Please select your home edition
Edition
Selden 2020 - LEADERBOARD

Yann Eliès: Neuschäfer will be our new heroine in solo ocean racing

by Ed Gorman / IMOCA Globe Series 26 Apr 2023 06:07 PDT
Kirsten Neuschäfer - Golden Globe Race © Kirsten Neuschäfer / GGR2022

When you look at the history of the IMOCA Class, you can see the link with the Golden Globe, the retro race that recreates the first non-stop, solo round-the-world race of 1968-'69 that featured legends like Bernard Moitessier and Robin Knox-Johnston.

That's when solo global racing began in the modern era, at an average speed for most of less than four knots, with sailors spending more than 300 days at sea. In that context, it's hard to believe what modern state-of-the-art foiling IMOCAs can now do, with today's skippers expecting to rip around the planet in 75 days or less.

During this winter, the old way has been celebrated with the current Golden Globe Race - the second recreation of the 1968 classic - in which boats entered had to be built before 1988, had to be no longer than 36ft and on which all electronic navigation aids are banned.

And it looks as though it will be the 40-year-old South African sailor Kirsten Neuschäfer, on board her Cape George 36, Minnehaha, who is going to complete an historic triumph, just ahead of the Indian sailor Abhilash Tomy, sailing a Rustler 36.

If Neuschäfer does win - probably on Friday when she is expected to reach Les Sables d'Olonne - she will become the first woman to win a solo round-the-world yacht race, after sailing more than 29,000 miles during more than seven months at sea. Not only will she have achieved something no woman has ever managed to do before, but she will have done so during a voyage in which she rescued another competitor whose boat sank in the Southern Ocean.

Among the IMOCA family of skippers, sailors, shore crews and designers, many have been checking their trackers since this contest started back in September, fascinated by its slow-motion war of attrition, as 16 starters gradually got whittled down to just three remaining competitors.

Yann Eliès has been one of them and when you talk to him about it, you realise that, like other IMOCA skippers, he views the Golden Globe not as an amateur event of no relevance to his own version of the sport, but another kind of sailing, albeit at the extreme end of the spectrum when compared with the modern Vendée Globe.

Elies has been particularly impressed by Neuschäfer, as he told the Class this week. "I think it's a good thing that she is winning this race," said the 49-year-old three-time Figaro winner. "This is happening at the best moment for us that a woman is winning a race around the world. Since Ellen MacArthur, we have needed another female hero like that - we have Sam Davies, we have Clarisse (Crémer) too - but they are not winning."

Eliès, who is currently part of the sailing squad on Team Malizia in The Ocean Race, and will rejoin that crew for Leg 5 from Newport to Aarhus, says Neuschäfer clearly loves to test herself and has a special affinity for her boat and for sailing alone, qualities evident in many IMOCA skippers.

"I don't know her very well, but she looks like she loves adventure with a capital A," he said. "And not only sailing but walking and cycling too. Adventure is her life. In the Golden Globe you can't just sail as part of a race, you need something inside you, to motivate you, and it is important to understand that before you do this race and she has always looked happy on board.

"And probably for racing on that sort of boat," Eliès added, "you have to sail smoothly because you just have a windvane autopilot on board. On that size of boat, with a long keel, if you push too hard, you will probably break the windvane, like (French entrant and pre-start favourite) Damien Guillou and some of the other guys who had problems with this. Probably Kirsten understands that smooth rhythm," added Eliès, who finished fifth in the 2016-17 Vendée Globe.

Eliès sailed on Leg 2 of The Ocean Race before sitting out the marathon Leg 3 through the Southern Ocean, which Team Malizia won in fine style. He does not mind admitting that he was happy enough to miss racing 12,750 miles through the Big South.

"I was a little bit afraid of the third leg because it was a long one," he said laughing. "But if I was to do that leg, I would have preferred to do it on Team Malizia because it is like a bus, a big bus. It is very comfortable. And I would not want to do it on Biotherm (skippered by Paul Meilhat), which is the most uncomfortable IMOCA I have ever seen!"

Despite her success on Leg 3, Eliès thinks it will be a tall order for Team Malizia to win the race overall. "The boat is designed for the South and for The Ocean Race, with lots of space for bunks and the galley and so on, and I am happy for Boris (Herrmann, skipper) because he imagined the boat for that. But I am a little bit afraid that it is not enough to win a race, or the Vendée Globe, because the voyage is not just through the southern areas of the world, but the Atlantic, north and south too. I think they have a lot to do to make the boat lighter," said Eliès.

In between his duties with Team Malizia, Eliès is working with Yoann Richomme on one of the most hotly-awaited IMOCA programmes behind the new Antoine Koch/Finot Conq-designed Paprec Arkéa. Eliès will sail with Richomme on the new flying machine in all the double-handed races in this year's IMOCA Globe Series, starting with next month's Guyader Bermudes 1000 which sets sail from Brest on May 7th.

"It's very exciting to try this new boat and exciting to do the Guyader Bermudes 1000 Race too," said Eliès. "It looks good. It is hard to be sure actually because we haven't sailed alongside another boat. But my feeling is that the boat is good - sometimes we hit nearly 30 knots and the overall speed looks good, so we are excited to see that in a few days on the Guyader Bermudes 1000 Race."

It seems the Paprec Arkéa skipper is delighted too. "Yeah, Yoann is happy - we have not had big issues on board - just the normal teething problems. It looks and sails pretty much how Antoine imagined the boat, so that is a good point - when a boat performs on its first sails, how the designers intended it to."

Related Articles

The Ocean Race Europe 2025: The summer of racing
Biotherm delivered a masterclass - Paprec Arkéa a lesson in consistency This Saturday, after a fiercely contested final race, the second edition of The Ocean Race Europe came to a close. It was a seven-week adventure from Germany to Montenegro, full of twists and turns, resilience, and raw emotion. Posted on 21 Sep
Time to celebrate… and then?
Paul Meilhat and the Biotherm team win The Ocean Race Europe And that's what you call finishing in style! Paul Meilhat, Amélie Grassi, Benjamin Ferré and Carlos Manera Pascual won the last coastal course contested this Saturday in Kotor Bay in Montenegro. Posted on 21 Sep
Another win for MACIF Santé Prévoyance
Sam Goodchild and Loïs Berrehar victorious in Défi Azimut Lorient Agglomération The British skipper Sam Goodchild, who was a key part of the crew on Biotherm that won The Ocean Race Europe, followed up with victory in the two-handed Défi Azimut - Lorient Agglomération 48 Hours race today. Posted on 20 Sep
Team Malizia ends on a high
Boris Herrmann's team fourth in The Ocean Race Europe After five legs, over 4,500 nautical miles, and six weeks of intense offshore racing, The Ocean Race Europe 2025 concluded today in Boka Bay, Montenegro. Team Malizia delivered a strong performance, climbing the overall leaderboard to finish fourth. Posted on 20 Sep
A podium finish for Holcim-PRB
Team showed drive, consistent performance and commitment in The Ocean Race Europe After six weeks of racing, Holcim-PRB sailed its final race of The Ocean Race Europe 2025 today in Montenegro. With a third-place finish in the coastal race in Boka Bay, the Swiss boat secured a spot on the podium, claiming the bronze medal. Posted on 20 Sep
15th Défi Azimut - Acceleration and extension
Sleep? Dream on! The numerous videos posted by the OBRs (On-Board Reporters) on the Défi Azimut Lorient Agglomération server this morning testify to the infinite patience and the depth of talent required by the crews to make the Occidentale de Sein. Posted on 20 Sep
Biotherm takes the win
Spectacular Coastal Race in Boka Bay marks the end of The Ocean Race Europe The Boka Bay Coastal Race was a perfect reflection of this edition of The Ocean Race Europe: spectacular. And as they did over and over again during the past six weeks, it was Paul Meilhat's Biotherm who secured victory. Posted on 20 Sep
37 days to the Transat Café L'or
72 boat fleet includes 18 female skippers On Sunday, October 26, at 2pm local time the 72 boats registered for the 17th edition of the TRANSAT CAFÉ L'OR Le Havre Normandie will set sail on the most famous double-handed transatlantic race. Posted on 19 Sep
Uncertainty reigns across Biscay in Défi Azimut
A cracking start for Charal, leading the fleet off the Glénans archipelago Doubt lingers this Thursday regarding the intentions of the wind gods off the coast of Lorient, Brittany. Will the fleet have enough breeze to fill their sails throughout the rectangular course concocted by Race Management? Posted on 19 Sep
The Ocean Race Europe is heading towards its final
All to play for in the final weekend of racing in Boka Bay, Montenegro The Ocean Race Europe 2025 is heading towards its Finale in Boka Bay, Montenegro. With the last points still in play, the final coastal race on Saturday will decide the remaining positions. Posted on 19 Sep
Doyle_SailWorld_728X90px_SY BOTTOMNorth Sails Loft 57 PodcastMcDYachts_Pyewacket-for-Sale_1456x180 BOTTOM