[2][3] After some bombardment, d'Aragona received word the Ottomans had recovered from the surprise and deployed 60 galleys (possibly not as many, given the state of the Turk navy at the time) in order to block the Dardanelles and cut their retreat.
[4] Free from the blockade and with favorable wind, d'Aragona had the fleet turn off their lanterns and navigate in darkness, while his own ship acted as a decoy with a light on.
[4] Capitalizing on the chance, d'Aragona sacked the Egyptian coast, and upon finding ten Turk ships, he attacked them without allowing them to use their superior size and artillery.
[8] Belegno's successor Giacomo Zane obtained the same result as him, after which Pedro de Gamboa captured a Turk merchant fleet for another million and half ducats.
[9] In response, Venetians and Ottomans planned to attack Naples with an armada of 48 Turk galleys, similar in size to tat deployed in Celidonia, but a storm forced it to return.