights key considerations for yacht maintenance, marinas, destinations and activities — from superyacht support to small-boat fishing and lake cruising — keeping yachting, sailing and boating communities connected to the sea and sunseeker lifestyle.
Who’s Leading at the Clipper Midpoint?">