In race mode
42 days… the solo round the world record under sail, which was set by François Gabart in 2017, will not be beaten. Up to the halfway mark in the Arkea Ultim Challenge, Charles Caudrelier was very much inside the record time and even a few hours ahead of schedule on passing South-East Cape in Tasmania at the exit from the Indian Ocean. However, the weather sequence in the Pacific, with forty-eight hours on stand-by shortly after Point Nemo and a particularly slow South Atlantic put the stopwatch to the bottom of the list of priorities. For the skipper of the Maxi Edmond de Rothschild, this is in no way a disappointment. In fact he insists: “I’m racing. It’s first place that I’m interested in, not the rest!”
Charles Caudrelier, 18 February
“The fastest routing has us finishing on Thursday evening or Friday, but we have slightly complicated weather at the end, so we’ll have to decide if we become embroiled in the weather system or sit it out for a bit to let the worst of it roll through. The weather for the end of the week is shaping up to be pretty boisterous, with very heavy seas. Either way, I hope we’ll finish by the end of the weekend.
François Gabart’s record will not be beaten, but that was not my objective on a personal level. I’m in a race, not a record attempt, and I didn’t choose my weather window. Racing is a whole different ball game. There is some strategy involved in relation to adversaries and that changes everything. Prior to Cape Horn, when we had to stop for 48 hours to let the bad weather roll over us, it was an easier decision to make because we were in front with a sizeable lead over the 2nd boat. During a record attempt, you know the course and your rival’s schedule. That really changes the deal in terms of the way you tackle your own navigation.
On paper, the Maxi Edmond de Rothschild has greater potential than Macif did at that time as we are flying around the world. However, what is notable on this course is that the weather is much more important than the potential of the boat. Record times, like the one for the Saint Exupéry in solo format or the crewed Jules Verne, are so low today that you need a perfect sequence of weather systems to beat them.”
Ranking at 16:00 UTC
1/ Maxi Edmond de Rothschild - Charles Caudrelier
2/ Sodebo Ultim 3 - Thomas Coville – 2,263.5 miles behind the leader
3/ Maxi Banque Populaire XI - Armel Le Cleac’h - 2 578,2 milles behind the leader (on a pit stop in Rio) 4/ Actual Ultim 3 - Anthony Marchand – 5,940.8 miles behind the leader
5/ Ultim Adagio - Eric Peron 6,468.1 miles behind the leader
Abandon SVR Lazartigue - Tom Laperche