Please select your home edition
Edition
ETNZ-STORE-728X90 one B TOP

IMOCA mixed crews in the Transat Jacques Vabre

by Ed Gorman / IMOCA Globe Series 3 Nov 2021 11:50 PDT 7 November 2021
11th Hour Racing Team © Martin Keruzoré / 11th Hour Racing Team

The IMOCA Class has always welcomed male and female competitors, whether it be in the single-handed classics like the Vendée Globe and the Route du Rhum or double-handed races like the upcoming Transat Jacques Vabre.

Last year's Vendée Globe saw a record six female skippers on the start line and this Transat Jacques Vabre also features a strong contingent of top class female sailors. They are part of a record number of mixed male and female crews in the race, with no less than five of these pairings in the IMOCA division.

The tradition of mixed crews in the Transat Jacques Vabre goes all the way back to 1999 when Catherine Chabaud and Luc Bartissol took part, alongside Ellen MacArthur and Yves Parlier. In the years since, IMOCA has consistently demonstrated that men and women can compete at the very top in short-handed offshore racing on an equal footing.

In this race the mixed crews are led by podium contenders Simon Fisher and Justine Mettraux on 11th Hour Racing Alaka'i. Alongside them on the start line will be Sam Davies and Nicolas Lunven on Initiatives Coeur, Isabelle Joschke and Fabien Delahaye on MACSF, Manuel Cousin and Alexia Barrier on Groupe SÉTIN-4MyPlanet and Louis Duc and Marie Tabarly on Kostum-Lantana Paysage.

The Class caught up with 41-year-old French sailor Barrier who is a fervent advocate of mixed crews at this level. The Vendée Globe veteran from Antibes, who is often to be seen on the dockside with her trusty labrador Nikka by her side (the dog has stayed in Antibes this time), says mixed crews are a "cool" option in ocean racing.

"That's one reason why I like offshore racing because when you are a woman, you can compete with men and you can be equal with the men," she said. "For me, it's just normal to be around men in a racing environment and playing the same game as them and having the same chance to win."

Barrier, who is hunting for a title sponsor to help her take part in the Vendée Globe in a foiling IMOCA in 2024, believes the Class is sending a powerful message. "I think it is normal to race together and it should be like that everywhere," she explained. "In society today we have many challenges for women and I think this is a good example not only for sport and sailing, but for society globally as a way of promoting equality between the genders."

"So I am really proud to be maybe an example for some young girls or women who would like to achieve something," she continued, "and maybe they think it is only for men, but when they see us - or sailors like Sam (Davies), Isa (Joschke) or Miranda (Merron) - they can see that it's possible."

Justine Mettraux is another skipper whose career has demonstrated the unique opportunities that sailing offers in the way that it is able to combine the skills of male and female athletes at elite level. Having been brought up racing on Lake Léman at the Racing Training Centre in Geneva, Mettraux has been used to sailing in mixed crews all her life.

"In my career I have sailed more in a mixed configuration than with women only because that is how we learned at the training centre in Geneva," she said. "We always had mixed teams there and it is an organisation that has existed for 40 years and they always have females on board. So I come from this background."

A member of The Ocean Race-winning Dongfeng Race Team, Mettraux believes the gender of sailors is not important. "To me, it is not whether you are male or female that matters, but whether you're a good sailor or not," she explained. "And you need the same skills to make the boat go fast and in the right direction. It's nice to see that a mixed team can perform well and that that could happen in other sports as well - there could be more incentives to mix genders in different teams in different sports."

On board Groupe SÉTIN-4myplanet, Barrier says the workload is shared equally between her and Cousin. "We both do the physical tasks," she said. "We work together when the manoeuvres are coming and when it's hard - we have to be together for this kind of thing because it's like that when you are racing with two people on board - you do all the physical things together."

Barrier added that she probably focuses more on the performance aspects of the boat, the data and speed, while Cousin takes care of any maintenance issues and technical faults that arise. "So we divide that part, but not the physical tasks," said the Groupe SÉTIN-4myplanet co-skipper, who says her goal is to win the "daggerboard race" in this Transat Jacques Vabre and put some foilers behind them too."

On 11th Hour Racing Alaka'i, Mettraux reckons she sometimes does a bit more of the heavy lifting than Fisher - known to his friends as SiFi.

"We try to share the effort and, in fact, I sometimes do more of the physical stuff like on the bow - but for sure we work the cockpit grinder together. Sometimes SiFi does the stacking a bit more than me but we try to divide it well because there is so much to do and it's really physical, so we try to share the effort."

Mettraux says she and Fisher have developed into a strong team, something that has been born out in their results, with a podium finish in both the Rolex Fastnet Race (third) and the Défi Azimut 48 Hours (second).

"It's been really nice for me, really easy," she said. "I think we have found a way to work together and done so really quickly, so it's been all good. SiFi is a really good sailor, a really good navigator and he's good at pushing the boat and finding a good set-up, so it's great to sail with him."

The key to the success on board Alaka'i is that Fisher and Mettraux are cool customers on the same wavelength.

"I think we are quite similar," summarised Mettraux. "Quite quiet and calm people and most of the time we think the same things at the same time about what to do for the boat and so on, so it's nice."

It will be fascinating to see whether this pairing can continue their stellar performances from earlier this year and become only the third male-female partnership in the Transat Jacques Vabre in the IMOCA Class to finish on the podium (after Chabaud and Bartissol in 1999 and Roland Jourdain and Ellen MacArthur in 2005)... and perhaps even the first to win it.

Related Articles

No major fears for Sunday's Transat CIC start
There will be no initial gales to contend with, rather a relatively light winds start As all of the Transat CIC skippers convened this morning at Lorient's La Base for the main briefing before Sunday's start of the 3,500 miles solo race across the North Atlantic to New York, ideas about the weather are the main topic of discussion. Posted on 25 Apr
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 on 25 Apr
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 on 25 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
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
Vaikobi 2024 FOOTERJ Composites J/99Rooster 2023 - Aquafleece - FOOTER