Transat Jacques Vabre: When Pit Stops Count

Published on November 15th, 2013

(November 15, 2013) – On the seventh day of the 5450 mile Transat Jacques Vabre from Le Havre, France to Itajaí, Brazil, it is Vendée Globe winners François Gabart and Michel Desjoyeaux who are back in the lead of the highly competitive IMOCA Open 60 class after leaders PRB, Vincent Riou and Jean Le Cam pit stopped into the Cape Verde islands this morning, repeating a rudder repair that their rivals undertook five days ago in Peniche, Portugal. In the Class 40 fleet GDF SUEZ have slightly increased their lead, as has FentetreA Cardinal in the Multi50s. And the two high speed MOD70’s have Recife, Brazil in front of them after crossing the Equator last night.

IMOCA Open 60. In the Pits… and Out
As PRB made their pit stop into the Cape Verde islands François Gabart and Michel Desjoyeaux on MACIF seized the lead in the IMOCA Open 60 class, passing through the island group in the wake of erstwhile leaders and carrying on when Vincent Riou and Jean Le Cam peeled off to rendezvous with their pit in Mindelo on the island of Sao Vicente.

The diversion, no more than a dozen miles west from the route taken by the Vendée Globe winning pair on MACIF, took a little over an hour but it allowed Gabart and Desjoyeaux to resume the lead that they had last held off Portugal five days ago, before they themselves had stopped into Peniche on the pit stop for repairs. MACIF was leading by 31 miles this Friday afternoon, but PRB was quicker.

Fifty miles to the west of the islands, Maitre CoQ (Beyou and Pratt) was giving chase with a deficit of a further 30 miles behind the leaders. But with a complicated and difficult Doldrums up ahead, the leading five are expected to compress again.

Jean Le Cam, co-skipper of PRB, recalled: “We just stopped for an hour to give us enough time to change the rudder, so it was fast. It went well. The rudder had broken when we were close to Madeira and for sure when you push the boat it is normal that things can break. We have had an excellent first half of the race and hope the second will be good too. One of us is always on deck and at the helm. We are off under spinnaker and going as fast as we can. We are going to see what options everyone is taking so we have to work out how we get up to Macif.”

And if the top five are engaged in an exciting tussle with the lead changing regularly – all five of the top boats have lead at least once – the scrap at the rear of the IMOCA Open fleet is as intense and challenging. Alessandro di Benedetto and Alberto Monaco on Team Plastique took over eighth place today ahead of the Polish duo on Energa, Zbigniew Gutkowski and Maciej Marczewski.

Multi 50’s, Long Tow to Madeira for Arkéma – Region Aquitaine
There is little change at the front of the Multi50 fleet where Erwan Le Roux and Yann Eliès on FenetreA Cardinal have Actual (Le Blévec and de Pavant) directly behind them as they start to contemplate their Doldrums passage, one which looks set to be less straightforward than that which prevailed for the MOD70’s. Le Roux and Eliès opened more than 20 miles on the second placed Multi 50 today and lead by 120 miles.

Although they are safe on board the Portuguese tug and Lalou Roucayrol and Mayeul Riffet are recovering from their 85 hours ordeal in the upturned Arkema Region Aquitaine, they are not yet able to relax. Conditions mean that, along with the tug company, they have decided to tow the upturned hull to Madeira, 285 miles downwind. They expect to reach there sometime in the middle of next week.

Speaking to French radio yesterday they relived the conditions in the capsized trimaran:

“We are feeling a bit better having had a shower and some food”, explained Mayeul Riffet, the co-skipper on Arkema – Région Aquitaine. “We did try and turn the boat over but the maneouver is virtually impossible with the sea state being so bad. We tried to while away the time but had a lot of maintenance work to secure the boat which involved diving to clear rigging and daily check outside. We had time to talk and philosophize on life, the future and think. We had to set ourselves objectives try and achieve them. Each time the ETA for the tugs arrival was delayed, we found it really tough. Conditions really worsened and the waves were breaking over the upturned hulls. We were lucky to have battery power inside despite being upturned, which gave us light at night and the ability to communicate. With no beacons it was only thanks to the GPS position given, that the tugboat managed to find us.”  

Roucayrol described the transfer onto the tug as: “Dangerous and frightening with very strong winds and angry and breaking waves.

Class 40, Caterham Sail Loft Challenge
In Class 40 the pace has slackened slightly but the lead of GDF SUEZ (Rogues and Delahaye) remains unchecked by second placed MARE (Riechers and Brasseur).

For the British duo on Caterham Challenge, Mike Gascoyne and Brian Thompson the last 36 hours have proven costly in terms of miles and distance, dropping to 13th after a sail repair marathon taking the best part of 36 hours, repairing their mainsail and gennaker:

“Finally hoisted the main at 9 last night.” Gascoyne reported today, “After a conservative first night we lowered it again to repair a small area that had inadvertently rubbed against the spreaders, re-hoisted and also took the time to fix the tack line. Finally at midday hoisted the spinnaker and started racing again. It’s been a tough 36hrs but it’s a long race and we need to push as hard as we can to catch up our lost ground.”

MOD70, Brasil Ahead!
In the MOD70 class the match race between Edmond de Rothschild and Oman Air-Musandam remains relatively even after the two crossed over the equator last night.

Pointing at Recife on the NE Brazilian coast this afternoon, Sébastien Josse and Charles Caudrelier lead by 73 miles from Sidney Gavignet and Damian Foxall.

They said:

Bernard Stamm, IMOCA Open 60, Cheminées Poujoulat

“Maitre Coq has managed to get a better wind angle, one that is more favourable for his boat, than the one we have. Things seem to have slowed for Safran, so we just have to keep an eye on the others. We have decided to go as far west as possible round the Cape Verde Islands to position ourselves to get to the optimum Doldrums crossing point. Conditions are a little strange, the sky is overcast and although we do not have the squalls or big clouds of the past few days, we do have a good established and regular wind. We have managed to get a bit of rest and the morale was boosted yesterday finding ourselves well positioned. It is not easy when you are leading and then lose ground, so it is tough; we have to keep on top of it all the time.

I think we are well set up to get through the Doldrums, which are positioned well north this year, and that means we should be a bit faster out.”

Jean Le Cam, IMOCA Open 60 PRB:

“We just stopped for an hour to give us enough time to change the rudder, so it was fast. It went well. The rudder had broken when we were close to Madeira and for sure when you push the boat it is normal that things can break.

We have had an excellent first half of the race and hope the second will be good too. One of us is always on deck and at the helm. We are off under spinnaker and going as fast as we can. We are going to see what options everyone is taking so we have to work out how we get up to Macif.”

François Damiens, IMOCA Open 60, Initiatives Coeur:

“We had some great speed yesterday and now things have slowed down a bit so we are losing ground. It is very frustrating when you are averaging 24 knots and now we are doing 11 / 12 knots. We have a blue sky, flat sea and gentle conditions. It is a bit like a holiday and completely different to what we had when we left Le Havre.

Yesterday I saw a whale and her baby just 10 metres away from the boat. We have had a lot of dolphins and then a seagull that just landed then a little bird that joined us for 3 days. I am still in my tights, because I think they suit me, but now that the sun is out I suppose I should get the trunks on. I am waiting for Tanguy to wake up and then we can have breakfast and have a wash and will make the most to get the shorts out.

We have Energa and Team Plastique close and so just a few miles away one is doing 8 and then other 12, so we just have to really keep en eye on the conditions on the water. You can just miss the wind trying to chase it.”

Sounds in English:

Michelle Zwagerman (Croix du Sud):
“Things are very well today onboard Croix du Sud! The sun is out.”
http://www.transat-jacques-vabre.com/sites/default/files/audio/son/michellezwagerman_croixdusud_20131115.mp3

Maciej Marczewski (Energa):
http://www.transat-jacques-vabre.com/sites/default/files/audio/son/maciejmarczewski_energa_20131115.mp3

See latest postions for the fleets:
http://www.transat-jacques-vabre.com/fr/classement

 

Follow the race:
Internet 
Live tracking updated every 30 minutes.
Race Tracker URL: http://tracking.transat-jacques-vabre.com/en/
Positions will be updated every 3 hours: 0400hrs / 0700hrs / 1000hrs / 1300hrs / 1600hrs / 1900hrs GMT

Social Media 
Live updates through the start and through the race itself on the official facebook pages and on the twitter feed (@TransatJV).
And the Transat Jacques Vabre Application is now available on iPhone and Android and includes tracking facility.

VIDEO
Video footage will be available to registered broadcasters for download on the TV server:
www.transatjacquesvabre2013.tv

For any queries please contact:
Hélène Tzara – helene.tzara@tjv2013.org – +33 (0)6 10 18 80 90

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