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Vendée Globe Day 6: Leaders are in tropical depression Theta

by Vendée Globe 13 Nov 2020 10:28 PST 13 November 2020
Alex Thomson set for the Vendée Globe © Alex Thomson Racing

Alex Thomson leads the Vendée Globe by some 26 nautical miles this afternoon, first to deal with the worst of storm Theta at some 250 miles south of the Azores.

The British skipper took HUGO BOSS as close to the centre of the system as he considered prudent, before a difficult gybe in around 40kts of wind and 5 metre seas around 1330hrs this afternoon, a move which should see him gain significantly on all but the French veteran Jean Le Cam who took a similar track.

The reward for the extra risk is sailing fewer miles than the rivals who are chasing him is being slingshot out of the low in strong N an NW'ly winds which, all going well, should net him a significant miles on his fast foiling rivals.

Thomson's nearest pursuer is 61 year old Jean Le Cam whose ocean racing history dates back to the 1980s and who won La Solitaire du Figaro three times and finished second in the Vendée Globe in 2004-5. He is sailing a 2007 launched boat with conventional straight daggerboards and leads all of the latest generation foilers other than the radical black HUGO BOSS.

Le Cam is more than twenty miles up on the third placed Nico Troussel on CORUM L'Épargne.

"I see them behind me these foilers. But as long they are there papy fait de la resistance (literally grandpa resists ed note 1983 french film)! I am 70 miles from the centre of the Theta depression. I am under mainsail alone, I am waiting to see what I am going to do. I always say, do not confuse speed and haste. Here I am calm, the wind rises gradually, it is useless for me to have up sail I won't need in half an hour. That's the worst thing, you put it up you put it down put it up.

Asked on the Vendée Globe LIVE show today about his passionate public following in typical Le Cam style he quipped, "I'm glad people are with me because this is not an easy adventure. And here I am. I can't not be happy! If I'm not happy there, then I'll never be happy! So I'm happy. I ate a cassoulet this morning, I found the cassoulet to go well with a depression. It does not go with the high pressure but rather with the depression. This is our culture in Brittany. Otherwise, I have sweetbreads to make, but I'll wait a bit."

"This is the first hors d'oeuvre of this Vendée", was Kito de Pavant's description of storm Theta during the Vendée Live programme. De Pavant is a three times a Vendée Globe starter who has not yet finished and who had to be rescued in the Southern Ocean by the Marion Dufresne supply ship during the last edition. Seeing the pace and passion of his friend and many times adversary Le Cam. De Pavant teased, "Maybe there is still a place for old people!"

Strategies for Theta vary all the way through the fleet. First timer Clarisse Cremer on Banque Populaire X admitted to being freaked out by it. Louis Burton today said he would play it safe, setting his cursor where he feels comfortable between speed and safety. And then are those who keep smiling, like Kevin Escoffier, busy manoeuvring further west in 30 knots of wind at midday.

The PRB skipper Escoffier highlighted the need to keep the hammer down as much as possible to avoid being left behind in a situation which is not so much rich get richer as the poor being left behind in a vacuum of anti cyclonic very light winds.

Escoffier said, "Water started coming into the boat just before I gybed at the depression. Here we go again! It took a fair bit of time to empty everything; the pumps are fast but it still took me 2 hours. When you discover that, after taking a little nap... Well, let's just say there's nothing like it, it definitely wakes you up! (he says laughing) I'm currently sailing in 30/35 knots, sailing downwind. I've given in to losing a bit of speed so that I can shift a little to the west and remain in control. I've moved away from the optimal route, but I'm going to sail as well as I can. Alex and Jean are making a very good start to the race. I made the decision to hang back a little and I'm not alone. Charlie gybed again this morning for the same reasons. I completely understand what Alex and Jean are doing, but everyone has their own path to take. These are never easy choices! I'm going to come out of the depression early tonight. I am happy with my start to the race. This is my second solo regatta and I'm trying to do it right. I've stayed in contact with good boats with good skippers at the helm. I'm proud of that no matter what happens afterwards."

Meanwhile some 300 miles to the north east, back up the track Miranda Merron and Didac Costa were among those stuck in the light winds and oily seas.

And true to the Vendée Globe's requirement to fix at least one thing a day, Sébastien Simon (ARKEA PAPREC) took advantage of being close to the Azores to climb to the top of the mast without succeeding in completely solving the problem (damaged wind vanes). Maxime Sorel has been dealing with autopilot problems. And Louis Burton transformed the Bureau Vallée 2 saloon into a "composite workshop" to repair a crack in a bulkhead. "I'm apprehensive the next time we go upwind in heavy seas," he explained.

Quotes:

Miranda Merron (GB, Campagne de France): "I don't really know what is happening in the rest of the fleet because I don't get any news at all. It has been quite busy since the start and now I am in no wind at all but there is no chance of getting any rest at all as the wind is changing everywhere and I am trying to use every last ounce of wind to get out of here and go south. I am fine though.

Are you conscious you are in the Vendée Globe, does it feel different to a Route du Rhum, say?

"I have never thought about it. I don't even know which was is up, so, no. I am totally unaware. I don't know what was going on last night but I could not bear away, to soak down at all and I have ended up in this whole area of high pressure and have no wind, I can see that others have been caught as well. I have three knots of wind from the NE but ten minutes ago it was from the NW and then 20 minutes from the SE.

"It has been such a busy race from the start. There have been so many sail changes and a tack or gybe is so much work. Actually you are not going very fast, the best way to go is to have easy sails. Friday the 13th is not one of my superstitions. But being able to touch wood is and I have a piece by the chart table for that very purpose."

Ranking at 17H00 UTC:

PosSail NoSkipper / Boat NameDTF (nm)DTL (nm)
1 GBR 99Alex Thomson / HUGO BOSS23114.20
2 FRA 01Jean Le Cam / Yes we Cam !23134.420.2
3 FRA 59Thomas Ruyant / LinkedOut23167.553.3
4 FRA 6Nicolas Troussel / CORUM L'Épargne23171.757.5
5 FRA 85Kevin Escoffier / PRB23176.562.3
6 FRA 09Benjamin Dutreux / OMIA ‑ Water Family2317964.7
7 FRA 79Charlie Dalin / APIVIA23182.167.9
8 FRA 1000Damien Seguin / Groupe APICIL23212.197.8
9 FRA 109Samantha Davies / Initiatives ‑ Coeur23212.998.7
10 FRA 17Yannick Bestaven / Maître Coq IV23217102.7
11 FRA 49Romain Attanasio / Pure ‑ Best Western Hotels and Resorts23225.4111.2
12 FRA 18Louis Burton / Bureau Vallée 223228.2114
13 FRA 53Maxime Sorel / V And B Mayenne23228.2114
14 MON 10Boris Herrmann / Seaexplorer ‑ Yacht Club De Monaco23228.6114.3
15 FRA 4Sébastien Simon / ARKEA PAPREC23257.9143.6
16 ITA 34Giancarlo Pedote / Prysmian Group23272.6158.4
17 FRA 30Clarisse Cremer / Banque Populaire X23293.3179.1
18 SUI 7Alan Roura / La Fabrique23295180.8
19 JPN 11Kojiro Shiraishi / DMG MORI Global One23342.2228
20 FRA 92Stéphane Le Diraison / Time For Oceans23349.8235.5
21 FRA 27Isabelle Joschke / MACSF23368.4254.2
22 FRA 14Arnaud Boissieres / La Mie Câline ‑ Artisans Artipôle23411.4297.2
23 FRA 71Manuel Cousin / Groupe Sétin23423.9309.7
24 ESP 33Didac Costa / One Planet One Ocean23451.3337.1
25 GBR 777Pip Hare / Medallia23462347.8
26 FRA 50Miranda Merron / Campagne de France23495.1380.9
27 FIN 222Ari Huusela / Stark23509394.8
28FRA 02Armel Tripon / L'Occitane en Provence23517.1402.9
29 FRA 72Alexia Barrier / TSE ‑ 4myplanet23537422.8
30 FRA 83Clément Giraud / Compagnie du lit ‑ Jiliti23545.1430.9
31FRA 69Sébastien Destremau / Merci23656.7542.5
32 FRA 56Fabrice Amedeo / Newrest ‑ Art et Fenetres23837.7723.5
33 FRA 8Jérémie Beyou / Charal24130.21015.9

Find out more...

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