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Atlantic rower from Fife nearing finish line after surviving capsize drama

Matthew Harvey (left) and his team HMS Oardacious hope to complete their Atlantic voyage on Friday or Saturday.
Matthew Harvey (left) and his team HMS Oardacious hope to complete their Atlantic voyage on Friday or Saturday.

A Fife navy man is nearing the finish line of a race across the Atlantic, having survived his boat being capsized by a giant wave.

Matthew Harvey was battered around in his team’s 28ft row boat as two of his crew mates were thrown overboard in the middle of the night.

Fellow Royal Navy submariners Callum Fraser and Dylan Woods scrambled back on board and despite shock continued their 3,000-mile voyage in the Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge.

The foursome, HMS Oardacious, expect to reach Antigua on Friday or early Saturday, having left the Canary Islands on December 12.

They were in sixth place on Thursday morning out of 35 teams, the winners Fortitude IV having finished on Monday in 32 days.

The team row in pairs in two hour shifts and sleep in tiny cabins.

Before their departure Matthew, 33, of Kirkcaldy, told The Courier his biggest fear was losing a man overboard.

HMS Oardacious: Matthew Harvey (right) with crew mates Hugo Mitchell-Heggs, Callum Fraser and Dylan Woods.

A post on HMS Oardacious’ Facebook page reported the team had suffered possibly their worst 24 hours during fierce winds and with problems with their vessel’s auto helm.

It said: “Then, in the middle of the night, in pitch black, an enormous wave hit and chucked Callum and Dylan out of the boat in their first full capsize.

“Matty and Hugo were ‘asleep’ (or at least trying to) and while they stayed dry, they were pretty battered.

“It was a scary few minutes, but they all had intensive training on what to do in exactly this scenario.

“They had everything strapped down and strapped on so at no point were they at any real risk, just a big shock.

“Without doubt, their submariner training also gave them the best possible preparation. Their reaction was never to panic but to get back on deck and make sure everyone was safe and everything was accounted for, then to get back rowing.”

The team lost radio connection during the drama but were now said to be focused on getting back to their families in one piece.

HMS Oardacious have already achieved their target of raising £100,000 for the Royal Navy and Royal Marines Charity and Greenwich Hospital.

Their progress can be followed on the Yellow Bricks app and donations made through their Facebook page HMS Oardacious.

Matthew, a former player for Kirkcaldy Rugby Club, is one of two Fife men taking part in the challenge, Scots Guards officer John Ford, of Lochgelly, sailing with the Atlantic Guardsman team.