Please select your home edition
Edition
North Sails Performance 2023 - LEADERBOARD

Briton Sam Goodchild takes second in 1000 Miles Des Sables

by Andi Robertson 30 Apr 2018 06:35 PDT
All in for the Rhum - Sam Goodchild - 1000 Miles Des Sables © Christophe Breschi

British sailor Sam Goodchild took a big, important step forward in his quest to win this Autumn's renowned Route du Rhum solo transatlantic race Thursday when he finished the qualifying 1000 Miles Des Sables race in a very close second place on his Class 40 All In For The Rhum.

Goodchild hopes his success will prove a platform to work from as he seeks to find a sponsoring partner for his Route du Rhum-Destination Guadeloupe. Although his Class 40 has been generously loaned to him, he is funding his challenge so far himself. If he does not find a partner of partners by July he will have to withdraw his entry and miss out on the pinnacle event which is a key part of his desire to compete in the Vendee Globe in the near future.

Although the race is Goodchild's first solo race in four years, in fact since completing La Solitaire du Figaro solo race in July 2014, he showed no sign of being rusty. After Monday's start off Les Sables d'Olonne - home of the Vendee Globe solo non stop round the world race - he made a strategic choice which immediately put him in close contact with two of the pre-race favourites Aymeric Chappellier and British rival Phil Sharp, the current Class 40 champion.

From there the trio contested a remarkable 635 mile five day marathon during which they were hardly ever out of sight of each other. And on the finish line Thursday afternoon Chapellier (AINA Enfance et Avenir) was just a slender nine minutes and 10 seconds ahead of Goodchild who in turn completed his 636 nautical miles course just 2 mins and 44 secs ahead of Jersey based Sharp (IMERYS Clean Energy).

The inaugural race, set up as the main qualifier for the Route du Rhum - Destination Guadeloupe - followed a triangle shaped course across the Bay of Biscay to a mark off Gijon, N Spain and was shortened by Race Direction from the planned 1000 miles because.

An exhausted Goodchild, 28, explained: "With Aymeric (Chapellier) and Phil (Sharp) we were within sight of each other practically the whole time. At the start, I had no idea what to expect. The aim was to test the boat and see how well I measured up. It's clear that this was a light airs race and those conditions suit the boat, but I felt competitive against Phil, who was sailing on the sistership to my 40-foot boat, and I managed to keep up with Aymeric, who is sailing really well. It was great watching them and learning things. It was fantastic, but I mustn't get carried away, as the three of us did particularly well at the start, which enabled us to make our getaway. In any case, I found myself racing in close contact with Phil and Aymeric, who finished second and third in the Transat Jacques Vabre last year and that's encouraging, as I am clearly going to progress.

He adds; "Qualifying for the Rhum is important but it is great to have checked in with the fleet and to have done well."

Of the initial key strategic choice Goodchild recalled. " I felt mine was a safe option - Phil went furthest to the west, I had a plan which was a bit more of a compromise which I was happy with. The wind was changing and for the best pressure it was east and the shift west. In the west it went well and we got away and it was just the three of us."

"Second is a great result but of more relevance is that I was always up against and in sight of the benchmark boats, the best sailed and prepared. Phil Sharp is the champion and has had his boat for three years and is always up there. And racing against them so intensely your learning accelerates exponentially, what works or not. Like the pilot settings, ballast in or out, bowsprit position, you try something and immediately you can see the effect because you are so close with these guys."

He has spent the last winter with the giant multihull Spindrift Racing after being hand picked to join a crew set to challenge the Trophee Jules Verne record for sailing non stop around the world. After racing four seasons in the Figaro class, peaking with a best ever British finish of 11th, Goodchild decided to broaden his sailing horizons and since 2014 has raced fast record breaking multihulls.

"Compared with the Figaro these are much more complicated and tweaky with eight sails, the Figaro is small and simple by comparison. It's different from the Figaro because it's a six day 1000 mile race but with some similar demands to a Transatlantic. And it's good because I know where I lost it against Americ. I potentially could have won but there was one transition coming out of Gijon when the wind was going aft and he changed to the right sail and the right trim and I was too slow compared to him I screwed up and lost five miles to him over that period. But he knows his boat and he is fast, he knows the trim and his sail configurations. "Now I have to find a partner for the Route du Rhum."

Related Articles

Groupe SNEF win the Niji40
A new Class 40 Transatlantic Race with a strong international flavour French aces Xavier Macaire and Pierre Leboucher, both formerly top Figaro solo racers, ably supported by Spanish Min650 racer Carlos Manera Pascual have won the first ever Niji40 Class40 race from Belle-Île-en-Mer to Marie Galante, Guadeloupe. Posted on 24 Apr
David Linger takes 6th in Global Solo Challenge
His journey was at times extremely difficult, even after arrival Sunday April 21st, at 2:03 pm local time, after 175 days, David Linger crossed the finish line of the Global Solo Challenge taking 6th place on his Owen Clarke designed Class40 #15 Koloa Maoli. Posted on 24 Apr
Transat Ready: Solo Skippers Optimised For Success
All eyes turn to Lorient for the start of the Transat CIC With the Vendée Globe on the horizon, excitement is building as the IMOCA skippers hurtle towards the world's premiere offshore challenge. Posted on 24 Apr
Race Yachts Premium Brokerage - Autumn Selection
When only the best will do... When only the best will do... Posted on 24 Apr
The Transat CIC is well and truly on course
A parade of sail and the race village inaugurated The 15th edition of The Transat CIC, the famous solo race from France across the North Atlantic to New York which will start this Sunday from Lorient La Base took real shape. Posted on 23 Apr
The Transat CIC coming to America
The city of New York is inextricably linked to the long history of solo ocean racing The Transat CIC is set to bring solo ocean racing's biggest, most modern IMOCA and Class40 fleet to the very heart of New York City. Posted on 22 Apr
The Globe40 bound for Valparaiso
Adding the stopover in Chile to its provisional schedule After several months of exchanges and a recent week on site, the GLOBE40 is thrilled to add a stopover in Valparaiso in Chile to its provisional schedule. Posted on 17 Apr
Over 50 entries already for the Drheam-Cup
With three months to go until the Grand Prix de France de Course au Large Entries to the fifth edition of the Drheam-Cup / Grand Prix de France de Course au Large have been open since 2 January and are coming in steadily, with over 50 entries already with three months to go. Posted on 11 Apr
François Gouin takes 5th in Global Solo Challenge
When he raised arms in triumph you could have easily been mistaken in thinking he had won overall François Gouin crossed the finish line of the Global Solo Challenge claiming 5th place with his Class40 Pogo 40S #75 Kawan3 Unicancer. Posted on 5 Apr
Tom Dolan ready for Class 40 Transatlantic race
“It is always good to experience something else” Ireland's offshore solo racer Tom Dolan takes advantage of a natural break in the Figaro circuit in France to expand his racing horizons and improve his skills as he competes in a new, crewed Class40 race - the Niji 40. Posted on 5 Apr
PredictWind - Routing 728x90 BOTTOMZhik 2024 March - FOOTERVaikobi 2024 FOOTER