Please select your home edition
Edition
Henri-Lloyd - For the Obsessed

Beyou and Cammas take the honours on Charal in a testing Défi Azimut 48-Hours

by Ed Gorman / IMOCA Globe Series 23 Sep 2023 10:09 PDT
Défi Azimut-Lorient Agglomération 48-Hours © Jean-Louis Carli / Défi Azimut

Charal is one of the most focused and well-resourced teams in the ever-growing IMOCA ranks led by two of the best offshore ocean racing sailors, in Jérémie Beyou and Franck Cammas, and in the Défi Azimut-Lorient Agglomération 48-Hours that proved an overwhelming combination.

Relishing a 600-mile course in fresh westerly and northwesterly winds in the northeastern Bay of Biscay, Charal was always in the mix, duking it out with Charlie Dalin and Pascal Bidégorry's MACIF Santé Prévoyance and Sam Goodchild and Thomas Ruyant's For the Planet.

Beyou's much-tweaked Sam Manuard design from 2022 was competitive on all points of sail, and never more so than upwind when her rivals struggled to live with her.

In the end, after one day, 17 hours and 46 minutes at sea, the red and black IMOCA, sponsored by a French meat products company, crossed the finish line off Lorient at the head of the 33-strong fleet. She was just under two hours ahead of MACIF Santé Prévoyance and nearly two-and-a-half hours ahead of For The Planet.

This was Beyou's first win of the 2023 season - his best previous result was second in the Guyader Bermudes 1000 Race - and he was delighted to have prevailed in this event for the third time, and to have achieved his first victory alongside Cammas. The key points, he said, were a good start on Thursday and his and Cammas's ability to recover from small mistakes.

"There's a high level of competition in the fleet so when you win such intense races you're doing pretty well," said Beyou on the dockside in Lorient. "After that, this result is good psychologically. I've been waiting for this for some time, especially with Franck."

Cammas highlighted the difficult wind conditions throughout a race that saw squalls all over the course, featuring sudden changes in wind direction and velocity. "Everything was pretty complicated," he said. "The sea was pretty rough. It was very unstable and yesterday afternoon we had another squall at 40 knots when we really weren't expecting it. The Défi Azimut-Lorient Agglomération is always a complete race, with a course that allows you to do all the different points of sail. It's reassuring to finish ahead, because it means that in terms of speed we're not out of our depth - far from it."

This race, which saw three retirements, including a dismasting for CORUM L'Epargne skipped by Nicolas Troussel and Benjamin Schwartz, proved another spectacular step in the early life of Dalin's new Guillaume Verdier-designed MACIF Santé Prévoyance. It came straight out of the box to win the Rolex Fastnet Race in July and was always in contention in this contest, despite injuries to Bidégorry who broke a finger and damaged a shoulder when being thrown across the cockpit.

The understated Dalin, who is among the most consistent of the top IMOCA skippers, said he could see plenty of positives from this most recent outing ahead of the Transat Jacques Vabre. "We're happy with our race," said the 39-year-old from Le Havre. "It was intense and interesting. On the face of it, everything's going well aboard the boat. The team did a quick check-up and everything's fine, even if there were a few phases when things were really hard. That bodes well for the future - the structure seems to be up to our expectations."

While Dalin emerged happy enough, the same could be said of Goodchild sailing with Ruyant for the first time while his teammates' new boat is being repaired. The two skippers seem to have got on really well. "He wasn't intense at all - he's intense in a very calm way!" said Goodchild when asked how the personalities gelled offshore. "Thomas is intense about the right things and not just for the sake of it. I don't like shouting and sailing angry and we didn't shout and sail angry. It was just cool - cool, calm and collected," he added.

This outing proved a useful opportunity for the Englishman to see how Ruyant got the most out of a boat in which he enjoyed great success including two transatlantic race wins. The old LinkedOut now struggles a bit against the new boats in the early foiling transitions and when cutting through a rough seaway, but Goodchild knows he has a contender for the Vendée Globe podium in his hands.

"There are definitely moments when we are missing performance, when we can't go as fast as the others," he reflected. "But, at the same time, I've got a boat that has worked for four years and I know it works and I can trust it. And now, having sailed with Thomas and working with his team for six months, we have learnt its limits much quicker than you would do with a new boat."

This Azimut 48-Hours, which many skippers were completing as part of their qualification process for the 2024 Vendée Globe, saw competitive racing throughout the fleet. Not least was the battle to be first female skipper at the line between Sam Davies of Great Britain and Justine Mettraux of Switzerland. They finished fifth and sixth respectively, just five minutes apart, with Davies sailing with Jack Bouttell on Initiatives-Coeur and Mettraux on Teamwork racing alongside Julien Villion.

Davies admitted fifth place was beyond her pre-start expectations at the and of a race which saw her and Bouttell break a jib sheet and have to contend with a leaking diesel tank which emptied inside the boat. "We learned a lot - we learned how to sail together and it went really well," said Davies at the finish. "I was glad to have Jack with me because he's solid," she added. She also paid tribute Mettraux and Villion: "They were always there and did a great job of moving up the fleet, but we knew that the lighter winds (would favour) us," she said.

While Charal enjoyed reasonable breeze all the way to the finish, all those following in her wake had to contend with ever lighter conditions over the final 150 miles, making for an unusually large spread in the field. Among those making their way slowly to the line, northeast of the Île-de-Groix, was Violette Dorange, sailing with Damien Guillou on DeVenir, who were on course to finish outside the top-10 but as first non-foiling boat on Dorange's first outing in the IMOCA fleet.

Related Articles

The Vendée Globe switches to American time
The New York Vendée Les Sables d'Olonne will set sail in 15 days time The last qualifying and selection race for the solo round the world race, the New York Vendée Les Sables d'Olonne, will set sail in 15 days time, on 29 May, at 20h00 French time. Posted today at 7:51 pm
11th Hour Racing sponsors IMOCA
To further advance sustainability and diversity in offshore racing 11th Hour Racing announced today it will join forces with the International Monohull Open Class Association (IMOCA) to drive sustainable innovation and support opportunities for female sailors within competitive sailing. Posted today at 6:38 pm
Perseverance is Clarisse Crémer's middle name..
Back racing hard in The Transat CIC and today is some 700 miles from the finish line After a strong, solid start to the Transat CIC, Clarisse Crémer suffered damage to the J3 bulkhead of her L'Occitaine en Provence on May 1st which required her to divert 500 miles to the Azores for five days whilst her technical team completed repairs. Posted today at 5:03 pm
The Transat CIC Prizegiving
Podium finishers honoured Competitors and invited guests honoured the IMOCA and Class40 podiums of the 15th edition of The Transat CIC at the prizegiving Sunday in New York. Posted on 13 May
The Transat CIC Update
New York offers finishers sunshine but still dark clouds over the Atlantic At 13 days since the fleet left Lorient just seven solo racers are still racing across the Atlantic on the 3,500 miles Transat CIC. Posted on 11 May
Giancarlo crosses the Transat CIC finish line
A tough test prior to the Vendée Globe 2024-2025 Giancarlo Pedote crossed the finish line of the Transat CIC 2024 at 22:07 hours (UTC) on Thursday 9 May after an epic crossing, which took him from Lorient to New York, putting both his skills as a sailor and his boat Prysmian to the test. Posted on 10 May
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 on 10 May
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 on 10 May
Team Holcim-PRB greets lady Liberty
Nicolas Lunven crossed the finish line of The Transat CIC Wednesday May 8th at 16:25 local time (22:25 CET), Nicolas Lunven crossed the finish line of The Transat CIC, 12 hours later the green and blue IMOCA sailed past the Statue of Liberty and the Manhattan skyline. Posted on 10 May
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
Doyle_SailWorld_728X90px-01 BOTTOMZhik 2024 March - FOOTERArmstrong 728x90 - Wing FG Board Range - BOTTOM