Finishes in the Transat Jacques Vabre

Published on November 8th, 2019

(November 8, 2019; Day 13) – Gilles Lamiré and Antoine Carpentier on their Multi50 50ft trimaran, Groupe GCA – Mille et un sourires, have won the 14th edition of the Transat Jacques Vabre Normandie Le Havre after crossing the line in the Bay of All Saints in Salvador de Bahia on Friday, November 8, 2019 at 04:49:41 (UTC).

The team finished the 4,350-mile biennial double-handed race from Le Havre, France to Salvador de Bahia in 11 days 16 hours 34 minutes and 41 seconds after starting on Sunday, October 27 at 12:15 (UTC).

Groupe GCA – Mille et un sourires covered the theoretical course of 4,350 miles at an average speed of 15.50 knots, but actually sailed 4,926 miles at an average speed of 17.56 knots.

After Groupe GCA – Mille et un sourires became the first boat to cross the line in the Bay of All Saints this morning under a magical moon, the second – Solidaires En Peloton – ARSEP – arrived in full flight in glorious sunshine. They crossed the line on Friday, November 8, 2019 at 14:53:01 (UTC ), 12 days 2 hours 38 minutes and 01 seconds after leaving Le Havre, France on Sunday, October 27 at 12:15 (UTC)

Solidaires En Peleton – ARSEP covered the theoretical course of 4,350 miles at an average speed of 14.97 knots, but actually sailed 5,054 miles at an average speed of 17.39 knots. They finished 10 hours 3 minutes and 20 seconds behind the winner Groupe GCA – Mille et un sourires.

IMOCA
Apivia looks uncatchable now, broad reaching away south to the tip of north-east Brazil in 16-knot south-easterly trade winds. The first and only one of the leading group to make it cleanly out of the Doldrums on Thursday, Apivia have covered nearly 100 miles more (396 miles) in the last 24 hours than any of their pursuers.

At the 15:00 UTC ranking they were 237 miles ahead of PRB in second with only 571 miles to the finish. PRB have no such luxury. Everyone is chasing them. In a 2010 boat without foils, it should be tough for Banque Populaire to hold on in third, five miles behind.

America’s Charlie Enright on 11th Hour Racing is just 24 miles behind. In normal circumstances they would all be worried by having Charal just another 25 miles behind. But it is hard to assess the physical and psychological effect that the Doldrums have had on Charal. The Doldrums have cost them 410 miles since they entered 120 miles ahead on November 5.

“At last! We’re free from the Doldrums and VERY happy to be in the SE Trade Winds,” Britain’s Samantha Davies, lying eighth with her French co-skipper Paul Meilhat, said in her message today. It is about 40deg Celsius and 100% humidity. Like sleeping in a sauna. Oh, a sauna that is attached to a roller coaster.

“The good thing is that we are going REALLY FAST and our old boat is definitely very happy with her new foils. We’re in the lead pack, albeit at the back of this pack, but we’re happy where we are, maybe we can gain a place on the run into Salvador.”

Class40
The music has stopped. The wind section has packed up and the leading skippers are hoping they haven’t gone for a long weekend. At the 15:00 UTC ranking the front of the fleet had all slowed down, Crédit Mutuel’s losses had finished and they had slightly extended to lead Britain’s Sam Goodchild on Leyton, by 65 miles, despite their corkscrew trajectory.

The 2017 runner-up, Aïna Enfance & Avenir remained a further 24 miles behind in third, with all three on a similar track. Banque du Léman in fourth is a further 80 miles back. The whole front of the fleet is now down into single figure speeds and Crédit Mutuel reported completely stalling overnight.

“A sinister place”, “Mordor”, and just “merde” have punctuated some of the skipper’s logs and interviews. From the poetic to the prosaic, the choice of language changes with every breath of sailor and wind.

“We’re into the thick of things now,” Adrien Hardy, Crédit Mutuel’s co-skipper said overnight. “We’ve been stalled for two or three hours. We hope it won’t last too long. It’s not easy, we’ve seen the forecasts, we have to stay close to the most direct route, and tack as directly south as we can. It’s a radical change of atmosphere, yesterday, we were riding along at 15/20 knots and now I’m standing in the boat, and it’s not moving at all.

We’re not looking too far behind us, we just have to get south as fast as possible; there’s nothing we can do, we just have to stay calm, it’ll be like that for one or two days. When you see that the IMOCA have still not got going again, it’s not encouraging.”

ETAs

Multi50
Primonial – Saturday, November 9, 14:00 (UTC)

IMOCA
Apivia – Sunday, November 10, 02:00 (UTC)
PRB – 18:00
Banque Populaire – 19:00
11th Hour Racing – 20:00
Arkea – Paprec – 21:00
Advens for cybersecurity – 22:00

Monday, November 11
Initiatives-Cœur – 00:00
Charal – 01:00

Class40
Crédit Mutuel – Wednesday, November 13

Race detailsEntry listTrackerFacebook

First held in 1993, the biennial Transat Jacques Vabre has three fleets of doublehanded teams – Class40s, Multi50s, and IMOCA 60s – competing from Le Havre, France’s to Salvador de Bahia, Brazil. The 4350nm race started October 27 with estimated race times as:
Multi50: 11 days
IMOCA: 13-14 days
Class40: 19 days

Source: Transat Jacques Vabre

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