Please select your home edition
Edition
Cyclops Marine 2023 November - LEADERBOARD

Lann Ael 3 inaugural IRC Two-Handed European Champion

by Rupert Holmes / RORC 10 Jul 2023 17:52 AEST 2-9 July 2023
Didier Gaudoux's MN35 Lann Ael 3 during the RORC Cowes – Dinard – St Malo Race © Paul Wyeth / RORC

Organised by the Royal Ocean Racing Club in association with l'UNCL Pôle Course du YCF, La Société Nautique de la Trinité sur mer, and Société Nautique de la baie de St Malo.

A second decisive race win in the inaugural IRC Two-Handed European Championship cemented Didier Gaudoux and Gildas Morvan's Lann Ael 3 as overall victor. As in the first race of the event, 350 miles from La Trinité to Cowes, they were in the right place at the right time for the complex weather and navigational transitions in the 150-mile Cowes Dinard St Malo race.

Results IRC Two-Handed European Championship

This event started in fine conditions ahead of a complex area of low pressure with active fronts, plus associated wind shifts that moved across the leaders mid race. From then onwards, much of the course was in lighter headwinds and at times boat speed, even for the leaders, was little more than one knot.

Before that they enjoyed a brisk reach under Code Zero across the English Channel to the Casquets in an easterly airstream. This favoured the newly launched one off Sam Manuard/ Bernard Nivlet designed Lann Ael 3, just as similar conditions, though with stronger breezes, had in the opening race.

"These two races were a very interesting combination for the championship, and of course the target is to win, so we are very happy," says Gaudoux, who explains there were two key elements to his success. "Initially we made a conscious decision to sail as low as possible to avoid the fleet because we started with IRC Class 1, so there were a lot of bigger boats around us.

"The other key point was that the forecast was quite uncertain when we arrived at the Casquets." He says they therefore tried to make the best possible progress with the wind they had at any given time, rather than put faith in GRIB files and routing software.

Then the wind shut off a few miles before the finish. "It was very difficult at the end - the wind was absent," he explains. "We lost a lot of time just before the finish line. It was not comfortable because we knew the boats further back were catching us quite fast and we were really just stopped with no wind."

How did Gaudoux get a new custom built boat up to speed so quickly? "We have done a few races already, including the Armen Race and Spi Ouest," he says. "But we're still learning the boat and, frankly speaking, we still have a lot of questions about which is the right sail and so on." Even though the choice of sail plan was relatively easy for this race, they still got it wrong once. "Fortunately, it was quite obvious and we could change it very quickly.

"Of course we're still in the learning curve," he adds. "There are many, many things we need to learn. We still have to fine tune the electronics and things like that, but we have a good basis."

The Cowes Dinard St Malo Race was nowhere near as French dominated as the opening race in the Two-Handed IRC European Championship. Nick Martin's Sun Fast 3600 Diablo, with Cal Finlayson as co-skipper, was next across the line behind Lann Ael 3 and took third place after IRC time correction. Olympic gold medallist Jonathan McKee and Alyosha Strum-Palerm's Sun Fast 3300 Red Ruby was the third boat to cross the finish.

"It was a challenging race, but we had a lot of fun," says McKee. "It was pretty fast and straightforward out the Solent and across the Channel. But once we got to the Channel Islands, it was lightish airs upwind, with a lot of tide and pretty tactical. That was the most difficult part of the race, especially later that morning, when the wind got quite light and pretty shifty."

Despite what might have been a course that appeared to favour faster boats in its earlier stages, one of the lower rated boats in the fleet, Jean-André Hebel's JPK 1010 Les P'tits Doudous en Duo, was next to finish, less than 200 seconds behind Red Ruby and took second place after IRC time correction. Two other 1010s also posted good results: Jean-François Chériaux Ad Hoc and Ludovic Menahes' Raphael, finishing fourth and fifth after time correction respectively.

A consistent performance near the front of the fleet saw Ad Hoc take second place overall in the Championship, just four points behind Lann Ael 3, with Les P'tits Doudous en Duo third two points further back and just ahead of fourth-placed Raphael. Diablo was top non-French boat in sixth places, two points ahead of Red Ruby in seventh overall.

"The championship was a really challenging combination of the two races, in a really interesting part of the world to sail," adds McKee. "There's a lot of tide and shifting winds, plus the first race was quite long, so that definitely tests your endurance as a double hander.

"It's pretty clear the French have been doing this for a lot longer and are at a bit higher level than the rest of us," he continues. "Their top boats are really well sailed, very, very well prepared, and they know those waters very well, so their success is not surprising. One of the reasons we did these races was to put ourselves against what we consider to be the toughest double-handed sailors in the world. The fleet was fantastic. We had nearly 60 boats, almost all of them in a very small rating range, so they are almost all the same speed and it's a real sailors' race."

Both Lann Ael 3 and Red Ruby are entered in the Rolex Fastnet Race, which this year will see the biggest ever double-handed fleet, with more than 100 boats. As overall winner of the 2017 race in his last boat, sailing with a team of six, Gaudoux must be one of the favourite two-handed entries. However, he is pragmatic about his chances. "I am doing the Fastnet this year with no specific target," he says. "This is the first time I'm competing double handed, so my target is just to sail a clean and safe race, while doing the best we can."

For more information about the Royal Ocean Racing Club: www.rorc.org

Related Articles

RORC De Guingand Bowl Race preview
North Sea Race hosted by Royal Harwich YC has attracted over 50 boats The Royal Ocean Racing Club's North Sea Race, hosted by the Royal Harwich Yacht Club, has attracted over 50 boats. The North Sea Race is one of the oldest in the RORC Racing Calendar dating back to 1931. Posted on 15 May
Ida Lewis Distance Race 2024 Preview
For 19 editions it has consistently proven itself as a rigorous yet gratifying overnight contest With Memorial Day Weekend just around the corner, sailors are prepping for a busy race season on Narragansett Bay. Posted on 13 May
Extra Djinn wins RORC North Sea Race
The 2024 edition had 53 boats racing from Harwich to Scheveningen The Royal Ocean Racing Club's North Sea Race is hosted by the Royal Harwich Yacht Club in association with the East Anglian Offshore Racing Association, the Yacht Club Scheveningen and the North Sea Regatta. Posted on 12 May
Royal North Sea Yacht Club Ascension Day Regatta
Thirty-one yachts from Ostend to Ramsgate On Thursday 9th May thirty-one yachts from the Royal North Sea Yacht Club raced from Ostend to Ramsgate for the annual Ascension Day Regatta. Posted on 12 May
RORC North Sea Race Preview
A fleet of over 50 boats will set off from Harwich to Scheveningen on Friday The Royal Ocean Racing Club's North Sea Race, hosted by the Royal Harwich Yacht Club, has attracted over 50 boats. The North Sea Race is one of the oldest in the RORC Racing Calendar dating back to 1931. Posted on 8 May
Bellino wins RORC Myth of Malham Race
NMD 54 Teasing Machine blasted round the 235 mile course to take line honours The overall winner of RORC Myth of Malham Race, after IRC time correction, was Rob Craigie's Sun Fast 3600 Bellino, racing Two-Handed with RORC Commodore Deb Fish. Posted on 7 May
Early Bird Discount for Ramsgate Week closes soon
Get your entry in for the friendly regatta! Advance notice that the Early Bird Discount for Ramsgate Week 2024 is due to close at the end of May. Widely known as the friendly regatta, the event takes place in August from 11-16th, making it a great event to bring your families along to enjoy. Posted on 7 May
Round the Island Race Live Stage Leaderboard
A new feature for the 2024 race! This year, competitors in the IRC or ISCRS (Island Sailing Club Rating System) fleets will be able to access a new LIVE Stage Leaderboard, which will show the boat's fleet position on handicap after each of the main race stages. Posted on 7 May
Sailing World Regatta Series at Annapolis
Knowledge of the Chesapeake Bay and its light, shifty winds paid off for local sailors Knowledge of the Chesapeake Bay and its light, shifty winds paid off for local sailors this weekend in the Helly Hansen Sailing World Regatta Series - Annapolis, as winners in 15 classes call the area home. Posted on 6 May
20th PalmaVela Overall
Galateia win again at PalmaVela… but only just David Leuschen and Chris Flowers' Wallycento Galateia won the Maxi class at PalmaVela for the third time in a row today in light winds on Palma Bay. Whilst last year's triumph was something of a whitewash, this time they were made to work all the way. Posted on 5 May
X-Yachts X4.0Sydney International Boat Show 2024Hyde Sails 2022 One Design FOOTER