Jean Yves Bernot, Arve Roass and Grant Wharington sporting the unshaven look. It’s possible to see that we have been out sailing for a while. Onboard photo / djuice team.
No other team relies so heavily on French sailing expertise. World-renowned weather router and navigator Jean Yves Bernot plots the boat’s course, while Thomas Coville and Jaques Vincent support the team with trimming and driving. Building 25% of the total crew of 12, they a major force on deck of the pink yacht.
Djuice’s approach is similar to other sports, like cycling or short track skating, where the top contenders stay in the middle of the pack until the final assault shortly before the finish. Not to mention that a third of the crew is Australian and must think about their fellow countryman who claimed Australia’s first Olympic winter gold.
The jump into second started to unfold yesterday evening, when neither Tyco nor ASSA ABLOY covered the djuice dragons when they moved away from the fleet towards land. There they found a gentle north-easterly breeze when everybody else struggled in no wind at all. Djuice’s navigator, Jean Yves Bernot commented on this decision after stepping off the yacht he has been on for more than three weeks : "As there was no wind offshore, we had to try inshore. Even though there were some discussions on board."
This second placing is djuice’s first top three result and will add a lot to their confidence in the ability of the Davidson designed boat, as well as in the team.
Two days ago Knut Frostad wrote, when lying in fifth position : "As the results from the winter Olympics are ticking in, and I proudly see that Norway is second overall, it makes me even more motivated to give everything we can on the last miles left. Hold your breath..."
Volvo Ocean Race Position Report, Day 24, 1146 GMT
11th Hour Racing Team has won The Ocean Race 2022-23, the world’s longest and toughest team sporting event - the first time a US team has won in the 50-year history of the Race.
The next edition of The Ocean Race, scheduled to start from Alicante, Spain in October 2021, will visit 10 international cities, including the start port and the Grand Finale finish in Genoa, Italy in the summer of 2022.
The latest edition of the Volvo Ocean Race, which started in Alicante, Spain in October 2017 and finished in The Hague in the Netherlands in June 2018, will be remembered as the closest in race history, as well as a record-breaking event on many levels.
Dongfeng Race Team has won the Volvo Ocean Race 2017-18 in the closest finish in race history.
Skipper Charles Caudrelier led his team to victory on the final leg of the race, a 970-mile sprint from Gothenburg, Sweden to The Hague.
Incredibly, it marked the first leg win for the team — it couldn’t have come at a better time.
Charlie Enright’s Vestas 11th Hour Racing showed great patience and sailed a clean race for a victory in the Gothenburg In-Port Race on Sunday.
But it was Xabi Fernández’s MAPFRE team who rode a third place finish on Sunday to win the overall In-Port Race Series, sailing 11 points clear of their closest pursuers, Dongfeng Race Team.
With (…)
The scientific research, using data collected by Race team ‘Turn the Tide on Plastic’, identified over three million micro plastic particles per square kilometre of ocean.
The sub-surface data on micro plastic pollution levels was collected using a state-of-the-art instrument on board their Volvo Ocean 65 racing yacht.
Vingt-quatre heures après les monocoques, ce sont les quatorze multicoques qui ont franchi à leur tour la ligne de départ mouillée devant le port du Havre.
Never in the history of ocean racing has a course attracted so many Open 60ft trimarans, nor so many potential winners. The entire multihull armada and with it the skippers of the moment are all lined up along one side of the docks in Le Havre, a truly impressive sight in itself.
Jamais dans l’histoire de la voile océanique, une course n’a réuni autant de trimarans ni de vainqueurs potentiels. Les meilleurs marins du moment et toute l’armada des multicoques 60 pieds Open est ici présente et cette transatlantique nouvelle formule cache un nombre de paramètres inconnus tellement importants qu’il est difficile de (…)
The nineteen strong international fleet of 12 Open 60ft and 7 Open 50ft monohulls lined up for the start of the 5th edition of the double-handed Transat Jacques Vabre finally set off from Le Havre, France on their 4,340m race to Bahia, Brazil at 1250hrs (French time) today under a crisp blue November sky.
Les dix-neuf monocoques inscrits dans cette cinquième Transat Jacques Vabre ont bien pris le large ce samedi 3 novembre. Destination Bahia (Brésil) : 4 300 milles (près de 8 000 km) de course a avalé au menu avec pour terrains de jeu La Manche puis le vaste Atlantique, soit entre 17 et 21 jours estimés de course.
Le Néerlandais Roy Heiner quitte aujourd’hui l’équipe de ASSA ABLOY. La direction du syndicat suédois participant à la Volvo Ocean Race estime qu’il valait mieux, pour une meilleure performance de l’équipe, que Roy Heiner renonce à son rôle de skipper. C’est le Britannique Neal McDonald qui va le remplacer pour la deuxième étape.
As of today, Saturday, November 3rd, British sailor Neal McDonald (38) from Hamble, UK, will be Skipper of ASSA ABLOY, replacing Roy Heiner (NED). McDonald will join Mark Rudiger (USA) as Co-Skipper at least for Leg 2 (from Cape Town to Sydney). McDonald is recognized as one of the world’s best sailors with an impressive record in ocean (…)
Le départ de la transat Jacques Vabre a été donné à l’heure prévue devant le port du Havre. Sous un ciel bleu et un petit vent frais, les dix-neuf monocoques se sont élancés vers Salvador de Bahia au Brésil à 12h50, heure française.
Coup de zoom sur l’exceptionnelle flotte des monocoques qui prendra le départ de cette cinquième édition de la Transat Jacques Vabre, ce samedi 3 novembre, de la ville du Havre. Douze monocoques de 60 pieds open ont répondu présents épaulés de sept unités de 50 pieds : la lutte s’annonce des plus prometteuses et il est des plus difficiles de (…)