Please select your home edition
Edition
V-DRY-X

French GC32s fly the tricolor at Marseille One Design

by GC32 Racing on 12 Oct 2017
Marseille One Design GC32s out practicing beneath the Notre-Dame de la Garde basilica Gilles Martin-Raget / GC32 Racing Tour
Foiling catamaran action kicks off in Marseille tomorrow, Thursday 12th October and will run until Sunday, when the champion of the 2017 GC32 Racing Tour will be crowned.

For a fourth consecutive year, the final event of the 2017 GC32 Racing is Marseille One Design, where the GC32 one design catamarans will race alongside their fellow flying sailors in the Moth dinghy class.

Marseille is always a popular destination for the GC32 Racing Tour. For more than 30 years, France has been the leading nation for multihull racing. Many the country’s top sailing stars, some of them household names such as Michel Desjoyeaux, Loick Peyron and Franck Cammas, have forged their careers competing on two or three hulls.



While Cammas, winner of Marseille One Design in 2016, is not back to defend his title, several are from his Groupama Team France crew, who competed with him in this summer’s America’s Cup in Bermuda. They include wing trimmer and local Marseille resident, Thierry Foucher, Nicolas Heintz and former Olympic Finn sailor Thomas le Breton. All three are racing on one of the two French entries competing at Marseille One Design this year – Erik Maris’ Zoulou.

The other French crew hoping for glory on their national waters is Team ENGIE of former Class 40 champion Sébastien Rogues. Rogues is also now one of the longest serving GC32 skippers. “My first GC32 experience was here in 2014 - I am the old guy of the GC32 class now!” he jokes. “We are very happy to be in France for the second event.” Marseille One Design follows September’s GC32 Orezza Corsica Cup, both events organised by French company, Sirius Events in conjunction with the GC32 Racing Tour.



Rogues has strong objectives for Marseille One Design as it will affect his position on the 2017 championship leaderboard. “Marseille is important because it is the last event of the season and mathematically we can get on the podium. But between the podium and us is a Japanese team...” At present Mamma Aiuto! of Naofumi Kamei sits on the bottom step of the podium on 15 points, with Team ENGIE currently lying in fourth on 18.

The most local team to Marseille is Pierre Casiraghi’s Malizia – Yacht Club de Monaco. The Monaco team is hoping to repeat its performance from early on in Calvi, when they dominated racing. Unfortunately disaster then struck on the final day when they caught the top mark, damaging their rudder, which caused them to miss the last races, thereby losing the lead.



On board Malizia is former French America’s Cup helmsman Sebastien Col, who heralds from Sète and who’s yacht club – Yacht Club Pointe Rouge - is nearby in Marseille. “We have trained hard for the last three days and hopefully it will pay for the week,” said Col. “Marseille is a place we like a lot, being French. Weather-wise it is a little bit on or off, light or breezy, but Marseille is a great city. I am really happy to be here.”

Meanwhile the fight for the overall lead of the GC32 Racing Tour remains between the Swiss crew on Realteam led by Jérôme Clerc and, just two points behind, Argo of American Jason Carroll. In third place the crew on Mamma Aiuto! is looking to defend its third place. However the hottest contest over the next four days will be between Argo, Malizia and Mamma Aiuto! They are all within a point of one another in the 2017 GC32 Racing Tour’s Owner-Driver championship.



Since joining the GC32 Racing Tour at Copa del Rey MAPFRE in August, Simon Delzoppo’s .film Racing has been steadily on the ascent. Still firmly on the steepest part of the learning curve, the Aussie team, that includes 2015 GC32 Racing Tour winner skipper Leigh McMillan, is hoping to improve on its sixth place in Calvi last month.

Going into Marseille One Design, Manager Christian Scherrer said: “It is a great pleasure to be back in Marseille to round off the 2017 GC32 Racing Tour, and a privilege to race out of the marina which will host the sailing at the Olympic Games in 2024 .”





GC32 Racing Tour results after four events
Pos Team Riva Cup Villasimius Cup Copa del Rey MAPFRE Orezza Corsica Cup  Total
1 Realteam 1 2 3 1 7
2 Argo 4 1 2 2 9
3 Mamma Aiuto! 6 3 1 5 15
4 Team ENGIE 3 5 7 3 18
5 Malizia - Yacht Club de Monaco 7 6 4 4 21
6 Movistar 5 4 5 10 24
7 ARMIN STROM Sailing Team 2 7 9 10 28
8 Zoulou 10 10 6 7 33
9 .film Racing 10 10 8 6 34

GC32 Racing Tour Owner-Driver results after four events

Pos Team Riva Cup Villasimius Cup Copa del Rey MAPFRE Orezza Corsica Cup  Total
1 Mamma Aiuto! 6 2 1 1 10
2 Argo 1 1 2 6 10
3 Malizia - Yacht Club de Monaco 2 3 3 3 11
4 .film Racing 6 6 5 2 19
5 Zoulou 6 6 4 4 20
Selden 2020 - FOOTERMarkSetBotBarton Marine Pipe Glands

Related Articles

2025 World Match Racing Tour Final day 1
High drama marks opening day in Shenzhen The opening day of the 2025 World Match Racing Tour Final, running from 6-11 January in Shenzhen China, delivered high-intensity racing from the first start, with no shortage of close calls and razor-thin margins amongst the sixteen competing teams.
Posted today at 7:45 pm
The Famous Project CIC Jules Verne Trophy Day 38
Alexia, Dee, Annemieke, Rebecca, Deborah, Molly, Támara and Stacey round Cape Horn It was 14.14 UTC on Tuesday, January 6, 2026, when The Famous Project-CIC's IDEC SPORT Maxi Trimaran, led by her highly international crew composed of Alexia, Dee, Annemieke, Rebecca, Deborah, Molly, Támara and Stacey rounded Cape Horn.
Posted today at 4:54 pm
Video: Exclusive Benjamin Schwartz Interview
Co-skipper of Sodebo Ultim 3 on Jules Verne Trophy attempt Today we have an exclusive Q&A with Benjamin Schwartz, co-skipper of Sodebo Ultim 3 from the Pacific Ocean during their Jules Verne Trophy record attempt around the world.
Posted today at 12:05 pm
ILCA Oceania & AUS Open & Youth Championship day 4
Wearn rules River Derwent and it's Moving Day for the ILCA 6 Women Australia's Matt Wearn has taken a commanding lead in the 2026 ILCA Oceania and Australian Open Championship in Hobart on Day Four of sailing, taking a lead of 16 points in the ILCA 7 Class, into the penultimate day of racing.
Posted today at 11:34 am
Australian 16ft & 13ft Skiff Championships Day 2
Fantastic Michael Chittenden and the full results Fantastic Michael Chittenden and the full results on day 2 of the 2026 Skelcon Australian 16ft & 13ft Skiff Championships at Belmont 16s Sailing Club.
Posted today at 11:12 am
2026 Moth Australian Nationals Day 2
The wind clearly hadn't read the race schedule After an exciting opening day of racing, day two decided to keep everyone guessing. While the sun was shining and temperatures sat at a very agreeable 25 degrees, the wind clearly hadn't read the race schedule and failed to show up on time.
Posted today at 11:12 am
2026 12ft Skiff Interdominion Championship Day 3
Crucial decisions in shifty variable winds, breakages and swims cost others Day 3 and two races were sailed at the triSearch 12ft Skiff Interdominion Championship on Sydney Harbour, where crucial decisions in shifty variable winds made some, breakages and swims cost others, in a long day on the water.
Posted today at 9:26 am
ILCA Oceania & AUS Open & Youth Championship day 3
Finals test ahead for 191 ILCA sailors Three days of qualifying races are over for the ILCA 4 and ILCA 6 fleets with the sailors now assigned to either the Gold or Silver Fleets in the 2026 ILCA Oceania and Australian Open and Youth Championships under way in Hobart.
Posted today at 12:21 am
RSHYR 2025 | 2hands, foils, multis by BCM
The evolution of the Sydney Hobart race - can it happen? Will it happen? What will it look like? With the 80th Hobart run and celebrations of a small boat year still ringing in our ears, John Curnow of Sail-World and Crosbie Lorimer of Bow Caddy Media shared thoughts on how the race might evolve.
Posted on 5 Jan
The complete package
A thriving clubhouse leads to higher racing attendance, and visa versa I'm a great believer in starting things on the right foot. Be that in the morning, going for a run (even though it was damn chilly this morning) to set yourself up for the day, or preparing ahead for a meeting so that you've got the figures to hand.
Posted on 5 Jan