Gill Race Team
- Adam May
- Alex Still
- Andy Smith
- Archie Massey
- Blue Sheets Racing
- Conrad Colman
- Craig Burlton
- Gareth Flannigan
- Geoff Carveth
- Grant Alderson
- Herbie Harford and Morgan Peach
- Hugh Brayshaw
- James Rusden
- Jordi Booth & Pau Dengra
- Mark Rushall
- Mike Wood
- Milo Gill-Taylor
- Nick Craig
- Noel Butler
- Quentin Strauss
- Sarah Allan
- Sarah Norbury
- Scott Wallis
- Sven Coster
- Team Quokka
- Tom Jeffcoate
- Tom Wright
- Vincent Horey
Conrad Colman
Biography Gallery NewsHelmsman: Conrad Colman
Class: Mini 6.50 & various sportboats/ IRC
Nationality: New Zealand
Crewmate/s: Armand De Jacquelot & Jerry Richards
Favourite item of Gill Kit: Ocean Racer Smock
Profile
Conrad comes from a broad nautical background that includes rigging, coaching, racing and sailmaking. Having made the move to sailing full time since 2007, Conrad is now moving through the ranks in the Mini 6.50 class and raced solo across the Atlantic in 2009 in the class's premier event, the Mini Transat 6.50. Conrad continues to race sportsboats at various regattas along the French coast and is currently developing an around the world campaign for 2011-2012.
Achievements
- 2009, Mini Transat 6.50
- Oman Sail Racing Coach
- Extensive solo deliveries through the Med and along the Atlantic coast
2011 Race Campaign
Global Ocean Race, double handed race around the world

Conrad Colman
Biography Gallery NewsConrad Colman for Seahorse Sailor of the Month
Date Posted: 01/02/2012

The winners of Leg 2 of the Global Ocean Race sailed into Wellington with a secret. Only once close family had been informed was it confirmed that Sam Goodchild had fallen overboard from the pair’s Class 40 approaching New Zealand in very rough conditions and had only been saved after a lengthy demonstration of quite exemplary seamanship on the part of his calm Kiwi co-skipper Conrad Colman.
Colman takes victory in GOR Leg 2
Date Posted: 30/12/2011

Colman and Goodchild rounded Cape Farewell at the northern tip of South Island at 14:00 GMT on Thursday (03:00 local on Friday), fighting against headwinds. With Cook Strait set for a 40-50 knot south-easterly blast, potentially gusting to 60 knots, the stretch of water separating South Island from North Island was not a location to be caught in. For the two leading, double-handed Global Ocean Race Class40s, Cessna Citation and BSL, there was no option and life became increasingly tough for the two teams. Fleet leaders Conrad Colman and Sam Goodchild, with Cessna Citation tacked hard in 35 knots of south-easterly wind in extremely ugly seas ahead of the main gale, sailing close to d’Urville Island and Port Gore on the northern tip of South Island before they attacked the 14-mile wide wind funnel at the narrowest part of the strait between Cape Terrawhiti on North Island and Perano Head on Arapawa Island in Marlborough Sound at 06:00 GMT on Friday with 18 miles remaining to the finish line.
One hour later, as the wind built to 45 knots, Cessna Citation barrelled through the 2km-wide entrance to Wellington Harbour between Pencarrow Head and the Miramar Peninsular in torrential rain and grey, rolling waves as daylight faded fast. Colman and Goodchild left the partially exposed Barrett Reef to port and crossed the GOR Leg 2 finish line off Worser Bay on the harbour’s western shore taking victory in Leg 2. GOR Race Officials boarded Cessna Citation via the Royal Port Nicholson Yacht Club’s support RIB, congratulated the co-skippers and swiftly checked the engine seal fitted in Cape Town was still intact and the Class40 continued to her mooring in Queen’s Wharf for reunions and celebrations in the relentless Wellington downpour.
Surrounded by friends and family on the wet, slick, wooden quayside, Conrad Colman was one of the happiest men on North Island: “It’s the legend of the youg’uns!” he laughed. “It’s absolutely fantastic and it can’t get much better than this,” adds Colman. “I’ve been wanting to sail in a race into New Zealand since I was six years-old when I watched Fisher & Paykel and Steinlager 2 match race down the coast, so not only racing into New Zealand, but winning is really something special.” His British co-skipper was relieved to be ashore: “The Indian Ocean isn’t the problem, it’s Cook Strait that’s the issue,” admitted Goodchild with a broad grin. “The last 12 hours have been pretty horrific.”
One of the really remarkable features of Colman and Goodchild’s partnership is their recent acquaintance: “We met each other a few days before the start of the race and pretty much shook hands on the start line,” explains Colman. “We did a lot of things on the fly, but we shared all the responsibilities and it worked really well.” Sam Goodchild agrees: “We come from two different sailing backgrounds with myself in the Figaro Class and Conrad in the Mini 6.50s and it just worked out well,” he says. “I never, ever expected that we’d win and it’s a massive bonus.”
For the victorious young duo, the GOR’s Leg 2 began well and Cessna Citation was among the leaders in the early stages as the five Class40s dropped south immediately after leaving Cape Town and skated along the GOR’s Western Indian Ocean Ice Limit at 42S. However, her uninterrupted lead of the GOR fleet began on 9th December shortly before Colman and Goodchild took maximum points at the Celox Sailing Scoring Gate, running north-south and bisecting the Indian Ocean at 069E. As Cessna Citation crossed the scoring gate 220 miles north of the virtual line’s southern limit at Kerguelen Island, Colman and Goodchild, Campagne de France and BSL were separated by just 30 miles and Cessna Citation and BSL immediately dropped sharply south to 48S before the two boats climbed north to reach the western end of the Australian Ice Limit at 45S.
Clearing the eastern end of the limit, Cessna Citation dropped south once again using perfect positioning in a cold front with 35 knots of breeze setting a new GOR Class40 24-hour distance run of 359.1 miles and building a lead of over 245 miles. Despite running into light airs and watching their lead diminish as they approached New Zealand, Colman and Goodchild held their nerve through the horrors of Cook Strait and kept pushing hard until the finish gun.
GOR leadeboard at 11:00 GMT 30 December:
1. Cessna Citation 30d 22h 20m 40s
2. BSL DTF 126 4.6kts
3. Campagne de France DTL 95 5.6kts
4. Financial Crisis DTL 363 10.6kts
5. Phesheya-Racing DTL 451 4.8kts
GOR cumulative Leg 1 and Leg 2 points excluding Leg 2 finish:
1. BSL: 39 (4 points at the Celox Sailing Scoring Gate)
2. Campagne de France: 36 points (5 points at the Celox Sailing Scoring Gate)
3. Financial Crisis: 27 (3 points at the Celox Sailing Scoring Gate)
4. Cessna Citation: 24 (6 points at the Celox Sailing Scoring Gate)
5. Phesheya-Racing: 14 (2 points at the Celox Sailing Scoring Gate)
6. Sec. Hayai: 6 (RTD from Leg 2)
Source: wwww.globaloceanrace.com
Conrad Colman duels for pole position in the second leg of the Global Ocean Race
Date Posted: 07/12/2011

Close competition has always been a basis of the Class40 Association, but after one week and over 1,300 miles of racing through the Indian Ocean, the five, double-handed, Class40s in the Global Ocean Race 2011-12 (GOR) are taking this characteristic to extremes. The Franco-British duo of Halvard Mabire and Miranda Merron took the lead on Monday night with their Pogo40S2 Class40, Campagne de France, before Gill Race Team’s Conrad Colman and Sam Goodchild regained pole position at 05:00 GMT on Tuesday with the New Zealand-British team's Akilaria RC2, Cessna Citation, but relinquished the lead to Mabire and Merron just four hours later.
West of the leading pack by 200 miles, the two first generation Akilaria's - Phesheya-Racing of South Africans, Nick Leggatt and Phillippa Hutton-Squire, and Marco Nannini and Hugo Ramon's Financial Crisis are racing through the high latitudes within sight of each other at 41 degrees South. Meanwhile, the New Zealand father-and-son team of Ross and Campbell Field in third on BSL continue to stalk the leaders, chiselling away at the distance deficit and shadowing Campagne de France and Cessna Citation.
At 15:00 GMT on Tuesday, Campagne de France was leading the fleet by a margin of four miles over Cessna Citation.
Current weather models suggest the breeze may go forward and slightly east of north over the next 24 hours as the fleet continue towards the eastern extremity of the ice limit, 190 miles ahead of the leaders.
GOR Leg 2 leaderboard at 15:00 GMT 06/12/2011:
1. Campagne de France: DTF 5596 10.8kts
2. Cessna Citation: DTL 3.8 9.9kts
3. BSL: DTL 23 9.6kts
4. Financial Crisis: DTL 207 10.3kts
5. Phesheya-Racing: DTL 211 10.1kts













