Please select your home edition
Edition
Vaikobi 2024 LEADERBOARD

Volvo Ocean Race - Comical insight from Dongfeng Race Team

by Dongfeng Race Team on 9 Jan 2015
Leg three, Day five - Pascal Bidégorry onboard 'He looks like a French submarine commander from a Cold War movie. If he could smoke his cigarettes down here, no question, he would!' - Sam Greenfield - Dongfeng Race Team - Volvo Ocean Race 2014-15. Sam Greenfield / Volvo Ocean Race
Volvo Ocean Race 2014-15 - Today Sam Greenfield gives us a comical yet accurate insight into the intensity of living next to an obsessed navigator. It’s easy to become obsessed with the small amounts of information about your competitors – boat speed, position reports every few hours. There’s not a lot to do onboard except analyse, discuss and analyse some more. Dongfeng holding their lead for now with Team Brunel, their Dutch competitors are only a few miles behind. It’s a game of cat and mouse.

Leg three, Day five – The hunt for the red October

Pascal is biting his nails again.

He looks like a French submarine commander from a Cold War movie. If he could smoke his cigarettes down here, no question, he would.

But I don’t know any French submarine movies, so to me he’s a French Sean Connery, running from a Dutch Jack Ryan.
His eyes are glued to Brunel’s AIS data on the nav chart. They’re still the only boat in range. You’d think we were dodging depth charges.

'Boatspeed. Eleven point four. Bearing. One ninety-eight,' he says into a microphone When he’s not biting his nails he buries his face in his weather hand and mutters French obscenities.

All the lights are out down below. The chart screen illuminates his weary face.

'Ten point nine. One eighty eight.'

Pascal’s numbers echo through every square meter of the boat’s black carbon belly, lost on the four sailors soundly asleep on the floor up forward. They rise onto deck to more attentive ears.

It’s 0800UTC and the air on deck is clean and warm and the moon as just started to rise and it chokes out the milky way and dims the expanse of stars overhead that Eric had been driving along to; locking his spreaders onto the most convenient constellation to keep his orientation.

The numbers continue: 'Eleven point two. One ninety five.'

Tomas trims the sails as a F1 driver shifts gears.

When Pascal’s numbers reach the two they can compare their own speed and bearing to the flickering masthead light on the horizon. Know your enemy.

The scene on deck is a far cry from Pascal’s moonless war desk. Imagine the wide-open chases from Master and Commander, and the Dutch Archeron has closed the gap down to two nautical miles.

That’s why Pascal is biting his nails.

Charles is sleeping in the front of the boat on a pile of crew bags until Pascal rouses him and the two walk back to the nav station where they compare their data with Brunel’s.

'Tonight is an important decision,' explains Charles.

'It’s maybe the only gybe left on this leg and you have to choose a good position because then you have 600 to 1000 miles to pass the India coast. So where you gybe is going to be your position compared to the fleet for the next four days.'

The two rise from their desk and walk up on deck together.

'If you gybe too early,' he continues, 'it’s a big mess because you are going to be in light wind. If you gybe too late you lose a lot of distance because right now we’re sailing 90 degrees of the coast. So it’s difficult to choose and it’s a key point of the leg.'

Charles takes the helm from Eric and tells Pascal to wake the crew for a gybe.

'If we do a good gybe tonight and are fast I think we’ll be able to keep the lead for the next four days so it’s very important.'

The young sailors clamor on deck and everyone is at their station and rubbing tired eyes in less than 60 seconds. There are no red flashing lights or battle station calls, but it feels the same none the less.

We gybe and the crew off watch returns to their bunks.

When the sun rises Kevin is at the help and Brunel is eight miles behind us.

‘The Dutch sailors behind us’ are mentioned and Kevin breaks his driver’s trance.

'Bahhwah? They are Dutch?'

'You didn’t know?' I ask. 'I can’t believe that.'

I ask Tomas and he replies matter of factly: 'Well… I knew they were Dutch, but I never knew Bouwe was, so…. No.'
Kevin continues.

'Well, Bouwe, I thought he could be American, sure, but Dutch? I had no idea.'

They’re baffled.

So much for know your enemy, but I suppose that means our Dutch nemesis would make a fitting Jack Ryan after all.
SCIBS 2024 FOOTERCyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERVaikobi 2024 FOOTER

Related Articles

470 Europeans at Cannes Day 2
A superb day for the Italian pairing of Elena Berta and Bruno Festo More light and shifty winds in Cannes on day 2 of the 470 European Championship made for difficult conditions to race in, watching for the shifts.
Posted today at 5:25 pm
RC44s revving engines on first visit to Galicia
Racing sets sail tomorrow for four days at the 44Cup Baiona Racing sets sail tomorrow for four days at the 44Cup Baiona, the first time the high performance owner-driver one design class has visited this northwest region of Spain.
Posted today at 5:05 pm
Cup Spy May 3: Brits hit over 40kts
The Brits seemed to have a better day, hitting 40kts on one foiling leg Three teams sailed - two out of Barcelona - Alinghi Red Bull Racing, and INEOS Britannia. And, the other - Luna Rossa - sailed out of Cagliari. The Brits seemed to have a better day, hitting 40kts on one foiling leg.
Posted today at 1:20 pm
Cup Spy April 7: American Magic - 'best day yet'
Team boss, Terry Hutchinson describes American Magic's splash, launch sail as "our best day yet" New York Yacht Club's American Magic has revealed their new AC75 and completed the launch, tow-test, sail and tack in Barcelona. The AC75 has several intriguing design features, including an intriguing crew cockpit arrangement.
Posted today at 11:44 am
Richomme pinching himself after Transat CIC win
Completing the race and gliding past the Statue of Liberty after the finish Many of the IMOCA skippers in The Transat CIC have been dreaming about completing the race and gliding past the Statue of Liberty after the finish, and on Tuesday race winner Yoann Richomme did exactly that.
Posted today at 11:37 am
470 Europeans at Cannes Day 1
Japan's Keiju Okada and Miho Yoshioka take the early lead Three races were held on the first day of the International 470 Class European Championship in Cannes, France. The day started off with very light winds, slowly building as clouds built over the race course. All in all, three races were held.
Posted today at 8:27 am
Foiling Week WASZP 8.2m Class Sold Out in 1 hour
There are still some spots available in our WASZP_X5.8m and 6.9m flee It has taken just one hour for the 8.2m section of the Foiling Week WASZP 8.2m fleet to sell out! This is the second major event that has sold out in the space of months. The International WASZP Games in Norway also sold out in the space of 48 hours.
Posted today at 5:18 am
America's Cup: New 'Patriot' has her first sail
Team members and their families gathered at their Barcelona team base for the christening ceremony A landmark day unfolded for NYYC American Magic on Tuesday morning, May 7th, as Boat 3, "Patriot", embarked on its inaugural sail.
Posted today at 1:34 am
America's Cup: American Magic splash and sail
American Magic sailed Tuesday revealing an interesting deck layout including aft facing cyclors American Magic rolled out their new AC75 at 5.45am on Tuesday, with the first set of slightly asymmetric race foils, rudder and rig all in place and revealing an interesting deck layout putting the helms and trimmers side by side and well forward.
Posted today at 12:11 am
Transat CIC IMOCA podium arrive in New York
Finishers dock in the heart of the Big Apple Freezing fog banks, a light winds head scratcher at 150 miles from the finish, deciphering the vagaries of the Gulf Stream....all these final challenges, and more, were all but forgotten when The Transat CIC IMOCAs enjoyed a sunny arrival in New York.
Posted on 7 May