Please select your home edition
Edition
Armstrong 728x90 - HA Foil Range - TOP

Beyou's red and black flying machine is proving a potent weapon on its first transatlantic race

by Ed Gorman / IMOCA Globe Series 20 Nov 2022 03:08 PST
Charal 2 © Eloi Stichelbaut / polaRYSE / Charal Sailing Team

It's a brand new boat, a new design with a revolutionary new rudder configuration taking part in its first transoceanic race and it has been consistently in the podium places.

This Route du Rhum-Destination Guadeloupe has seen an impressive performance by Jérémie Beyou on his Sam Manuard-designed Charal 2, with its inverted V-shape rudder configuration and the Manuard signature scow bow.

In the history of the Class very few boats have been designed after a Vendée Globe, then been built and launched and then gone on to complete the Route du Rhum. So Beyou is on his way to a considerable achievement and so far everything has been going like clockwork.

The 46-year-old Breton skipper from Finistère had to retire from the last Route du Rhum on the VPLP-designed Charal 1 because of technical issues. He then saw his dreams of winning the Vendée Globe dashed, after he had to return to the start for repairs, and he eventually finished 13th. As a result, this is a massively important race for Beyou.

Currently in third place, and 44 nautical miles behind new leader Thomas Ruyant on LinkedOut and 32 miles behind Charlie Dalin on APIVIA, Beyou is fighting hard to stay in touch in the trade winds and give himself a chance of moving up the podium places in the final stages.

In a report from on board yesterday he described tricky unstable downwind conditions with squalls that can lead to huge losses. "It can happen and it can happen again, so we are not safe from anything," he said. "You have to keep pushing and believe in yourself."

Beyou is trying to ensure that he gets to Pointe-à-Pitre in one piece. "Right now, the wind is getting stronger and I'm paying attention to the boat because the idea is to finish the race," he explained. "With a new boat, being here is already not bad. We shouldn't ruin everything by doing something stupid, by pushing too much on the boat or by adjusting the mast badly...I've been on the podium since the beginning of the race, so I'd be upset if I wasn't there at the end."

In fact Beyou's team say their skipper finds it almost impossible not to push himself and his boat to the limits, so competitive a sailor is the three-time Figaro winner. "Jérémie doesn't know the word 'conservative,'" said the Charal technical director Pierre-François Dargnies. "That's why we had to prepare a very strong boat for him because we know he can't manage a boat conservatively - he always wants to win a race. Even when I say 'this is the first race, we have to finish and we need experience on board,' he says 'yes, but I will push' because every race is important to him."

Dargnies says the team has been pleased with the new boat's upwind performance in the tough early stages of this race. "We know that upwind it is impossible to match APIVIA, because of the rules and the new foil rules. We know that it was impossible. The objective is to be faster than the other new boats and we saw that. We know that we can do better...but today we are really happy with the performance upwind," he said.

Downwind it is more of a work in progress with the boat improving all the time as Beyou tries out different configurations and set-ups as Charal 2 flies towards Guadeloupe. However, the unique rudder design - in an inverted 'V' configuration - is on its way to passing another one of its first big tests and the team is convinced that it is more efficient than the more conventional arrangement on Charal 1.

"The rudder design is very new and we play with the system carefully because we don't want to break it," said Dargnies. "We are happy because the system is OK - it is operating at 100% without problems - and we are absolutely convinced that the boat trim is more stable than on Charal 1, but it is not perfect. We have to work on it, but we are happy because the system works and we know that on the return transat, with a full crew, we will play with it and try a lot of things and I am sure we can progress a lot with this rudder configuration."

During the build-up to this race the Charal team has been augmented with the arrival of Franck Cammas who has been driving performance improvements with characteristic zeal. Dargnies says Cammas is the perfect addition to a team that needs to move one or two more steps up the podium.

"In the last four years we have had a good project, with a lot of second and third places - with first place too in some small races and in the Vendée Arctique - but we have been missing something to win and I think Franck can show us how to do that," he said. "He pushes the team a lot and he will sail on the transat, coming back from Pointe-à-Pitre to Lorient, when I am sure he will find a lot of improvements."

The other boat in the same category as Charal - a post-Vendée Globe new design and build - is Boris Herrmann's VPLP-designed Malizia SeaExplorer. The German skipper is now down in 25th position, nearly 730 miles off the lead, and is no longer in race mode. Herrmann has discovered a structural problem with the starboard foil casing and is content to nurse his boat to the finish, saying he is glad he has discovered this issue now and not later - for example during the up-coming Ocean Race.

As the leaders in the IMOCA fleet reach the final stages of another epic race, the gap between the top-seven - Ruyant, Dalin, Beyou, Kevin Escoffier (Holcim-PRB), Paul Meilhat (Biotherm), Maxime Sorel (V and B-Monbana-Mayenne) and Justine Mettraux (Teamwork) is of the order of 200 miles.

Behind Benjamin Dutreux (8th), however, there have been some big changes with Sébastien Marsset putting together a remarkable performance on the non-foiling 2006 Farr design, Mon Courtier Energie-Cap Agir Ensemble. Over the past couple of days Marsset, with Britain's Pip Hare in tow on Medallia on the northern flank of the fleet, has moved up to an impressive 10th place and is now the leading daggerboard boat in the field. Hare, in 11th position, is hot on his heels despite sailing with a badly torn mainsail.

ETA IMOCA

Thomas Ruyant (LinkedOut)
Monday 21st, 7.20 am (Guadeloupean time) - 12.20 pm (mainland France)

Charlie Dalin (APIVIA)
Monday 21st, 7.50am (Guadeloupean time) - 12.50pm (mainland France)

Related Articles

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
The Ocean Race joins world leaders in Athens
Nature's Baton and the Relay4Nature connect at Our Ocean Conference The Ocean Race joined world leaders at the Our Ocean Conference 2024 at the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center (SNFCC) in Athens, Greece on Tuesday, who had gathered to advance measures to protect and restore ocean health. Posted on 17 Apr
Doyle_SailWorld_728X90px-01 BOTTOMSOUTHERN-SPARS-MISSY-FURLING-BOOMS-728-X-90 BottomJ Composites J/45