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Best ever all-British finish for Elsey & Matson in Transat AG2R La Mondiale

by Artemis Offshore Academy 26 Apr 2016 10:30 EST 26 April 2016
Sam Matson & Robin Elsey aboard Artemis after the 2016 Transat AG2R LA MONDIALE © Alexis Courcoux

Two ecstatic young British sailors hit the dock on the tiny Caribbean island of St Barts today, delighted to have completed their first transatlantic race and to have finished sixth in a fleet of 15 in the Transat AG2R La Mondiale.

Sam Matson, 25, and Robin Elsey, 23, both almuni of the Cowes-based Artemis Offshore Academy, set sail on the 3,800-mile marathon from Concarneau in Brittany on April 3rd, on board the Figaro Beneteau II one-design, Artemis, and completed the best ever finish in the race by an all-British crew.

They made a good start but early in the piece – off Cape Finisterre –they briefly separated to the east from the leading bunch, who pushed west early. It proved a costly error, allowing the top-five boats to get away.

But Matson and Elsey never let-up in their chase, in what turned out to be an extraordinarily competitive race, and were delighted to get to the finish after around 530 hours of racing inside the top-half of the fleet.

They reached St Barts after 22 days, four hours and 15 minutes at sea and just three hours and nine minutes behind the winning boat, Gedimat, co-skippered by the French pairing of Thierry Chabagny and Erwan Tabarly. For both Matson and Elsey this had been their longest time at sea and they were elated at completing the race.

"It was incredible and getting here is the coolest thing ever," enthused Matson. "Twenty-two days to fight to get here and it feels unbelievable to have arrived – so good." Elsey was of the same mind. "It's such a good feeling – we fought really hard to get here – it's brilliant."

Elsey, the top rookie in last year's Solitaire Bompard Le Figaro, was more than satisfied with his first go at a long distance short-handed race. "We are really happy with it," he said. "We sailed really well. We got on really well. We made clear choices and when we made bad ones we just got on with them. We kept our heads in the game the whole time even when we were detached from the fleet. We kept going, worked hard and got back into it."

Matson agreed: "There is not a lot we could change to be honest. We literally did everything we had to do to make sure we stayed in it and to make sure we stayed competitive. Just task-setting every day and pushing every day to make sure we got a sense of achievement and challenge day-in, day-out."

What came over loud and clear was that these two sailors had genuinely got on while racing a small, noisy and often uncomfortable boat over 22 days. "We both have quite similar racing styles and we are similar characters," said Elsey. "We were out there to enjoy ourselves – that is the reason why we do these races – and we want a great result and that comes with enjoying it."

Matson concurred. "There were times when individually we might have got a little bit frustrated – not with each other – but with the scenario or maybe just tired or whatever, but we could vent a bit of that at the co-skipper and know he was not going to worry about it. For sure we probably said to each other every other day 'it doesn't matter, just crack on," he said.

The moment off Finisterre that defined the race for the sole British crew in an otherwise almost entirely French fleet, was something both men were philosophical about. They put their meteo error down to inexperience and admitted that, at the time, they could not understand why the leading boats were pushing to the west while they stayed east on a more direct route.

"That was inexperience more than anything," said Elsey. "Once we had worked that out and worked out what they were doing, we worked really hard to get back into it. Twenty miles from the finish earlier today (when Gedimat crossed the line), we couldn't have been happier with the way we had fought the whole race."

Both men will now return to Europe to prepare for the Figaro. Matson, who was 13th overall last year, has learnt that taking a bit more food and making himself a little more comfortable need not necessarily mean an uncompetitive boat. "I am going to go into the Solitaire feeling a little more relaxed about what I am taking and making sure I have some comforts on board. If I race the Figaro like this, then I know I will come out of it feeling happy and having had a good race," he said.

Elsey says his confidence has only been boosted by knowing that he and Matson were on the pace at all times over three weeks of open ocean racing. "It's just a bit more confirmation of the importance of just enjoying yourself and working hard and enjoying the racing and the results will come at the end of the day," he said.

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