A sea mist shrouding the start zone off Les Sables d’Olonne held up the start of the ninth edition of the Vendée Globe solo non stop round the world race for nearly one hour and 20 minutes.
But for their patience the record-sized 33 boat fleet was rewarded by late Autumn sunshine, a near perfect 10-12 knots south easterly breezes and flat seas when the start gun finally sounded at 1420hrs French time, sending the lone 27 men and 6 women skippers off on their 24,296 nautical miles round the world challenge.
For the nervous first timers the added delay ratcheted up the tension on top of a morning of bubbling emotions. In contrast the super-experienced solo racers grabbed a welcome quiet cat-nap after enduring what almost all reported to be a sleepless final night on land.
When the gun sounded at 1420hrs (French time) Louis Burton on Bureau Vallée 2 broke the start line first. But the third-time Vendée Globe skipper, racing the boat which won in 2016-17 and holds the race record, was notably seconds ahead of the gun.
He is penalised according to the strict race rules, required to halt his race for five hours – stopping racing and resuming from the same point – before 38°40,000N, so just north Lisbon.
With two to three months of racing ahead, safe prudent starts were otherwise the order of the day. But as the fleet accelerated away from the line the fast, foiling IMOCAs started to build speed on the flat seas.
It was the newest, least proven boat of the eight, new 2020 generation builds to line up in this race, the Juan Kouyoumdjian designed Corum L’Épargne sailed by first-timer Nico Troussel, which set the early pace, at the vanguard of an armada heading due west into a complex first week at sea. Pre-race favourite Jérémie Beyou lay second and Britain’s Sam Davies was fourth on Initiatives Coeur.
As the afternoon wore on and the pace lifted, on the heels of a strengthening breeze, Beyou’s Charal held the lead making 26kts ahead of Charlie Dalin on Apivia in second with Briton Alex Thomson gradually winding up the potent HUGO BOSS after his promised safe, steady start, to lie third at 1600hrs local time.
Pontoon Emotions Blown Away
Without exception, from rockstar favourites to hard bitten adventurers, the solo racers will be content to be in their preferred element this evening. They are facing a difficult first night at sea with winds over 30kts after midnight tonight when a first front hits. But they are finally unleashed after a week of Covid confinement, the building breeze now requires full focus race mode, and blows away memories of this morning’s emotional dockout from the famous Les Sables d’Olonne pontoon.
With spectators banned from the famous Channel, the pierheads, the docks, the beaches by a vigilant, active police presence it was a particular, curiously quiet departure on to the ocean.
From – first down the dock – the zen like Armel Tripon who had missed his usual morning meditation and had the longest walk to his jet black scow bowed L’Occitaine.
His purposeful march was followed by simple direct answers. He chose not to have his close friends and family on the pontoon but was loudly applauded by the appreciative technical teams on each boat as he passed.
“Complex weather, I slept well, but I didn’t have time to do my meditation this morning.” Announced Tripon a smile in his eyes that belied his obvious urgency to be at sea.
While shaven headed chilled pout Tripon arrived at his boat alone surrounded by family Clement Giraud bolted from his dockside interview overcome by tears. There were long lingering embraces for Damien Seguin and his partner. Switzerland’s Alan Roura and Germany’s Boris Herrmann leave behind tiny babies.
Charal’s Jérémie Beyou commented, “It is my fourth but I have the same emotions as the first time. It is not easy, not easy. But it is cool to be here with my team I know so well, and with my boat which is well prepared. It is a special thing. I spent a bit of last night looking at the weather and strategy a bit this morning.”
Herrmann, said “I am happy to go and ready to go. I am very happy the race is starting at all considering the conditions, it is a good job that every who organises the race has done. I’m not too excited, that will come later but I slept very, very well.” Said Herrmann.
England’s Sam Davies arrived with her partner Romain Attanasio, smiling, focused, radiant wearing her lucky red tights with white hearts on them. “I am excited, happy to be here with this amazing boat and amazing team. Now hopefully I can go and sail as well as my team has prepared my boat and for the race. I am just really looking forwards to it.” Said the Initiatives-Coeur skipper.
Her compatriot Miranda Merron looked relaxed and almost skipped to her Campagne de France, “Why would I be worried, it is too late now. I have no indication right now that I am off on a round the world race on my own. I am sure I will be more worried at the start. I hate starts I am always worried about other boats.” She added, “I am sure the state has a good reason to have locked up the entire population of Les Sables d’Olonne in their houses this morning but to me it seems a little mean spirited when this event comes round once every four years. And I think the organisation has done an amazing job in a very difficult context and I just I think it is a shame that even people who live right on the waterfront are not allowed out of their houses.”
Dignified, charismatic Japanese Kojiro Shiraishi arrived in traditional Japanese costume and carrying his bō, a fighting staff..
Reunited with her Medallia Pip Hare gushed, “I’m really, really happy even if it does not look like it.” She said, looking all the time to the blue skies and fighting back tears, “I am really nervous. I can’t believe this day has arrived. I can’t believe it is here. It is huge. In a way I can’t imagine what is ahead of me and in another way I can imagine every single minute of it. I just want to go out and find out if this thing that I have thought will be is as amazing. But I think it is going to be better.”
By way of contrast Alex Thomson was brisk and business-like, starting looking positively skinny as he stepped on board HUGO BOSS. “It is a lovely morning, the fog has cleared and the sun is out. It is going to be an interesting start, great for the TV cameras, the wind should be light to begin with. It is going to build but then a bit of a light patch this evening around 6pm , and then it will build and we get to a front and tack and try and avoid the light air off Finisterre then the wind comes back in from the south we will tack again and go west, with potentially difficult boat breaking conditions big waves up to five metres, the front passes and we start heading south. But it is messy with lots of secondary lows where we are looking to snaking to the south somehow. It is a shame there are no tradewinds, it is going to be a tough five to six days for all the skippers, lots of sail changes and potentially boat breaking conditions in that second front. And a complicated routing. It will be tricky. And it will sort the men from the boys. For sure. It has been a tough year. It is a shame there are no public. I feel happy, privileged I have done the four before and so there is not maybe the emotion of before, but I have that. I am 2/4 in terms of my starts, I am a 50%-er, I have to make it 3/5. That is the main objective.Every Vendée Globe is the race of your life I am just looking forwards to taking this boat and seeing what we can do together.”
President of the Vendée Globe Yves Auvinet wished the fleet well, “To all of you, fellow sailors I sincerely wish you a nice and enjoyable race around the world, looking forward to seeing you again. Good luck, fair winds.”