Please select your home edition
Edition
Cyclops Marine 2023 November - LEADERBOARD

Solitaire Bompard Le Figaro– Yoann blazes trail through Chenal du Four

by rivacom.fr on 28 Jun 2016
Gildas Morvan (Cercle Vert) - 2016 Solitaire Bompard Le Figaro Alexis Courcoux
After 50 hours at sea on leg two of the 2016 Solitaire Bompard Le Figaro, Yoann Richomme on Skipper Macif 2014 is holding onto the lead he grabbed earlier in the 430-miles stage from Gildas Morvan on Cercle Vert.

This afternoon Richomme led a tight top-group of four boats through the notorious and spectacular, rock-strewn Chenal du Four off the Brittany coast south of Ushant in brisk conditions, with a two-nautical mile advantage over Morvan.

Hot on Morvan’s heels was Charlie Dalin on Skipper Macif 2015 in third place and Nicolas Lunven on Generali who was just under three miles adrift of Richomme.

With 130 tricky miles left to sail to the stage finish at Paimpol, Richomme is doing his utmost to press home his advantage, knowing he has an opportunity to establish a strong race-leading position when he crosses the leg finish line early tomorrow.

The key for him is that leg one winner Erwan Tabarly, who started the stage seven minutes ahead of him, is back in sixth place on Armor Lux, nearly 10 miles behind. Assuming Richomme holds on, his closest pursuer by Paimpol is likely to be Dalin who started the second stage only four minutes behind him.

In the meantime Richomme, who is on his seventh Solitaire and has a best overall finish of fourth in 2013, is watching Morvan in his wing mirrors. “It is not going to be easy,” he said on the sat phone from his boat. “Gildas is moving well and I must not get complacent, despite the current standings. But I’m going for the win on this leg; I’m not going to go home with any regrets.”



Lunven in fourth place, feels as though Dalin is connected to him by wires. “I’m sailing side-by-side with Charlie,” he reported. “It seems like every time one of us tacks, the other one follows suit. We can’t seem to drop each other. It’s not going to be easy to catch the boys up ahead and we certainly can’t rely on them making any errors.”

The last sector of the course is hugely challenging for exhausted sailors who have to pick their way through the navigational dangers of the Iroise Sea before returning north through the Chenal du Four and then following the coast round to Paimpol. The strong westerly-southwesterly breeze will make it a fast passage with the boats beating south, then running and reaching in the last stages of the leg.

After the top-four, Tabarly is racing alongside Alexis Loison (Groupe Fiva) and Corentin Douguet (Sofinther-Un Maillot Pour La Vie) in a group of three boats, about nine miles off the lead. Then four miles further back comes Sebastian Simon on Bretagne-CMB Performance, in eighth place and the leading boat in the main peloton which stretches south-north over nine miles, as far back as the rookie Marc Noesmoen (Team Vendee Formation) in 36th place.

The 39-strong fleet had remained quite compacted up until the Lizard on the west-going opening section of the leg, taking the fleet from the start at Cowes on the Isle of Wight to the Carn Base turning mark off Land’s End. But then in a reverse of what happened at the Lizard on leg one, the boats inshore got a jump on those offshore and the gaps started to appear.



“The coast of England showed the treachery of the country,” quipped race director Gilles Chiorri. “With extremely variable winds and tidal currents…the coast of England certainly came up with all the ingredients necessary to create gaps, which can never be closed.

“Since Monday, the fleet has stretched out,” Chiorri added. “During the night things paid off again for the leaders with slightly more favourable winds and better tidal opportunities and the rich just got richer. Those chasing the two front-runners lost a lot of miles between the Lizard and Carn Base, allowing Gildas Morvan and Yoann Richomme to make their getaway.”

“The wind will remain fairly strong until the finish, so the gaps in the fleet will narrow slightly, although in terms of distance they remain important and the overall rankings are likely to be shaken up,” summarised Chiorri.

Among those who found the English coast a tough test was Benjamin Dutreux (Team Vendée), currently eleventh and nearly 15 miles behind Richomme: “I was pulling my hair out along the English coast; it seemed like each time I tacked the wind would change,” he said as he approached Ushant. “I don’t really know this area very well, I only go through the Chenal du Four twice a year for the Solitaire. I’m going to try and catch some of the boys whilst staying safe and not taking any unnecessary risks.”

Sydney International On-Water Boat Show 2025Maritimo S SeriesHyde Sails One Design Sale 2025

Related Articles

iQFOiL earns 4 nominations at World Sailing Awards
11th Hour Racing Impact Award and three Kuehne+Nagel Young World Sailor of the Year Award The iQFOiL Class has been shortlisted for four 2025 World Sailing Awards. The prestigious 2025 World Sailing 11th Hour Racing Impact Award, recognized for its groundbreaking work in environmental and social sustainability.
Posted today at 12:58 pm
Crazy Kiwi joined by trail biker for Transat
Aotearoa Ocean Racing's Conrad Colman joined by top ultra-trail runner for Transat Café l'OR Aotearoa Ocean Racing's Conrad Colman has been joined by top French ultra-distance runner Mathieu Blanchard, who is new to sailing. Blanchard won the 625km Yukon Artic Ultra earlier this year.
Posted today at 11:25 am
A Flying Season for Hyde Sails
With more to come in 2026 The 2025 Championship Season has been a busy one for the team at Hyde Sails, with major events up and down the UK, as well as spectacular results around the world.
Posted today at 9:30 am
New sequence for the Globe40
After crossing the longitude of the Cape of Good Hope yesterday evening After crossing the longitude of the Cape of Good Hope yesterday evening, passing not at the level of South Africa but at the southern limit of the course, the leading group of the 2nd edition of the GLOBE40 entered the new territory of the Indian Ocean.
Posted today at 8:12 am
Sun Hung Kai & Co Hong Kong Race Week 2026
Incorporating the 2026 29er Asian Championship Asia's No 1 dinghy regatta, presented by the the Sailing Federation of Hong Kong, China, and organised by the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club, returns to the southern waters of Hong Kong in January next year.
Posted today at 3:03 am
2025 Bermuda Gold Cup Day 1
Collisions and Comebacks An incident-packed first day at the 2025 Bermuda Gold Cup featured a collision in the first flight of the day before eight-time match racing world champion Ian Williams shot to the top of the leaderboard with Switzerland's Eric Monnin.
Posted today at 12:53 am
iQFOiL Youth & Junior Europeans 2025 day 3
Day three delivers high-speed racing and rising leaders in Sardinia Day three of the iQFOiL Youth & Junior European Championships brought a full schedule of racing to the sparkling waters off Club Nautico Arzachena in Sardinia.
Posted on 21 Oct
Tassie yachts take on the Vics in M2D Yacht Race
The AdvantEdge team is racing against the clock to repair a torn mainsail Tasmanian entrants AdvantEdge and Just Farr Love will be flying the flag for their home state in this year's Melbourne to Devonport 'Rudder Cup' Yacht Race.
Posted on 21 Oct
Transat Café L'or: Pam Lee has Class40 baptism
First skipper to have her own boat and her own project ready to race Ireland's Pam Lee has already made her own little bit of history as she lines up to start the Transat Café L'Or, the doublehanded race from Le Havre to Martinique.
Posted on 21 Oct
The passing of one of the greats of WA Sailing
Remembering Don Devine It is with deep sadness that we share the news of the passing of PDSC Life Member and Past Commodore Don Devine on 11 October 2025.
Posted on 21 Oct