Route du rhum: the toll is heavy after the terrible “creepy as you wish” depression


Three dismasting, two capsizes and material breakage… The passage of a violent front has left its mark on the Route du Rhum.

An Imoca monohull, although accustomed to the seas of the deep south in the Vendée Globe (dismasting of Louis Burton’s Bureau Vallée), an Ocean Fifty trimaran (capsizing of Solidaires en Peloton – ARSEP of Thibaut Vauchel-Camus) and two Class40 monohulls affected (dismasting of the Crosscall by Aurélien Ducroz and La Boulangère Bio by Amélie Grassi, one of the seven women in the race), the toll is heavy on the Route du rhum fleet, and those who escaped, and surely other breakages will be announced during the day heal their wounds, after the passage of a terrible depression. Like Fabrice Amedeo (Nexans – Art & Windows), starboard ballast affected, batteries flooded and mainsail torn, forced to detonate towards Cascaïs (Portugal). Or even Brieux Maisonneuve, picked up by Jean-Pierre Dick (Notre Méditerranée – Ville de Nice), the leader of the Mono Rum category, after his catamaran capsized.

About 350 miles northwest of Cape Finisterre, the passage of this front was violent, as Yoann Richomme (Paprec Arkéa), the double winner of the Solitaire du Figaro, told future skipper of an Imoca monohull and title holder: “It was fast but very very violent after the front. The boat was jumping in the waves. It felt like everything was going to explode any moment. It was creepy as hell. Xavier Macaire is the one who attacked the most and I admit that I didn’t try to keep up with his pace, especially after seeing Aurélien Ducroz and Amélie Grassi dismasting just in line with my transom. I really thought we were all going to go through it. I know what it’s like to lose your mast in these kinds of conditions. It’s incredibly hard to undo all the ropes on rough seas and at night too”added the navigator, author of a magnificent comeback to return to the top three alongside Corentin Douguet (Quéguiner – Innoveo) and Xavier Macaire (Groupe SNEF), the three men being grouped in less than 7 miles, after having to let them slip away to complete his 4-hour penalty following a premature start on the line in Saint-Malo.

Good weather not for now

Even if the conditions improved after the passage of the front, the wind dropping from 40 knots to a more reasonable twenty, the sea remained rough for Yoann Richomme and the survivors of this 12th edition. And you will have to wait between 3 and 4 days for the Class40s and half as long for the fastest Ultim trimarans and Imoca monohulls, to finally escape this zone of high atmospheric pressure and finally be able to take off the oilskins.

On this decidedly badly paved Guadeloupe road (which is not illogical in November), Charles Caudrelier (Maxi Edmond de Rothschild) managed to give himself a tiny bit of air ahead of François Gabart (SVR Lazartigue). In the 12 o’clock ranking, the leader is 28 miles ahead of his rival, not even an hour at sea at an average of 30 knots, and 85 miles over Thomas Coville (Sodebo), Francis Joyon (Idec), holding him of the title being relegated to 479 miles, far from his dreams of a double for the moment. “François came back to me in the light airs, shortly before the Azores. He was going straight, while I couldn’t! I turned 4-5 times, which required considerable energy. I took a slightly tougher option than his in the archipelago but, in the end, it came back to almost the same thing (…) It’s still a bit of a war in terms of conditions. It is far from the dream. We are impatiently waiting to be able to take off the raincoats and enjoy stable winds. There, it constantly fluctuates between 20 and 30 knots, it’s far from restful »said Charles Caudrelier, well served for his first Route du rhum, which could end according to first estimates on the night of Tuesday to Wednesday.

Small gaps in all categories

As for the Imoca monohulls, Charlie Dalin (Apivia) is still leading the dance during a first participation that has been perfectly mastered for the moment, ahead of Jérémie Beyou (Charal) with a comfortable gap of 93 miles at 12 o’clock, Thomas Ruyant (LinkedOut) next at 98 miles, Paul Meilhat (Biotherm) at 109 miles and Kevin Escoffier (Holcim-PRB) at 117 miles. And on the Ocean Fifty side, after the leader Thibaut Vauchel-Camus left the road, Quentin Vlamynck (Arkema) dominates with a 29-mile lead over Sébastien Rogues (Primonial). A small gap which finally symbolizes well the course of this Route du rhum where no one (except perhaps Charlie Dalin) managed to make the best of it. And so much the better for the suspense…

SEE ALSO – Route du Rhum: 138 sailors took the start

This Sunday morning, nine sailors officially gave up on the 138 leaving Saint-Malo on Wednesday and five should soon join them on the fatal list.

Dropouts (in brackets those who have not yet officially dropped out)

Ocean fifty trimarans: Sam Goodchild, (Thibaut Vauchel-Camus)

Imoca monohulls : Kojiro Shiraishi, Damien Seguin, (Louis Burton)

Class40 monohulls : (Amélie Grassi), (Aurélien Ducroz), (Keni Piperol), Martin Louchar, Antoine Magré, Laurent Camprubi, Geoffrey Matacynski, Jonas Gerckens

Rum Multi : Oren Nataf


SEE ALSO – The superb goal of Kévin Gameiro during Ajaccio-Strasbourg on November 5 (4-2)



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