Route du Rhum: Race leader Seb Josse updates Gitana team on damage
by Sabina Mollart Rogerson/Richard Gladwell S-W NZ 5 Nov 2018 12:43 PST
6 November 2018

Edmund de Rothschild - start Route du Rhum - November 2018, St Malo © Eloi Stichelbaut
After suffering a breakage on her starboard float, the Route du Rhum race leader, Maxi Edmond de Rothschild expected into La Coruña, Spain between 20 and 22:00 GMT
The incident occurred in four metre seas and 30kt winds. The broken float has been retrieved on board.
The incredible memories of the foiling 32metre Maxi Edmond de Rothschild flying towards Cap Fréhel already seem a long time ago.
Posting a superb start on Sunday, from St Malo heading for Guadeloupe, the memories will remain in the history books of offshore racing for a long while.
Then in the early hours of this morning Sébastien Josse alerted his shore team to major damage aboard the maxi triamran Edmond de Rothschild, latest addition to the Gitana fleet.
That all came to an end whilst leading the race and making the most of the first lively night at sea to extend away from his closest rivals. Seb Josse enjoyed a 28-mile lead over François Gabart on the tracker and nearly 40 miles in terms of actual distance on the water.
For reasons that are not currently known, Gitana Team came to an abrupt halt and promptly discovered that nearly 10 metres of his starboard float had broken away. Having made the Maxi secure, Sébastien is making headway at a reduced speed towards La Coruña, on the Spanish coast, which he is set to reach between 20:00hrs and 22:00 GMT on Monday.
At 04:30GM an 8 to 10 metre section of bow broke off as a result of the incident.
At 04:38 GMT this Monday, team manager Cyril Dardashti’s phone rang. Unfortunately, these nocturnal calls from the ocean are rarely harbingers of good news. Via satellite phone, Sébastien Josse alerted his the team that his boat had suffered major damage, synonymous with the end of the race for the five-arrow racing stable.
“The starboard float has suffered extensive damage with nearly 8 metres missing from forward of the beam. Sébastien set off pretty carefully and he was on track with the timing organised with his routing cell. These boats are quick, the speeds are always impressive, but the race rhythm was controlled. There were no technical issues aboard and Sébastien had just had a nap. He was in good form and ready for the next stage of the programme.”
The Maxi Edmond de Rothschild expected into Spain this evening
Very soon after the damage was announced, the shore team got together in Lorient at Gitana’s base. Working with the weather cell, which are in constant contact with the boat, Cyril Dardashti and Pierre Tissier, the team’s technical director, got operations underway to recover the sailor and his boat.
“Our primary concern is the sailor. Once we know that he’s okay we take care of the boat. In this instance, Sébastien was fine and had a very clear idea with regards to what action needed to be taken. Indeed, he had taken all the necessary measures to slow the boat down and had reduced the sail area down to the second reef to make La Coruña in complete safety, as the seas are still heavy, with waves of between 4 and 5 metres, and 30 knots of breeze. As such, it’s important to be relatively careful. The aim is to avoid the low pressure system, which will beef up in the area on Tuesday morning.”
Two members of the shore team hit the road to the north-west tip of Spain this morning and, by midway through the afternoon, the rest of the team were in position in La Coruña to prepare for the arrival of the Maxi and her skipper.
Safety before the explanations
“Of course it’s very hard… there is a massive sense of disappointment both for Sébastien and for the team and exiting a race prematurely when you’ve prepared so hard for it is never easy to accept, especially when you hold all the cards to post a solid performance. However, today our one and only concern is to get Sébastien and the Maxi nicely protected before the arrival of a big low pressure system set to sweep across the Bay of Biscay and the North-West of the Iberian peninsula tomorrow morning. There is no immediate danger, even though there are heavy seas, but the boat is no longer as balanced or manoeuvrable and the damaged float has taken on a lot of water, which has added a few tonnes to the platform… Why has this come about and what exactly happened? We can honestly say that we don’t think there was a collision with a floating object. It is the windward float that has gone. For now, we don’t have an explanation. However, we’ll have the time to analyse it all at a later date,” concluded Cyril Dardashti.
Given the extent of the damage, the Maxi Edmond de Rothschild’s retirement from the Route du Rhum – Destination Guadeloupe is no more than a question of administrative formalities, which will be dealt with once the boat and the skipper have made it back to terra firma.
Background: Gitana Bullet Sebastien Josse and the maxi Edmond de Rothschild
43 Years old
16 Transatlantic Races
3 Vendée Globe races, 1 Volvo Ocean Race, 1 Jules Verne Trophy, 5 Solitaire du Figaro's
The Maxi Edmond de Rothschild - christened Gitana 17 becomes the latest of the famous and long line of Gitana boats - a 32 metre long by 23 metre wide trimaran it was designed by the architect Guillaume Verdier and his team, in collaboration with the Gitana design office. Precursor, this giant of seas with decidedly planing, aggressive and innovative hulls, far removed from those known on current oceanic multihulls, opens the era of a new generation machines whose aim is to fly around the world.