Normandy Channel Race - The battle rages on
by Kate Jennings on 26 May 2011
Port De Caen Ouistreham - Normandy Channel Race 2011 Normandy Channel Race 2011
www.normandy-race.com
Normandy Channel Race 2011 is seeing the battle continue to rage some 24 hours before the arrival of the first Class40s. Today it is most impossible to attempt to announce the name of the winner, given that the slim distances between the top three.
Port de Caen Ouistreham and Initiatives Saveurs have been neck and neck for over a day. At 1000 GMT, Fabien Delahaye and Bruno Jourdren had a lead of just 0.1 miles over Tanguy de Lamotte and Sébastien Audigane. At 1400 GMT, the two crews were completely tied in terms of theoretical distance to the finish. At the last radio session, Initiatives Saveurs had passed back into the lead off Land’s End, just 200 metres ahead of Port de Caen – Ouistreham. Enough to send even the best bookmakers into a spin!
Clearly the change of course has done nothing to upset the furious pace of the race. The 12 competitors are maintaining some fairly high speeds. In a few hours’ time, they’ll pass Land’s End to begin a long run down towards Guernsey. After that there will be two Norman headlands to round, before they cross the finish line later afternoon tomorrow, Thursday.
Match racing
Since the first few hours of racing, it has been one almighty battle. A day before the finish, the five leaders are bunched up within 10 miles of each other. Two boats have managed to get away from the first chasing group, Port de Caen - Ouistreham and Initiatives Saveurs. It’s a real offshore version of match racing!
According to Fabien Delahaye, skipper of the Class40 Port de Caen – Ouistreham, the battling is intense: 'We’re having a great battle and things are very tight. Tanguy and Sébastien are within 100 metres of us. We rounded Tuskar Rock together. Last night they got ahead of us, we then overtook them, we tacked and at that point they got ahead of us again. To sum it up, it’s very much game on!'
The first Class40s are set to pass Land’s End over the coming hours. Once around the English headland, the competitors are likely to hit a Westerly wind proffering downwind conditions, which will enable them to drop quickly down towards Guernsey and then on to the finish. For the past 12 hours, the competition has been intense, with the skippers making headway into the wind by putting in a series of well-timed tacks.
There are a whole range of tactical possibilities up for grabs in sailing conditions such as these. One thing for sure is that the two leaders will be marking each other’s every move all the way to the end. Tanguy de Lamotte, skipper of the Class40 Initiatives Saveurs freely admits this: 'I feel like I’m doing the Tour de France à la Voile! The light from their mast passes, gets away from us, falls back, we plot our position, we just don’t stop!'
ETA
Already thoughts go to the Estimated Time of Arrival. Indeed current ETAs suggest that the first Class40s are likely to cross the finish line off Hermanville late tomorrow afternoon. The distance of the theoretical course for the Normandy Channel Race 2011 was originally around 1,000 miles. Following the change of course, the competitors didn’t round Fastnet Rock, instead setting a course straight towards Guernsey after Tuskar Rock, which equates to a course spanning nearly 200 fewer miles.
Until today, the average race speed across the water was around 8.4 knots. Clearly this average speed is set to increase dramatically over the coming hours, since the current Southerly wind is set to clock round to the West, remaining fairly strong to carry the Class40s downwind to Caen. According to Nicolas Boidevézi, co-skipper of the Class40 Défi GDE – Tzu Hang, the strong wind is likely to make rounding the remaining Norman headlands a rather complicated affair:
'The Channel crossing should be quick, but we’re wondering what will happen after that, especially at Raz Blanchard where 30/35 knots of downwind conditions await us as we battle against the current…'
Ranking for Wednesday 25 May at 1400 hours GMT:
1 Port De Caen Ouistreham Fabien Delahaye/Bruno Jourdren Dist to finish 250,1 Separation 0,0
2 Initiatives Saveurs Tanguy de Lamotte/Sébastien Audigane 250,10,0
3 Mare.DE2 Jorg Riechers/Etienne David 253,83,7
4 Talanta Jean Galfione/Eric Péron 255,15,0
5 L'Express - Sapmer Pierre-Yves Lautrou/Dominic Vittet 259,29,1
6 Des Pieds Et Des Mains Damien seguin/Yohann Richomme 260,810,7
7 Defi GDE - TZU HANG Axel Strauss/Nicolas Boidevézi 285,935,8
8 Red Matthias Blumencron/Boris Hermann 295,845,7
9 Phesheya Racing Philippa Hutton/Nick Leggatt 299,649,5
10 40 Degrees Hannah Jenner/Anna-Maria Renken 340,290,1
11 Gryphon SOLO 2 Joe Harris/Josh Hall 340,890,8
12 Ocean Eleven Stéphanie Alran/Caroline Vieille 414,4164,3
ABD Livewire - Stuart Dodd/Steve Kennington
ABD Spliff - Andrew Dawson/Rune Aasberg
ABD Marie Toit - Caen La Mer Marc Lepesqueux/Michel Kleinjans
ABD Partouche - Christophe Coatnoan/Sébastien Figue
Event website
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