Short-Handed
Baroni and Miglietti, the Lunatika team, are both from Rome, and ahead of the race had sailed from Genoa to Malta over the season taking in regattas along the way. The class win at the 46th Rolex Middle Sea Race carried special meaning, following retirement in 2024. Heartbreak turned into motivation and, 12 months later, the duo returned stronger, more determined, with a point to prove.
“We love the Rolex Middle Sea Race because it’s one of the most beautiful and demanding courses in the Mediterranean. You sail through stunning places, but the weather makes it a real challenge. It’s never predictable,” commented Baroni. “Last year we had to retire after damaging our mainsail, and that stayed with us all year. We returned with one clear goal: to finish what we started. To stand here now as winners feels extraordinary.”
“Double-handed racing is very different,” confided Baroni. “It demands organisation, endurance and total trust. You have to manage the boat, yourself and each other — two people doing the work of eight.”
“This victory is for everyone who loves double-handed sailing, but especially in Italy!” enthused Miglietti. “It shows that with preparation and persistence, it is possible to take on the great offshore races and win. The Rolex Middle Sea Race is not just a competition; it’s an adventure that tests your seamanship, your friendship and your spirit.”
Although they fell just short, British brothers Patrick and Vincent Harris brought a timeless style to the 46th Rolex Middle Sea Race with Mowgli of Portsmouth, a 60-year-old classic sloop designed by Primrose & Illingworth. Completing the race four seconds shy of six days, the exhausted pair tied up at the Royal Malta Yacht Club spent but wide-eyed with the fantastic reception they received. Hand-steering for the entire race, the Harris brothers’ resilience was inspiring and was a suitable tribute to Mowgli’s heritage.
“We wanted to bring Mowgli back to celebrate her 60th birthday. The Rolex Middle Sea Race was the right time to do something bold.” commented Patrick. “We’d completed this race double-handed in 2004 and always dreamed of returning. It wasn’t about winning; it was about finishing with the boat, together, and proving she still has what it takes.”
“No autopilot meant no rest; one helming, the other grabbing minutes of sleep or pumping the bilge,” commented Vincent. “Cooking was nearly impossible; patience was harder still. But Mowgli behaved beautifully. She’s heavy, steady, and honest — she tells you exactly what she wants. The conditions were brutal at times, yet she just kept going. To hear that we placed second in our division was a complete surprise. For us, that’s victory enough.”
Marco Paolucci’s Italian JPK 1180 Libertine, racing with Niccolò Bertola, was the first two-handed team to cross the finish line, finishing the race in just under five days. Libertine completed the Double-Handed podium, finishing third after time correction. This was Paolucci’s 14th race and his eighth two-handed.