Please select your home edition
Edition
Sydney International On-Water Boat Show 2025

Queen Mary 2 leaves French four in her wake but resists luffing

by The Bridge on 27 Jun 2017
Queen Mary 2 Jehan Ashmore
After enjoying a magnificent start from the place of its birth in St Nazaire on Sunday, the Queen Mary 2 has powered into a commanding lead of over 250 miles after 24 hours of racing in The Bridge Centennial Transat race. She has left the four giant trimarans in her long wake. In the battle behind, the veteran record-breaker Francis Joyon and his crew on IDEC Sport reeled in the young gun Francois Gabart and MACIF on Monday afternoon to lead by nine miles at the 19:00 ranking (French time).

The only regret for the Queen Mary 2’s captain, Chris Wells, is that he was not allowed perform what would have been the largest luffing maneuver in history after the starting gun sounded.

“The first and most important thing is that currently I am in the lead,” Wells, who has been captain of Queen Mary 2 since 2008, said, tongue maybe partially in cheek. “I was a little disappointed as the gun went off that I was not allowed to accelerate very fast because we had to give enough room for the four trimarans to get ahead of me to allow them to tack in the channel. I could have been like Mr Lewis Hamilton and squeezed into the space quicker but we did have the race director on the bridge with me, so we had to wait. It would have been a magnificent luffing maneuver. But, I was a British gentleman and allowed them to go first.”

There was probably a joke about he who luffs last luffs hardest, but to his credit Wells resisted. At 1,132 feet long (345m) and 236 feet 2 inches high (72 metres) keel to funnel, the Queen Mary 2 (QM2) would have cast a wind shadow on her competitors the envy of any America’s Cup skipper.

For Wells it was a more emotional departure than normal, especially as he oversaw the building of the Queen Mary 2 in St Nazaire before her launch in 2003. “What a fantastic event and there was something extra special about taking the ship back to St Nazaire, the place of its birth,” he said. But his schedule does not allow him room for sympathy with the travails of the skippers behind him.

“I will go direct, taking the minimum distance route on this Great Circle track,” said Wells, who was born in Bournemouth, grew up in Poole, fell in love with the water and has spent his life at sea. “They are on the search for stronger wind, and of course I don’t want stronger wind. There is stronger wind further north, so all four of them are taking a more northerly route. I have a schedule to maintain. I will arrive at 06:00 on July 1 and I will make the speed required to arrive there. But at least we’re going at the design speed of the ship this time, which was a six-day transatlantic as opposed to the seven-day transatlantic.”

That means Wells will average 23.2 knots covering just over 3,000 miles across the Atlantic, speeds easily within the compass of these Ultime-class trimarans in different conditions to the anticyclonic ridge that greeted them in the Bay of Biscay. Joyon has been averaging 13 knots. They may be nimble for their size, but the QM2 has a 157,000-horsepower engine plant to call on allowing her to churn out a metronomic 540 miles a day.

The good news for the trimarans is that they will find stronger winds tomorrow (Tuesday). “They have had to cross a huge area of calm stretching from the coast of Cornwall in England to the Iberian Peninsula,” Dominic Vittet, the race meteorologist, who is on board the QM2, said.

However, from tomorrow (Tuesday), the face of the race should radically change and take a completely different turn with an approaching a low-pressure system, which should allow sail racers to seriously speed up the pace. “Tonight (Monday) and Tuesday and Wednesday are much better and stronger: the boats will be closer to the depression, the south-westerly will intensify (up to 20 knots) and switch to the north-west,” Vittet added. The boats that catch these winds first will begin to open up the first significant gaps and match the speed of their steel leader.

For more information visit www.thebridge2017.com.
Rolly Tasker Sails 2023 FOOTERMarkSetBotSea Sure 2025

Related Articles

New Zhik Thermo TechFleece
Performance in Every Layer Precision-built for active performance and refined for daily use, the new Thermo TechFleece Hooded and Sports Jackets deliver adaptable warmth and unrestricted movement.
Posted today at 7:15 am
Globe40 Leg 2 Update
Three contenders on the same line "It could end in a penalty shootout," Ian Lipinski's prophecy, expressed in his last message the day before yesterday is about to come true: this Friday at 09:00 local time in Reunion Island, the three Class40 "scows" in the race are virtually neck & neck
Posted today at 5:57 am
2025 J/70 Worlds at Buenos Aires day 3
The roller coaster scorelines started to settle on Thursday The roller coaster scorelines of the J/70 World Championship started to settle on Thursday as the discard race came into effect with now six races scored.
Posted today at 12:09 am
Palm Beach XI enters 2026 Newport Bermuda Race
One of the world's most celebrated ocean-racing yachts will race next year The legendary 100-ft. canting keel supermaxi yacht Palm Beach XI is the 100th boat to register for the 2026 Newport Bermuda Race.
Posted on 30 Oct
2025 IKA Youth Worlds at Praia da Vitoria Day 3
Gusts, glory and the comeback kid Day 3 of the Formula Kite Youth Worlds in the Azores delivered a punishing mix of gusty winds, gear disasters and gutsy performances with France's Nell De Jahamm among those impressing in the demanding conditions.
Posted on 30 Oct
2025 Optimist Asian & Oceanian Championship day 3
Omani sailors deliver strong performances Omani sailors delivered strong performances on the third day of the 2025 Optimist Asian & Oceanian Championship, organised by Oman Sail in collaboration with the Oman Maritime Sports Committee and the International Optimist Dinghy Association (IODA).
Posted on 30 Oct
IOM Worlds 2026 at Datchet Build-Up
Dinghy and Keelboat sailors could learn a lot from radio sailing Datchet Radio Sailing are hosting the biggest event of the radio sailing world in May next year, the IOM World championships. Competitors from 20 plus countries will participate and the spectacle of the best in the world racing is not to be missed.
Posted on 30 Oct
Last chance to get a free entry or free jib
2026 Fireball Worlds Expression of Interest Closes midnight Friday Pay £50 and you will be put into a draw to take place on 1st November 2025. The first non-UK boat drawn will receive a free entry to the UK Nationals and the Worlds, whilst the first UK boat drawn will receive a jib kindly donated by P&B.
Posted on 30 Oct
17th Transat Café L'or Day 5
Into the Blue While the ULTIM race leader Tom Laperche and Franck Cammas (SVR Lazartigue) are opening distance all the time on their pursuers, now into the trade winds and averaging 31 knots this afternoon, not far behind them are the Ocean Fifty class.
Posted on 30 Oct
CXr - A new generation of Code furlers from Seldén
Enhanced with several new features of which a patented ratchet design stands out 15 years ago, as a response to a growing demand for convenient headsail handling, Seldén broke new ground by introducing their CX and GX furlers for Code 0 and flying down wind sails.
Posted on 30 Oct