Please select your home edition
Edition
A+T Instruments 2024 Leaderboard

The Vendée Globe: A supreme test of mental toughness

by Ed Gorman / IMOCA Globe Series 15 Oct 2024 21:32 PDT 10 November 2024
Foussier - Sébastien Marsset © Marin Le Roux - polaRYSE / Foussier

The Vendée Globe solo round-the-world race, which sets sail from Les Sables D'Olonne on November 10th, is a test of sailing skill, of sporting competitiveness and endurance for both boat and sailor.

But perhaps its most difficult and least well understood challenge is the psychological one - how do you sail alone around the world for 80 days or more, through some of the most dangerous seas on the planet, and keep your strength of mind?

The record entry of 40 IMOCA sailors in the 2024-'25 edition of this classic race, will all experience moments of sheer joy, but also deep disillusionment and negativity. They will be frightened at times, lonely or even bored, and they will have to contend with lack of sleep, lack of fresh food and the company of others. They will race alone against the elements and, to some extent, against their own inner demons as they take on the global course in the toughest race in sailing.

Sébastien Marsset, the 39-year-old skipper of Foussier, has been doing a lot of preparation work in this area during the build-up to what will be his first Vendée Globe on board his 2006-generation Farr-designed IMOCA. We asked him what is the hardest part of the psychological challenge of this race.

"Ah, it's facing yourself," he said without hesitation. "It's facing your own weakness. Yeah, I think that's the biggest challenge. Manoeuvering the boat is one thing and you can break stuff, but I know how to manoeuvre the boat. But in this race, things will happen that I cannot predict - they are going to come as a surprise - and I really don't know how I am going to react to them because I have never spent that much time alone offshore and I've never spent that much time on my own."

Marsset has sailed the global course before as part of a Jules Verne Trophy crew on the maxi-trimaran Spindrift, so he has some idea of what he will be facing. But that does not mean he is under-estimating the challenge that lies ahead and he has been working with sports psychologist Anne-Sophie Douguet as part of his preparation.

"We have been working on all the challenges I am facing on shore and at sea and on my personal side and my professional side," he explained. "We are trying to get me into the best position for the start of the race and we have been working on the tools I am going to be using while sailing, because I need to be 100% effective."

Marsset has been breaking the Vendée Globe down into manageable-sized chunks to help him cope with the overall scale of the challenge. He imagines an opening phase, for example, of three-to-five days after the start which could feature rough weather, then a slightly easier section going past Madeira and the Canaries, then the period in the Trade Winds and then the Doldrums. In his mind he can identify each one and tick them off as he goes.

"I'm working on cutting down the racetrack into different pieces and appreciating the journey that I will have already done. I don't know what the Vendée Globe is going to bring me - it's going to be around 90 days and I want to sail one day after the other, in a way that is short in terms of thinking," he said.

Marsset is disarmingly honest about the scale of the psychological challenge he will face and one particularly interesting aspect of it, for him, is that by far the most stressful element of his Vendée Globe so far has been the challenge on shore during the build-up. His campaign has been constantly short of funds and in danger of collapse and it has taken all his mental strength to keep his focus on getting to the start. "I have had to deal with a lot on shore," he says, "and for now, it has been a lot more challenging onshore than offshore."

So how can Vendée Globe sailors deal with the stress of racing alone? We asked the Dutch organisational psychologist Anje-Marijcke Van Boxtel, who worked with the victorious 11th Hour Racing Team during the last Ocean Race, for some tips.

Van Boxtel says that preparation in this area is absolutely essential and can make all the difference. She says sailors can benefit by creating what she calls their own "personal compass of effective and ineffective behaviour" and self-knowledge in this area is hugely powerful.

So, for example, a sailor needs to understand how his or her mind might react when under extreme pressure alone. "You have to know what you will do in dangerous triggering situations which elicit a lot of adrenaline and cortisol and a lot of emotions," she said. "So when you know what are triggering situations for you, and when you recognise your own emotions and thought patterns and behaviour, you are able to regulate them better."

Van Boxtel says dealing with emotions is a key skill and trying to suppress an extreme reaction to a crisis or to a sudden problem will only make it worse. "What you should do is develop the ability to experience emotions with a 'witnessing mind,'" she said. "So accept them, be able to sit with them, don't try to put them in your big toe and forget them because they will rule your life. That is the first thing - being able to accept those emotions when they come from challenging circumstances in the outside world."

She says a similar technique applies to fear which, she says, is a totally natural response to what can be very dangerous predicaments for sailors in the Vendée Globe. "Acknowledge that fear is a healthy emotion that helps you survive," she said. "So be scared, allow yourself to be scared, reassure yourself that that is a very apt reaction to a very dangerous environment but then - and you have to prepare this too - then realise how am I going to behave in a very good way, sailing-wise, even when I'm scared? What am I going to say to myself when I'm scared? - because our thoughts can regulate our emotions and our behaviour."

Sleep deprivation is a particular danger in the Vendée Globe. Van Boxtel says the key to coping with it is identifying it early and then knowing how to deal with it. "You have to know what it does to your brain and to your behaviour - like you are likely to stop eating properly - because you can lose control of it if you miss the first signs and the situation can deteriorate very quickly, leading to losing your perseverance and your cognitive structure," she said.

When talking to Van Boxtel you quickly realise that there are tools available to deal with all aspects of the psychological challenge of the Vendée Globe. Of course there will inevitably still be extremely difficult moments, but preparation can help give a sailor techniques to rely on when the going gets really tough.

Marsset knows enough about life offshore alone to know how difficult it can be. "It's like when you are lacking sleep, it does affect how you are feeling a lot," he said. "You can feel really high after a good moment of navigation, or a good ranking, and then you can get really low, sometimes for no reason, or for a reason that you think is important, but often that is not really the case. On the boat it's really hard to moderate your feelings, to get the right feelings and to know that the way you are seeing the situation is not accurate. That's quite difficult," he added.

Related Articles

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
48 hours in light airs on the cards
15th Défi Azimut Lorient Agglomération begins The two-handed Défi Azimut - Lorient Agglomération 48 Hours race set sail from the IMOCA headquarters at Lorient on 18th September, promising a tricky light airs contest for the 12 crews taking part. Posted on 18 Sep
Big colour displays
Which would you prefer? A+T Instruments will be at the Monaco Boat Show and at the Les voiles de Saint-Tropez. Hugh will be navigating on SY Sealen B, and Pete will be navigating on SY Mariella. Posted on 18 Sep
IMOCA Speed Runs in Lorient
15th Défi Azimut Lorient Agglomération kicks off Une Battle commenced in the 15th Défi Azimut Lorient Agglomération with a spectacle guaranteed from the get-go. Speed runs left, right and centre in the Courreaux de Groix, followed by a grand parade by an 11-strong fleet of IMOCAs to delight the crowds. Posted on 18 Sep
Biotherm wins the Ocean Race Europe
For Paul, this was most satisfying of wins in a race that he planned for and targeted for many years Paul Meilhat and his crew on Biotherm are the runaway winners of the second edition of The Ocean Race Europe after adding their fourth leg win in five starts early this morning. Posted on 15 Sep
Holcim-PRB claims 2nd place in Boka Bay
After memorable comeback in The Ocean Race Europe Leg 5 The Holcim-PRB crew claimed an outstanding second place on the fifth and final leg of The Ocean Race Europe, navigating a course full of twists and turns. Posted on 15 Sep
Biotherm win final leg into Montenegro
To seal dominant overall victory in The Ocean Race Europe 2025 Paul Meilhat's French-flagged IMOCA Biotherm has won the fifth and final stage of The Ocean Race Europe - the 1,600-nautical mile leg from Genova, Italy to Boka Bay in Montenegro - and in doing so has confirmed a spectacular overall win. Posted on 15 Sep
Team Malizia Third in Boka Bay
Clinching Podium Finish in Final Leg of The Ocean Race Europe 2025 After a tight battle for the podium on the fifth and final stage of The Ocean Race Europe 2025, Team Malizia crossed the finish line in Boka Bay, Montenegro, early this morning to claim third place and five points. Posted on 15 Sep
Mackay Boats 728x90 BOTTOMHyde Sails 2024 - One DesignLloyd Stevenson - AC INEOS 1456x180px BOTTOM