{"id":2535,"date":"2020-07-28T07:48:20","date_gmt":"2020-07-28T07:48:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/velocityyachts.com\/blog\/figaro-series-the-hardest-sailing-race-on-the-planet-where-money-means-nothing\/"},"modified":"2020-07-28T07:48:20","modified_gmt":"2020-07-28T07:48:20","slug":"figaro-series-the-hardest-sailing-race-on-the-planet-where-money-means-nothing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/velocityyachts.com\/blog\/figaro-series-the-hardest-sailing-race-on-the-planet-where-money-means-nothing\/","title":{"rendered":"Figaro Series: The hardest sailing race on the planet where money means nothing"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The legendary Michel Desjoyeaux says the Figaro Series is the hardest race in the world. Matthew Shehan finds out whyThe Figaro Series fleet makes an impressive sight at the start. Photo: Yvan Zedda\u201cThis is the hardest race \u2013 not to win, just to do. Winning is something else,\u201d says Michel Desjoyeaux. \u201cFor me, the Figaro is harder than the Vende\u0301e Globe.\u201d It is a bold statement about an annual single-handed coastal series that involves four offshore legs of around 500 miles apiece, each designed to take around three to four days to complete. But when Desjoyeaux speaks, the solo sailing scene listens.<br \/>\nLa Solitaire Urgo Le Figaro, which celebrated its 50th anniversary last year, attracted a big fleet of 47 entries, including a spectacular gathering of the most decorated and accomplished solo sailors, but is still a world apart from the 28,000-mile, non-stop, 100-day round-the-world marathon.<br \/>\nIn France, the 54-year-old Desjoyeaux is a national hero. He is the only person to have won the Vende\u0301e Globe more than once, taking victories in 2001 and 2008. He is not alone in thinking that this is harder, though. There are plenty of other French A-list offshore sailors who point to winning the Figaro as their proudest moment.<br \/>\nOffshore legends (l to r) Loi\u0308ck Peyron, Alain Gautier and Michel Desjoyeaux were reunited in the 2019 Figaro Series. Photo: Alexis Courcoux<br \/>\n\u201cPeople always expect me to say that the Vende\u0301e Globe is my best victory,\u201d said Alain Gautier, who won the solo around the world race in 1992. \u201cFor me, it\u2019s not. Winning the first leg of the 1983 Figaro into Kinsale when I was 21 was my proudest moment as I crossed the line ahead of one of my sailing heroes, Philippe Poupon.\u201d<br \/>\nA scroll down the list of winners in both events reveals a close connection between the two races. Five of the eight Vende\u0301e winners have been Figaro champions. All but one have been Figaro competitors.\u00a0Both Desjoyeaux and Gautier have won the Figaro outright; Desjoyeaux three times from 13 events, Gautier once from 17. The numbers speak volumes. The bottom line is clear: winning the Figaro is always hard, no matter how many times you have tried.<br \/>\n\u201cIt took me nine editions of the race before I won it,\u201d said three-time Figaro winner Je\u0301re\u0301mie Beyou, whose long-term project lies with the 2020 Vende\u0301e Globe aboard his radical new IMOCA 60 Charal. So why was he, and so many like him, back in a boat a fraction of the size he is used to, in a race that could deliver potentially embarrassing results?<br \/>\nArticle continues below\u2026<\/p>\n<p>\t\t\t\t\t\tThe inside story of the nail-bitingly close 2019 Sydney-Hobart race<\/p>\n<p>\t\t\t\t\t\t\tHad any of the crew of the nine yachts that finished the inaugural Sydney Hobart Yacht Race in 1945 been\u2026<\/p>\n<p>\t\t\t\t\t\tBattle of the giants: The inside story of the Brest Atlantiques Race<\/p>\n<p>\t\t\t\t\t\t\tOn Tuesday 5 November four giant trimarans \u2013 Maxi Edmond de Rothschild, Macif, Sodebo and Actual Leader, and their double-handed\u2026<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThis is a very special event,\u201d he explains. \u201cIt is an irresistible challenge because the Figaro boats are identical and so you know how you are really doing compared to your competitors.<br \/>\n\u201cIt\u2019s a very personal race and it\u2019s very intense. There are times when you doubt yourself and want to give up. Times when you think: I\u2019m better than this, I\u2019m not happy with being so far behind, I don\u2019t need this, I want to turn on the engine and head home. But every day is like this in the Vende\u0301e Globe. So the Figaro is good training for that. You have to learn to cope with the highs and lows.\u201d<br \/>\nOthers, like Gildas Morvan, have shown even more commitment to the Brittany-based race. With 22 races under his belt and six leg wins, he is one of the longest serving Figaro sailors, yet he has never won overall. \u201cIt\u2019s hard to explain why it is such a big pull, but it is like a love affair,\u201d he said.<br \/>\nClose quarters, tactical racing places big demands on the solo skippers. Photo: Alexis Courcoux<br \/>\nEvent director Mathieu Sarrot has a different theory. \u201cIt\u2019s a drug \u2013 a good drug, but one for masochists,\u201d he says with a smile. While his work is ashore, he has followed 25 races, and is also clearly hooked.<br \/>\nUp against the world\u2019s best<br \/>\nGoing into the 2019 Figaro Series, top French star Yann Elie\u0300s had won the event three times from 19 attempts. \u201cIf you miss out racing for a season it takes years to get back to the front,\u201d he says. \u201cIt takes a long time to get to the stage to be ready but just a few minutes to lose all your confidence. But for some it\u2019s a brutal experience.<br \/>\n\u201cIn 1998 the first leg took six days. On the second leg, one boat sank near the coast and the skipper had to swim ashore and climb the cliffs with an injured arm, so this race can be very hard.\u201d<br \/>\nTanguy Le Turquais went hard aground in the Alderney Race aboard Queguiner. Photo: Alexis Courcoux<br \/>\nThe 50th anniversary marked a step change for the event with a brand new boat, the Beneteau Figaro 3. At 10.85m long, the new VPLP-designed, production built monohull is roughly the same size as her predecessor, the Figaro 2, but she is significantly more powerful downwind.<br \/>\nAsymmetric spinnakers flown off a fixed bowsprit mark a move away from the conventional poles and symmetrical kites of the previous model that lasted 15 years. Plus, the new sailplan includes a Code 0.<br \/>\nBut from the outside, the most obvious change is the retractable, curved daggerboards that extend out from the topsides like giant aquatic stabilisers, designed to provide righting moment on the leeward side at speed.<br \/>\nThe 50th anniversary marked a step change for the event with a brand new boat, the Beneteau Figaro 3. Photo: Yvan Zedda<br \/>\nThe combined effects of these changes, in addition to a more modern, faster hull form, has thrown conventional thinking out of the window. Far less is known about these boats than their predecessors, making it harder for skippers to plan their tactics and routing. Feel has become an important part of identifying the Figaro 3\u2019s sweet spots.<br \/>\n\u201cThis is one of the reasons that there are so many top sailors this year,\u201d offshore legend Loi\u0308ck Peyron tells me. \u201cWe are like kids at Christmas with the new toys and we want to know what makes the new boats work. It\u2019s also exciting to be discovering this at the same time as everyone else and it gives those of us who haven\u2019t been in the Figaro for a long time a chance to see if we can beat the Figaro specialists.\u201d<br \/>\nAlain Gautier agrees, and adds that the campaign costs also make this event and the new boat appealing. \u201cUnlike an IMOCA campaign where a new boat is going to cost around \u20ac5 million, money doesn\u2019t influence success in the Figaro class,\u201d he said. \u201cIf you charter a boat you can do a season\u2019s campaign for around \u20ac200,000 and be sailing against the world\u2019s best.\u201d<br \/>\nTom Dolan on Smurfit Kappa took 2nd place in the rookie division. Photo: Alexis Courcoux<br \/>\nFor the current Vende\u0301e Globe champion and local poster boy Armel Le Cle\u0301ac\u2019h, the new boat also means a return to some valuable hands-on training. \u201cOn the IMOCA and Ultime boats we rarely steer by hand, so the Figaro gives us the feel once again,\u201d he explains.<br \/>\n\u201cIt\u2019s easy to forget the feeling and how to achieve perfect balance aboard the big boats as there is so much else to control. Hand steering also puts you back in touch as you look at the clouds, feel the weather and the current.\u201d<br \/>\nAll of which has also helped to level the playing field this year across a fleet in which the skippers\u2019 ages span almost 40 years. In general, there were two different approaches. The young guns were sailing by feel while using AIS to keep an eye on the big names to validate their own thinking. Meanwhile, the old hands were quick to adopt their own tried and tested offshore routines, yet they were also trying to unlearn what they knew made the Figaro 2 go quickly.<br \/>\nHelming for 24 hours<br \/>\nIf the new boat was clearly one of the reasons for a big shake up in the results, the weather was another. The 545-mile opening leg from Nantes to Kinsale in Ireland saw Yoann Richomme, the 2018 Route du Rhum winner in the Class 40 fleet, take the first win, but only by one minute and 13 seconds ahead of Figaro rookie Tom Laperche.<br \/>\nJust under 22 minutes behind, Loi\u0308ck Peyron was 6th. Three minutes further back Desjoyeaux was 8th. Then came Le Cle\u0301ac\u2019h in 11th. Such a closely packed fleet in an event which is all about aggregate time rather than points, is typical of this race. In previous events, seconds have often been the winning margin. Not this time\u2026<br \/>\nThe course for Leg 2 from Kinsale to Roscoff via the Isle of Man was changed at the last minute to avoid a forecast that included winds of up to 35-40 knots in the St George\u2019s Channel. Instead, the fleet went east to Bishop Rock, then up to the Needles Fairway buoy to the west of the Isle of Wight, before then heading to the finish in Roscoff. But sending the fleet up the English Channel didn\u2019t keep them sheltered.<br \/>\n\u201cAt one point we had a 40 knot squall that was only forecast to be 25 knots,\u201d said Britain\u2019s Will Harris, racing Hive Energy. \u201cThe big kite was up when the breeze hit and I wasn\u2019t able to get it down. I\u2019ve never dropped it in that kind of breeze and it would have been far too risky. So I ended up helming for 24 hours.<br \/>\nJe\u0301re\u0301mie Beyou took time out from his IMOCA 60 Charal to compete in the Figaro Series. Photo: Charal Sailing Team<br \/>\n\u201cFortunately, because I thought it would be a windy period, I\u2019d packed my pockets with food and snacks as I knew I wasn\u2019t going to get any hot food. But the worrying thing was that we were all heading straight towards the TSS exclusion zone. Luckily, in the end we just missed it by about a mile.\u201d<br \/>\nThe 26 year old from Surrey made a name for himself in his first Figaro in 2016, winning the rookie prize for the highest-placed newcomer. This year, he was frequently punching above his weight once again.<br \/>\nA fast learner, he only took up keelboat sailing five years ago, but after his 2016 performance the French professionals saw his talent and invited him to join Po\u0302le Finisterre in Port-la-Fore\u0302t, regarded as one of the best training establishments in offshore race training.<br \/>\nWill Harris on Hive Energy crosses the finish line at Roscoff. Photo: Yvan Zedda<br \/>\n\u201cI\u2019ve spent the last six months living in Brittany, where I\u2019ve been training with the likes of Yann Elie\u0300s, Armel Le Cle\u0301ac\u2019h and Michel Desjoyeaux,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s been incredibly useful. You have to be at a certain level before you can be a part of it, past the basics of navigation and avoiding rocks. You need to be looking at the finer details. It\u2019s very intense training.<br \/>\n\u201cYou think that these sailors are untouchable and that they know all the answers, but they don\u2019t, especially with this new boat. They still need to sleep, just like the rest of us, they\u2019re just more efficient. And I learned it\u2019s not simply about fitness. For example, I now have lists for everything so I don\u2019t spend time fiddling around with settings, especially when I\u2019m tired and not thinking as straight.\u201d<br \/>\nHitting the red zone<br \/>\nSleep is a major topic in the Figaro. No one sleeps for more than 20 minutes at a time \u2013 they simply daren\u2019t. The racing is so close and the difference between the performance of the boats so noticeable between the autopilot and hand steering that going for a kip costs places.<br \/>\nLoi\u0308ck Peyron was drawn back to the event by the new boat, which he says is teaching him new tricks about trimming small boat. Photo: Yvan Zedda<br \/>\n\u201cYou\u2019ve got to know your limits, when you\u2019re in the red and, more importantly, when you\u2019re about to hit the red,\u201d says British sailor Alan Roberts. \u201cThe red zone is where you\u2019re hallucinating, you\u2019re talking to yourself, you\u2019re imagining things are going on and you\u2019re seeing things in the water.<br \/>\n\u201cYou\u2019re so tired that when something comes over the radio you can\u2019t string the words together to understand it and write it down. But you need to have been there to understand what you need to avoid because it\u2019s hard to simulate.\u201d<br \/>\nIn a previous race it is said that one skipper woke up when his boat went aground on the sand. As he rushed up on deck he was convinced that he was doing a delivery with his girlfriend and panicked when he discovered that she wasn\u2019t there.<br \/>\nFearing that she had gone overboard, he dropped the sails, broke the seal on the engine and motored around and around to try and find her. The penny only dropped when he saw the dodger in the guardwires with the Figaro logo and his name on it.<br \/>\nCurrent Vende\u0301e Globe champion and Ultime skipper Armel Le Cle\u0301ac\u2019h was among the offshore rock stars to be back in an 11m monohull. Photo: Alexis Courcoux<br \/>\nBy the time the fleet had arrived back in Roscoff, this time at the end of Leg 3, the cumulative effects of sleep deprivation meant that the effects of the red zone were starting to show through.<br \/>\nAs skippers arrived at the dock, even the pros struggled to answer questions and left long pauses as they stared into the distance. If this had been any other major racing event you would put their behaviour down to team politics, diplomacy or mind games. But here, they were simply so tired, so mentally exhausted that thinking before speaking was a big effort.<br \/>\nSlowed by weed<br \/>\nLeg 3 had been long and, for many, frustrating with some major tidal gates. In particular, one at Alderney, where the infamous tidal race and a light breeze that was insufficient for the fleet to overcome the current, shut the door and only a handful made it through.<br \/>\nWeed was a big problem too. Carbon weed-flossing sticks were often insufficient to remove the clumps that wrapped around each yacht\u2019s five foils. \u201cAt one point I had to stop the boat and go over the side to remove it as it had wrapped itself around the keel,\u201d recalls Alain Gautier.<br \/>\nAfter a relentless and often windless Leg 3, the rankings were bad for many of the big names, now several hours off the pace. Overall race leader Yoann Richomme had lost 10 hours on this leg and saw his enormous lead hacked back to just 1hr 26 mins for the fourth and final leg. This would have been a decent margin by normal standards, but 2019 was turning out to be anything but normal.<br \/>\nFor newcomers, a position on the podium was unlikely, but winning the rookie prize is a big first step in the Figaro. Even then, as an indication of just how different and difficult this event is, rookies aren\u2019t always what you might think.<br \/>\n\u201cOn the face of it, with three round-the-world races under my belt including a Vende\u0301e Globe, it makes no sense to say that I\u2019m a rookie. Yet for me the learning curve has been vertical,\u201d said New Zealander Conrad Colman, who was racing Ethical Power.<br \/>\n\u201cThe reality is that, no matter where you have come from, be it the Vende\u0301e Globe, the Olympics or any other discipline within the sport, when you come to the Figaro for the first time you\u2019re a rookie because you need to combine so many different types of racing. This year there were 11 rookie sailors.<br \/>\nThe event is dominated by the French and while international sailors do take part, learning the language and the culture make the challenge of competing even tougher.<\/p>\n<p>The 2019 Figaro Series in numbers<br \/>\n4 legs<br \/>\n2,130 miles<br \/>\n47 entrants<br \/>\n6 nationalities<br \/>\n11 rookies<br \/>\nBig commitment<br \/>\n\u201cThe hard fact is that if you want to be even remotely competitive in the Figaro you have to come to France, you have to live here, you have to get involved with one of the training centres and you have to change your phone number to +33,\u201d says former Figaro sailor and professional project manager Marcus Hutchinson of Vivi Resources.<br \/>\n\u201cIt requires a big commitment; you\u2019ve got to be here full-time. To reflect this challenge and to encourage those who do make the commitment we have provided a new perpetual trophy this season, the Vivi trophy, which is for the first international skipper.\u201d<br \/>\nAs Leg 4 played out, there was continual intensity in a 500-mile needlematch across the Channel from Roscoff to the finish in Dieppe. The tactical challenges of working along the UK\u2019s south coast with its notorious tidal gates and tricky headlands were made even tougher by a mixture of light winds, squalls, thunder, lightning, rain and fog.<br \/>\nWithin the 47-boat fleet, the battles between the newcomers and some of the world\u2019s most accomplished sailors continued to rage. La Solitaire Urgo Le Figaro is like a one-design dinghy race, played out on a coastal course. Everyone knows it\u2019s tough. There is no shame in being at the back; everyone has been there.<br \/>\nYoann Richomme sailing HelloWork-Telegram Group pulled out an 11-hour lead only to see it hacked back to just over one hour after Leg 3. Photo: Alexis Courcoux<br \/>\nAnd be they rookies or rock stars, Desjoyeaux speaks for them all when he sums up the Figaro: \u201cThis is the best offshore school in the world. The one who wins will be the one who makes the least mistakes.\u201d<br \/>\nAnd the winner is\u2026<br \/>\nBy the end of the final leg, the Figaro had at last played to form, with the bulk of the fleet finishing within one hour. But no one was able to eat into Yoann Richomme\u2019s leading margin, giving the French skipper, also the 2016 overall winner, another Figaro victory.<br \/>\n\u201cI am really moved. I never thought I\u2019d win two. This was a really tough event,\u201d he said. Meanwhile, British sailor Alan Roberts took the Vivi Trophy for the first international skipper, and Benjamin Schwartz earned the top rookie prize.<br \/>\nThis article was first published in the August 2019 edition of Yachting World. The delayed 2020 Figaro Series is due to run from August 27 \u2013 September 20.<br \/>\nThe post Figaro Series: The hardest sailing race on the planet where money means nothing appeared first on Yachting World.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The legendary Michel Desjoyeaux says the Figaro Series is the hardest race in the world. Matthew Shehan finds out whyThe Figaro Series fleet makes an impressive sight at the start. Photo: Yvan Zedda\u201cThis is the hardest race \u2013 not to &hellip; <\/p>\n<p class=\"link-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/velocityyachts.com\/blog\/figaro-series-the-hardest-sailing-race-on-the-planet-where-money-means-nothing\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Figaro Series: The hardest sailing race on the planet where money means nothing&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":2536,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[5],"tags":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v23.0 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Figaro Series: The hardest sailing race on the planet where money means nothing - Yachting Blog, Yacht News, Charter Yacht Blog<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/velocityyachts.com\/blog\/figaro-series-the-hardest-sailing-race-on-the-planet-where-money-means-nothing\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Figaro Series: The hardest sailing race on the planet where money means nothing - Yachting Blog, Yacht News, Charter Yacht Blog\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The legendary Michel Desjoyeaux says the Figaro Series is the hardest race in the world. 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Matthew Shehan finds out whyThe Figaro Series fleet makes an impressive sight at the start. 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