The crew of the MaseratiMulti70 trimaran skippered by Giovanni Soldini are today locked in a high speed three-way battle for the lead of the multihull division in the Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Honolulu.
The crew of the MaseratiMulti70 trimaran skippered by Giovanni Soldini are today locked in a high speed three-way battle for the lead of the multihull division in the Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Honolulu.
The MaseratiMulti70 trimaran is in second place in the multihull division after nine hours of racing in the Transpac Race.
At 13.30 local time (22.30 in Italy) Giovanni Soldini’s flying ocean racing trimaran, Maserati Multi70, together with four other multihulls crossed the start line off the Point Fermin headland of the 2017 Transpacific Race from Los Angeles, California to Honolulu, Hawaii.
Giovanni Soldini and his crew of Spanish and Italian sailors aboard MaseratiMulti70 – the first ocean-going flying multihull – are today primed and ready in Los Angeles, California to take on one of yacht racing’s classic open ocean races – the Transpacific Yacht Race to Honolulu, Hawaii.
All is ready aboard Giovanni Soldini’s Maserati Multi70 trimaran which tomorrow (Thursday July 6) will set off on the 49° edition of the 2,225-mile long Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles, California to Honolulu, Hawaii.
The start of the five-boat multihull fleet is scheduled for Thursday July 6 at 13.30 local time California (22.30 in Italy).
A skilled and experienced crew of Italian and Spanish sailors will race alongside renowned Italian offshore yachtsman Giovanni Soldini on the Maserati Multi70 trimaran in the Transpacific Yacht Race – a 2,225-mile open ocean race from Los Angeles to Honolulu, Hawaii.
Maserati Multi70 – the Italian ocean-going foiling trimaran skippered by Giovanni Soldini – is back on the water in San Francisco after a two-month overhaul of the 70-foot multihull’s on-board systems.
Giovanni Soldini’s Maserati Multi70 trimaran has switched oceans from the Atlantic to the Pacific after a successful passage through the Panama Canal and is now on route to San Francisco, California.
After an electrifying head-to-head of almost 34 hours with the trimaran Phaedo3, Maserati Multi70 was second across the finish-line in the RORC Caribbean 600 Race, just 13 minutes behind the American boat