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Rolene Strauss, Miss World 2014, at the top of the Dongfeng Race Team mast in the Volvo Ocean Race Village in Sanya. Image Credit: Organiser

Abu Dhabi: Volvo Ocean Race’s six-strong fleet heads out towards Auckland, New Zealand, from Sanya, China, for Leg 4 on Sunday with some big calls to make as the marathon contest is finely poised.

Charles Caudrelier’s Dongfeng Race Team have their noses in front by a single point from Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing after the stage from Abu Dhabi to Sanya, but know they could so easily follow the example of Team Brunel, who could only muster fifth place on the leg to China after winning the previous one.

The Chinese team, which became the first from the world’s most populous nation to win a leg in the 41-year-old race last month, have yet to announce their crew plans for the 5,264-nautical mile trip to Auckland.

This stage promises to be as absorbing as anything that has taken place since the fleet left Alicante on October 11 on the first stage of the nine-leg, nine-month marathon around the world, culminating in Gothenburg, Sweden, on June 27.

Rob Greenhalgh, the ultra-experienced watch captain of MAPFRE (GBR), sums up the challenges: “Historically, Leg 4 is a bit of a tricky one. A lot of upwind, a lot of reaching, quite a long leg as well.

“I imagine it will be quite close, certainly up until the Philippines. There’s a few options on routes to take beyond that. Tight reaching angles may see the boats separate a little bit.”

Most of the sailors agree that the Philippines will be a key staging post on a route that takes the boats through the South China Sea and into the Pacific, skirting past eastern Australia.

“Going in the right direction, beyond the Philippines, is key,” said Greenhalgh. “As you start cracking off and reaching, the boats which do the reaching angles fast will make a bit of a jump.”

Tream Brunel skipper Bouwe Bekking, so determined to bury memories of his crew’s ‘bloody hopeless’ fifth place in the last leg, added: “The key point will be at the top of the Philippines. You have to make a decision — how far north you go or how far east,” he said.

“Maybe it doesn’t show straight away, it will only show up after one and a half or two weeks of sailing, but it will be quite critical over there.”

Chris Nicholson and several members of the Team Vestas Wind crew, whose boat was badly damaged on a reef in the Indian Ocean on November 29 during Leg 2, will watch the departure in Sanya.

The skipper from Lake Macquarie, New South Wales, reported on Thursday that Vestas Wind had arrived at the Persico yard in Bergamo, Italy, and the first stages of the rebuild were now underway, with a hoped-for return to the race in June.

Meanwhile, the latest round of the In-Port Race Series — this one named the Team Vestas Wind In-Port Race — will be held on Saturday, with the all-female Team SCA aiming to continue their good form following victory in Abu Dhabi.