Please select your home edition
Edition
PredictWind - Routing 728x90 TOP

Vendée-Arctique-Les Sables d'Olonne Race update: A tough night off the Irish coast

by Julia Huvé 6 Jul 2020 02:35 PDT 5 July 2020
Charal during the Vendée-Arctique-Les Sables d'Olonne Race © Eloi Stichelbaut - polaRYSE / IMOCA

The skippers in the Vendée-Arctique-Les Sable d'Olonne "warm-up" for this year's Vendée Globe have certainly been enduring a baptism of fire as the early stages of the race continue to prove tough on them and their boats.

During their second night at sea, on their way from Les Sables d'Olonne to Iceland, the fleet has been closing on the southwest corner of Ireland with the leaders coming within a couple of miles of the coast near Kinsale in a bid to get out of the worst of the weather.

It has been a long hard beat into the northwesterly wind which has been hitting 35 knots in the gusts. Throughout, the leader has remained the Frenchman Thomas Ruyant on LinkedOut - the boat named after a charity supporting the homeless.

He has set a tough pace for the leading group which has settled into a collection of four boats with Charlie Dalin on Apivia this morning in second place just one-and-a-half nautical miles behind, then Jérémie Beyou on Charal (+2.5) and Kévin Escoffier on PRB (+3.9) in fourth place.

At a position about 45 miles south of the Fastnet Rock on starboard tack, Ruyant was pushing his foiler ahead at 14 knots with about 800 miles to go to reach the IOC UNESCO waypoint off the southwest tip of Iceland.

Beyou spoke about a tough couple of days aboard his super-powerful monohull which had been crashing and smashing her way to windward in big seas which have made it difficult for the Volvo Ocean Race winner to sleep or eat or even check over the boat.

"I haven't had much time to eat, sleep or take care of myself," he said. "I would need to be able to stand up in the boat in order to do that. The sea must calm down and it will be more favourable later in the day. We did a lot of manoeuvering during the night off the Irish coast when the idea was to get a flatter sea and a little less wind by getting in close."

Beyou has been sailing with two reefs in his mainsail and the J3 and he has been eyeing the challenging weather conditions that he and his rivals will have to deal with over the next few days. "We wonder how we will get to the IOC-UNESCO buoy and how we will get back," he joked. "I don't know if I'm going back to the coast or not. The weather is not entirely clear in my opinion."

As Beyou indicated, the leaders should experience a moderation in conditions during the day today as the wind backs to a more westerly direction and then backs again by midnight. The weather picture is complicated by a small area of low pressure forming to the southwest of the fleet that could produce strong downwind conditions for a while but then see the fleet having to cross a large area of light winds off the west coast of Scotland.

Behind the leading group is a competitive second rank of boats lead by Boris Herrmann on SeaExplorer-YC de Monaco who is 13 miles off the lead. He is just three miles ahead of Isabelle Joschke on MACSF, with Britain's Sam Davies another four miles behind on Initiatives-Coeur. Fifteen miles to leeward of that group is the Japanese sailor Kojiro Shiraishi on DMG MORI Global One who is nearly 30 miles behind Ruyant but has been steadily climbing through the fleet.

Behind them, the third group of boats is lead by Yannick Bestaven on Maître Coq (+31.7) followed by the top non-foiler in the fleet, Clarisse Crémer on Banque Populaire X (+32) and Fabrice Amadeo on Newrest-Art et Fenêtres (+47). Armel Tripon, meanwhile, who was the first skipper to tack onto starboard yesterday afternoon, is now holding 14th position on L'Occitane en Provence (+63).

The last 24 hours have seen a second boat return to port with Damien Seguin following the earlier example of Sébastien Simon (ARKÉA PAPREC) deciding to head for Port-La Forêt on board Groupe APICIL.

Seguin discovered that his alternator mounting had completely sheered off in the upwind conditions that were battering his boat and realised he would not have enough power to run his onboard systems without being able to use the engine.

"I quickly looked at what I could do and realised that unfortunately I couldn't fix it at all," said Seguin who has never retired from a professional race before. "It seemed very difficult to continue like this upwind without being able to re-charge the batteries on board, so I made the decision with the team to return to Port-La-Forêt," he added.

Seguin was just south of Brest this morning on his way home but had not retired from the race.

Find out more at www.imoca.org/en/races/imoca-globe-series/vendee-arctique-les-sables-d-olonne

Related Articles

Lunven and Soudée on the dockside in Lorient
Preparing for a classic north Atlantic passage in the Transat CIC Once again La Base marina in Lorient, Brittany – the main home of the IMOCA fleet – is a hive of activity as 33 boats and their skippers prepare for the daunting challenge of the North Atlantic alone. Posted today at 1:38 pm
The Transat CIC: Who are the favourites?
Charlie Dalin (MACIF Santé Prévoyance) makes his comeback The start gun of the 15th edition of The Transat CIC will sound on Sunday sending a fleet of 48 skippers - 33 IMOCAs, 13 Class 40s and two vintage yachts - off on the complex, cold and mainly upwind passage across the Atlantic. Posted today at 7:44 am
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
Rookie Swiss skipper set for Transat CIC Race
Oliver Heer ready to collect the miles ahead of the Vendée Globe Oliver Heer, 35, the ambitious Swiss offshore sailor is in Lorient with his IMOCA 60, ready to compete in his first Transat CIC. Posted on 24 Apr
The Ocean Race will return to Genova
A key stopover for The Ocean Race Europe in 2025 The Italian city of Genova and The Ocean Race will extend their close relationship with The Ocean Race Europe bringing a fleet of foiling IMOCA race boats to the Mediterranean port in the late summer of 2025. 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 Preview
A new beginning for Bellion and a return to solo racing for Pedote For Éric Bellion The Transat CIC, which starts from Lorient bound for New York on Sunday, is a huge moment in his journey to this year's Vendée Globe. 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
IMOCA introduces an impact reduction rule
The initiative marks a historic shift in the maritime industry IMOCA establishes pioneering impact reduction rule, leading sustainability in sailing by requiring a 15% reduction in boat's construction emissions between 2025 and 2028. Posted on 20 Apr
Shawyer qualifies for the New York to Vendée Race
The Canadian skipper is preparing to line up with 30 fellow IMOCAs Scott Shawyer, the Canadian skipper of the IMOCA Be Water Positive, will be competing in the prestigious single-handed transatlantic race, the New York Vendée, which starts on 29 May 2024. Posted on 19 Apr
Armstrong 728x90 - A-Wing XPS - BOTTOMC-Tech 2020 Battens 2 728x90 BOTTOMRooster 2023 - Aquafleece Robe - FOOTER