Please select your home edition
Edition
Maritimo M600

52nd La Solitaire du Figaro Stage 4 Day 3: Leader Delpech goes solo, Dolan and Macaire hold firm

by Andi Robertson 14 Sep 2021 10:54 PDT 14 September 2021

French rookie Jules Delpech (ORCOM) is the breakaway leader of the fourth stage of the 52nd La Solitaire du Figaro, taking a lone, solo route more than 25 miles to the east of the main body of the fleet as they negotiate the tricky descent of the Celtic Sea after rounding the mythical Fastnet rock in the small hours of this morning.

It was, appropriately, the race's only Irish skipper Tom Dolan (Smurfit Kappa-Kingspan) who narrowly led around the iconic light as its welcome beam cut through a typically wet, inky darkness at 0240hrs (CET) this morning. He was only four minutes up on second placed Xavier Macaire (Groupe SNEF) but the boost to Dolan's morale would have been significant.

But while Dolan and Macaire left the lighthouse and started off upwind on the 400 nautical miles leg back to Saint Nazaire, the pursuing group were able to stay west and progressively pick up the first of the new NW'ly breeze. Meantime Delpech went east early and, as much, benefits from his position closest to the direct, theoretical rhumb line passing close to Land's End. He has been two knots slower in less wind than his nearest rivals.

On his 29th birthday the overall General Classification leader Pierre Quiroga (Skipper Macif 2019) has been keeping his powder dry as much as possible, playing the percentages with the main peloton which has still been very slightly quicker than Macaire and Dolan, second and third respectively, holding four or five miles of theoretical advantage over Quiroga who is fourth this evening.

He joked earlier today, "What do I want for for my birthday? You'll have your own ideas I'm sure! But I am going to try and hang in here like a big guy, but this last stage is not easy."

Racing under big spinnakers in light breezes and sloppy, confused seas - caused by the conflicting influence of a variety of different weather systems - the balance is very fine, between sailing more miles in the west but getting more wind pressure or sailing the more direct route favoured by Dolan and Macaire who re-oriented themselves during this morning to keep a loose check on their adversaries to their right.

Fabien Delahaye, in fifth and one of the more westerly skippers, explained this afternoon,

"It was a very damp, unpleasant night but now I am downwind under spinnaker in the sun, I am drying my clothes and I have eaten. This route is the lesser of many evils even if it is not optimal. I was abeam of Gildas Mahé (Breizh Cola) and now he is five miles behind now. There is for sure more wind pressure in the west. I went round the Fastnet with TeamWork (Nils Palmieri) and he's stuck next to me. Since we came through the front, we have been moving along the edge of the ridge and the wind is stable. The pilot steers well, I have taken a few naps. I take advantage of it for the moment, because I do not know how long it will stay that way. There is a lumpy, crossed swell which is getting bigger and bigger. It comes from the cyclone that passed across the Atlantic and it's giving us this westerly swell off that strong wind. These waves comes from there which is weird because it's not very windy. Right from the start we have been supposed to have had less wind all the time. And in fact it's all happened quicker everywhere. We still have another 24 hours to see what happens in this slightly variable north-west wind between north and west. It will be more disturbed when approaching the French coast."

Latest predictions have the first finishers crossing the line between Thursday evening and early Friday morning.

The race returns back to the Loire-Atlantique

After three weeks on the road the race village of La Solitaire du Figaro returns to Saint Nazaire, to the maritime coasts of the of Loire-Atlantique who are a major partner of the event.

The race village opens its doors tomorrow Wednesday near the Saint Nazaire submarine base. Among the sponsors booths and exhibitions are Suzuki marine et automobile, 727 Sailbags - Official Store, Champagne Charles Collin, Saint-Nazaire offshore wind farm or the Brasserie de Bretagne.

Sailing, the future of maritime transport.

Ocean racing is a particularly innovative technological world. Flying foiling boats, rigid wing sails, canting masts, these technologies are now finding applications in the world of maritime transport.

Chantiers de l'Atlantique in Saint Nazaire have been working for several years on hybrid propulsion solutions and have just presented Solid Sail, a rigid sail largely inspired by ocean racing. Composed of composite panels, foldable, this sail, which can exceed 1,000m", will be able to propel the future cruise liners of Chantiers de l'Atlantique (Silenseas project). The panels will be linked to each other by dyneema strips and the sail will be hoisted by electric winches.

A first prototype of this innovative rig (38 meters of air draft and 550m" of sails) is being installed on the site of the build yard at the mouth of the Loire, to be tested there. The first seagoing units could see the light of day by 2025.

www.lasolitaire.com/en

Related Articles

A true attraction for non-French skippers
Hard work, training, and perseverance in the 56th La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec The excellence of the French solo racing pathway is increasingly attracting non-French skippers who want to come, learn, and train in a discipline that, for now, remains very French. Posted on 25 Sep
Tom Dolan retires from Solitaire du Figaro
Flying Irishman injured his arm just one hour into the opening stage Reigning Solitaire du Figaro Paprec champion Tom Dolan confirmed this morning that he will withdraw from the third and final leg of the solo offshore race due to an injury sustained early in Leg One. Posted on 21 Sep
Tom Dolan at Solitaire du Figaro Leg 2 Day 4
For the Irish skipper there's good news and bad news Day four of leg two started in light airs for most of the fleet. The leading bunch have passed Cape Finisterre, funneling through a mandatory checkpoint gate added by the race committee, and are closing in Vigo, around 40 miles to the south east. Posted on 19 Sep
Dolan makes western gamble in Solitaire du Figaro
Currently 56 nautical miles (103km) behind the leader Offshore racing is about making educated guesses. You read the forecast, make your plan and sail to it. Posted on 18 Sep
56th La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec Leg 2 day 3
Advantage to the Southerners On this second leg of La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec 2025, between the Bay of Morlaix and Vigo in Spain, two options have taken shape over the past hours. Posted on 17 Sep
Dolan charges on in La Solitaire du Figaro Leg 2
The Kingspan skipper led a group that tacked out west around sunset As the second morning of Leg Two dawns, it's all about positioning out in the Bay of Biscay for the fleet of La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec. Posted on 17 Sep
Dolan at front of the pack in Solitaire du Figaro
The fleet are now crossing the Bay of Biscay in Leg 2 Irish sailor Tom Dolan is on the leading edge of the pack in the second leg of the Solitaire du Figaro Paprec, with 385 miles (~710 kilometres) remaining in the leg that will finish in Vigo, in northern Spain. Posted on 16 Sep
56th La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec Leg 2 start
After a 30-hour delay, the 34 sailors were finally able to head out to sea After a 30-hour delay, the 34 sailors competing in La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec 2025 were finally able to head out to sea and face the elements. At 7 p.m. this Monday, September 15, the starting gun was fired. Posted on 15 Sep
Dolan continues Figaro campaign despite injury
Leg 2 of the Solitaire du Figaro is set to start on Monday evening, after a 24-hour delay Irish Offshore Sailor Tom Dolan starts Leg 2 of the Solitaire du Figaro on Monday evening, after a 24-hour delay due to extreme winds. The 900km leg, delayed to allow dangerous sea conditions to ease, takes the fleet across the Bay of Biscay to Vigo. Posted on 15 Sep
La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec Leg 2 start tomorrow
After 486 miles of a modified course, the Spanish coast will come into sight On Monday, September 15 at 2.45pm, the 34 solo skippers will set course southwards towards the port of Vigo, Spain. A leg already shaping up to be demanding, with a depression forcing the race committee to postpone the start by 24 hours. Posted on 14 Sep
Armstrong 728x90 - HA Foil Range - BOTTOMSea Sure 2025Palm Beach Motor Yachts