Great race of the Tchin Tchan in the Cowes- Dinard that ends second in its class

Great race of the Tchin Tchan in the Cowes- Dinard that ends second in its class

Nautica Digital Europe Sports Highlights Sailing

The Vizcaine crew shone and enjoyed one of the oldest and most popular races on the RORC calendar between Cowes and Dinard (St. Malo). The Tchin Tchin, in the provisional general, was twenty among a hundred ships

The Tchin Tchin of the Royal Maritime Club of the Abra-Real Sporting Club, participated in the prestigious Cowes-Dinard Regata (St. Malo) and made it second in its IRC Two class among almost 40 ships.

Juan Ignacio Gomeza's crew made a huge race and crossed the finish line at 12.23.46 this Saturday to end up in the second square (94 points), just behind Paul Archer's Play.

The Tchin Tchin competed with Juan Ignacio Gomeza, Carmen Rita Gomeza, Juan Basáñez, Juan Penide, Alfonso Córdoba, Gabriel Ybarra, Carlos Morata and Jokin Basáñez.

2022-07-06: Tchin Tchin of the Abra Maritime in the Cowes-Dinard Regata

This competition is an area with a lot of current on the Solent channel, as well as one of the most important tidal currents in Europe near the arrival at Dinard-St. Malo, where in his estuary is the tidal center of La Rance, one of the most important in the world and first to be built

The Tchin Tchin, a race ship of the Royal Abra Maritime Club, has been participating since Friday in the prestigious and popular Cowes- Dinard Regata (St. Malo), one of the oldest and most popular on the RORC calendar.

The crew of the Tchin Tchin will be made up of Juan Ignacio Gomeza, Carmen Rita Gomeza, Juan Basáñez, Juan Penide, Alfonso Córdoba, Gabriel Ybarra, Carlos Morata and Jokin Basáñez, the last two in charge of transport to Cowes, the English port of the town of the same name on the island of Wight.

The race in which the Tchin Tchin will be on the starting line begins on Friday, July 8, at 8 a.m. - local time - with the arrival scheduled a day later in the middle of the afternoon on this highly reputed 151-mile test. The winner still receives the original Trophy of King Edward VII's Cup, which dates back to 1906. They participate in the different classes about 150 ships.