A swift and unwanted return for Azzam



As it inched into the harbour at a distance at 10.13am yesterday, it looked so squat and nondescript that you might have mistaken it for some vessel far less glamorous.

Yet as it whirred to the wharf to reveal devastated sailors in their bright-yellow garb, it took on an entirely different look. It became one of the ugliest things you ever saw, its ugliness worsened by the thought of its beauty in normality.

Well, normality clearly had abandoned Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing's Azzam, its 31-metre mast bent sickeningly forward and then grotesquely all the way backward, exposing wiring at the folds, protruding off the stern and telling of one wretched Mediterranean night only 11 men will ever comprehend.

Having sailed toward Cape Town on Leg 1 for only six hours and change, the 70-foot yacht had motored back and found an Alicante bereft of its Saturday giddiness. Workmen dismantled temporary pavilions. Forklifts hauled around heavy stuff. The wind gusted through an exhausted setting.

Yet somehow here came Azzam, back into the quiet, its exhausted Shore Team braced for days of voluminous work and inadequate sleep. The Shore Team and the sailors hauled off the sails; the tenacious sailor Justin Slattery worked at the bow; the Emirati sailor Adil Khalid and the reserve Emirati sailor Butti Al Muhairi exchanged a freighted dock-to-boat handshake; Jamie Boag, the team director, recommended that reporters give the sailors space; and one little word seemed to hover over the premises.

No.

Surely after 18 months of scarcely mitigated labour, this did not happen on an early wave plenty steep but no more compelling than stuff Azzam had faced on its way from its Portuguese base to Spain. Surely the crew did not finish a momentous yet flawless sail change with everybody on deck only to land from a wave and see that the mast "just kept going", as Ian Walker, the skipper, would put it.

Surely on the first morning of the 20-day trek to Cape Town, the meticulous skipper would not have to say: "You get the sort of cracking-carbon sound but it's remarkably peaceful, and I guess once it's all fallen down it's almost like an eerie calm, and then you've got to stop the mast from smashing into the hull."

Surely this ruminative 41-year-old man would not have to endure the thoughts he outlined: "I think you go through a cycle, don't you? The immediate thing is, What happened? Why did it happen? Was it my fault? What could I have done differently? And then the ramifications. What does it mean? Are we going to get to Cape Town? The sponsors? What are they going to say? There's 100 questions that go through your mind. You go through a range of emotions …

"You have to count your lucky stars that nobody was hurt. That we have a spare mast. That we have contingency plans."

Surely the mast lights did not go out on Azzam the very first night so that Team Sanya almost struck it slipping by in the darkness, and surely Wade Morgan, the Australian bowman and boat captain, debuting in a Volvo Ocean Race slot earned through a 40 year old's experience at age 30, did not have to don lifesaving gear, plunge in and cut at the top of a mainsail.

"Wade was able to make several attempts at cutting, however, a very violent sea state made it extremely dangerous for him to remain in the water," media crew member Nick Dana wrote.

"The crew retrieved him promptly and were able to get the mainsail off the lock, allowing it to slide down the rig and be pulled from the water."

We know these guys view these things as more routine than the rest of us would, but surely no, not now, not this soon.

After all, just think of Saturday night. The six boats of the 2011/12 race had made off to sea, and the people whose DNA went embedded in Azzam - Boag's description - had worn an evident lightness when encountered on the street. It had ruled their lives and then departed, and they had fresh freedom.

In an Italian restaurant, Walker's wife, Lisa, had eaten pizza with their two young daughters. Across the way, Morgan's wife, Nikki, dined with their toddler daughter and America's Cup friends. Simultaneously and unbeknownst to them, one of their husbands had gone into a rude sea, and the other had gone into a cruel range of emotions he absolutely did not deserve.

Words might fail, but you could always begin with "harsh".

Israel Palestine on Swedish TV 1958-1989

Director: Goran Hugo Olsson

Rating: 5/5

Going grey? A stylist's advice

If you’re going to go grey, a great style, well-cared for hair (in a sleek, classy style, like a bob), and a young spirit and attitude go a long way, says Maria Dowling, founder of the Maria Dowling Salon in Dubai.
It’s easier to go grey from a lighter colour, so you may want to do that first. And this is the time to try a shorter style, she advises. Then a stylist can introduce highlights, start lightening up the roots, and let it fade out. Once it’s entirely grey, a purple shampoo will prevent yellowing.
“Get professional help – there’s no other way to go around it,” she says. “And don’t just let it grow out because that looks really bad. Put effort into it: properly condition, straighten, get regular trims, make sure it’s glossy.”

The years Ramadan fell in May

1987

1954

1921

1888

Russia's Muslim Heartlands

Dominic Rubin, Oxford

U19 World Cup in South Africa

Group A: India, Japan, New Zealand, Sri Lanka

Group B: Australia, England, Nigeria, West Indies

Group C: Bangladesh, Pakistan, Scotland, Zimbabwe

Group D: Afghanistan, Canada, South Africa, UAE

UAE fixtures

Saturday, January 18, v Canada

Wednesday, January 22, v Afghanistan

Saturday, January 25, v South Africa

UAE squad

Aryan Lakra (captain), Vriitya Aravind, Deshan Chethyia, Mohammed Farazuddin, Jonathan Figy, Osama Hassan, Karthik Meiyappan, Rishabh Mukherjee, Ali Naseer, Wasi Shah, Alishan Sharafu, Sanchit Sharma, Kai Smith, Akasha Tahir, Ansh Tandon

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Our legal columnist

Name: Yousef Al Bahar

Advocate at Al Bahar & Associate Advocates and Legal Consultants, established in 1994

Education: Mr Al Bahar was born in 1979 and graduated in 2008 from the Judicial Institute. He took after his father, who was one of the first Emirati lawyers

The specs

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Power: 181hp

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On sale: Now

The Buckingham Murders

Starring: Kareena Kapoor Khan, Ash Tandon, Prabhleen Sandhu

Director: Hansal Mehta

Rating: 4 / 5

MATCH INFO

Uefa Champions League final:

Who: Real Madrid v Liverpool
Where: NSC Olimpiyskiy Stadium, Kiev, Ukraine
When: Saturday, May 26, 10.45pm (UAE)
TV: Match on BeIN Sports

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World Cup League Two

Results

Oman beat Nepal by 18 runs

Oman beat United States by six wickets

Nepal beat United States by 35 runs

Oman beat Nepal by eight wickets

 

Fixtures

Tuesday, Oman v United States

Wednesday, Nepal v United States

 


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