Please select your home edition
Edition
Selden 2020 - LEADERBOARD

LinkedOut, Charal and APIVIA battle it out just north of Madeira in the Transat Jacques Vabre

by Ed Gorman / IMOCA 12 Nov 2021 15:44 PST 12 November 2021
Thomas Ruyant and Morgan Lagravière on board LinkedOut in the Transat Jacques Vabre © LinkedOut

With five days of racing completed in the 15th edition of the Transat Jacques Vabre, the now 20-strong IMOCA fleet is making good progress to the south, led by the trio of LinkedOut, Charal and APIVIA.

After the very slow early phases off the Brittany coast, the pace has quickened as the leaders rounded Cape Finisterre and then swept down the Portuguese coast, running before fresh northerly/northeasterly winds.

This morning the leader, LinkedOut co-skippered by Thomas Ruyant and Morgan Lagravière, is just 75 nautical miles north of Madeira, surfing downwind at about 12 knots in a moderate north-northeasterly breeze and with a mere 4,485 miles still to sail to the finish at Martinique.

Behind the blue and white IMOCA, the fleet is spread out over 500 miles on a northeast-southwest axis with the backmarker, EBAC, skippered by Antoine Cornic and Jean-Charles Luro, currently about 130 miles southwest of Cape Finisterre.

While the pace has quickened, the fleet has lost a second boat to a dismasting in the last couple of days with Simon Fisher and Justine Mettraux on 11th Hour Racing Team-Alaka'i having to retire into La Coruna on the northwest corner of Spain. The loss of their rig - a bitter blow after a strong start to the race - followed the earlier dismasting of Louis Burton's Bureau Vallée.

This has already been a fascinating race as the fleet tackled a lottery of light airs and then took off, a notable early casualty being Nicolas Troussel and Sébastien Josse on CORUM L'Épargne who became marooned offshore and are now back in 11th place, nearly 230 miles behind the leader.

Up at the front, the next big decision is what to do about the Canaries after the leaders pass to windward of Madeira. Six hundred miles to the south of LinkedOut, the leading Ocean Fifty trimaran - Koesio skippered by Erwan Le Roux and Xavier Macaire and benefitting from onshore routing - is heading through the islands, east of Tenerife, while the chasing group seems to be keeping to the west.

Overall the gameplan for navigators is all about staying in the breeze which at the moment means keeping more to the east side of the course but trying hard not to fall into light patches. Much further down the track will come the decisive moment on when to start heading further west as the co-skippers target their crossing point of the Doldrums.

The battle at the front was being led for much of the last few days by Charlie Dalin and Paul Meilhat on APIVIA. But a move to the east and a couple of gybes back has seen them surrender the initiative to Ruyant and Lagravière and then also being overtaken by Jérémie Beyou and Christopher Pratt on Charal. The three front-running crews are within less than 20 miles of each other and it's game-on between them as they look to stamp their authority on this race.

Beyou is relishing being back on the racecourse in the much-modified Charal and said, in a message from the boat today, that he and his co-skipper Pratt are working hard to stay in the breeze. "We are trying to stay in the wind zone, to progress downwind," he said. "The strength of the wind is quite variable and remains quite random. It's kind of up to each of us to make fast progress.

You have to manoeuvre a lot, make a lot of adjustments and change sails. It's easier on port tack because of the direction of the waves. On starboard, the boat is much more complicated to move forward, so you really have to be on top of it, and then there are a lot of gybes, so it's a little bit of a sport each time."

Beyou was a little coy about his plans as the recourse opens up in front of Charal with the rock fortress of Madeira and its wind shadow to deal with, then the Canaries and then the Cape Verde Islands. "The strategy is to move south and we are really playing the short-term," he explained. "We have an idea of the long-term strategy, but we'll keep that to ourselves. Let's say that all the options are open; we're starting to have a precise idea and yes, we're looking at the general situation and looking at the situation in the Doldrums. We can see that it's very tight and that there's a lot of uncertainty that will remain for a long time."

In a message from on board, the irrepressible Davies said she and Lunven were frustrated to lose a few miles in an unforecasted calm patch late on Thursday. "As the night fell the wind filled back in, more and more, until we had a bit too much for our spinnaker," she reported. "As we need that sail for a lot of the race, we chose not to take any risks and so we changed to the A3 (gennaker) and at the same time it was time to gybe to head south.?

"So now we are sending it fast," she added, "there's water cascading down the decks of Initiatives-Coeur and we are happy 'hooning' along under a starry night. We're in a sandwich between Charal (now APIVIA) and 11th Hour 2 (Malama), so we're not sure to be able to hold their pace but we're trying our best."

Related Articles

Clarisse Crémer resumes The Transat CIC
After a 5-day technical stopover in Horta After discovering a crack of over 4.20 meters on her boat during the race, Clarisse had to make a technical stopover in Horta for repairs last Monday. Posted today at 10:38 am
Ambrogio Beccaria wins The Transat CIC in Class40
Crossing the line of the historic race at 03:47:55 hrs this morning Italy's Ambrogio Beccaria on his all Italian designed and built Musa 40 Alla Grande Pirelli added the hugely prestigious Transat CIC Class 40 title to his steadily growing collection of solo and short handed ocean racing honours this morning. Posted today at 8:19 am
The Transat CIC Update
Ambrogio Beccaria has Class 40 finish line and victory 'in sight' With less than 140 miles to go to the finish line of the Transat CIC solo race across the North Atlantic from Lorient to New York Italy's Ambrogio Beccaria appears to have dealt with the last weather hurdle earlier today. Posted on 9 May
Clarisse Crémer hoping to restart Transat CIC soon
After discovery of major damage on her IMOCA L'Occitane en Provence After a week of uncertainty following the discovery of major damage on her boat during The Transat CIC race onboard the IMOCA L'Occitane en Provence, Clarisse Crémer hopes to soon be able to continue her race towards New York. Posted on 9 May
Oliver Heer's battle with The Transat CIC
Swiss sailor faces several more days at sea as he continues to fight through a series of setbacks Swiss-German solo sailor, Oliver Heer, is facing a gruelling personal battle in the Transat CIC race, a notoriously difficult solo transatlantic crossing. Posted on 9 May
Nicolas Lunven finishes The Transat CIC
Ensuring his qualification for the Vendée Globe It was at 22:25 French time, 16:25 New York time when Holcim-PRB pointed its bow in front of Liberty Island in the United States. Posted on 8 May
Transat CIC: Le Turquais top daggerboard finisher
Half the IMOCA fleet in now in New York The top 13 finishers - that is to say half the IMOCA class on the Transat CIC solo race across the North Atlantic - are now either in New York or en route from the finish line which is 110 miles offshore. Posted on 8 May
Richomme pinching himself after Transat CIC win
Completing the race and gliding past the Statue of Liberty after the finish Many of the IMOCA skippers in The Transat CIC have been dreaming about completing the race and gliding past the Statue of Liberty after the finish, and on Tuesday race winner Yoann Richomme did exactly that. Posted on 8 May
Transat CIC IMOCA podium arrive in New York
Finishers dock in the heart of the Big Apple Freezing fog banks, a light winds head scratcher at 150 miles from the finish, deciphering the vagaries of the Gulf Stream....all these final challenges, and more, were all but forgotten when The Transat CIC IMOCAs enjoyed a sunny arrival in New York. Posted on 7 May
Sam Davies third in The Transat CIC
British sailor completes an international IMOCA podium in the race An exhausted but delighted Sam Davies sailed her Initiatives Coeur across the finish line of the Transat CIC at 20:11:37hrs local time NYC (00:11:37 hrs UTC) to take a well earned third place on the legendary solo race across the North Atlantic. Posted on 7 May
Selden 2020 - FOOTERHyde Sails 2022 One Design FOOTER2024 fill-in (bottom)