Blessed with bright Caribbean sunshine and a 20-knot trade
wind for the final passage around the island of Basse Terre, French solo
skipper Armel Tripon today won the Multi50 class in the 2018 Route du
Rhum-Destination Guadeloupe. The 43-year-old solo ocean racing veteran from Nantes crossed the
finish line off Pointe-à-Pitre on his brown and white trimaran, Réauté Chocolat,
at 16:32hrs local time this afternoon (20:32hrsUTC/21:32hrs CET) and
becomes the third finisher in the four-yearly 3,542-nautical mile
single-handed race from Saint Malo in Brittany.
Tripon’s race time was 11 days, seven hours, 32 minutes and 40
seconds. He missed the class record for the race set by Erwan Le Roux in
2014 – who is on course to finish this race in second place behind
Tripon tomorrow - by just two hours and 19 minutes.
The sun was just starting to set as a relieved and delighted Tripon
brought his multihull alongside Pointe-à-Pitre's victory dock, in front
of the iconic Memorial ACTe dedicated to the history of the slave trade.
“I am very moved by the excitement of this finish but with it comes
such a release of pressure," admitted the shaven-headed Tripon. "The
stress is just constant in these boats. It wears you down. So here I am,
burned out. I am cooked. But I am so, so, so happy for this team."
The 43-year-old Frenchman who is in just his second year in
the fast, light Multi50 trimaran class, was not tipped among the
favourites to win when the 11th edition of this classic race that started in Saint Malo on Sunday, November 4th.
But just as 62-year-old veteran Francis Joyon defied the odds to conclude a thrilling outright race win on Sunday night in the ULTIME class, so Tripon brought his Multi50 safely across the finish line to a well-earned victory. He finished three days, 17 hours and 10 minutes after Joyon crossed the finish line on IDEC Sport.
A proven all-rounder, this is Tripon's second transatlantic race win and comes 15 years after his victory in the 2003 Mini Transat, the entry-level solo ocean racing championship, sailed in 6.5-metre prototypes.
"This is my second transatlantic victory but this is one is about maturity," said Tripon. "Fifteen years after the Mini Transat, this is about a project delivered by a great team. With Réauté Chocolat we set ourselves a two-year project for the Route du Rhum and here we are, reaching that goal. It's fabulous. Now it is time to celebrate."
But just as 62-year-old veteran Francis Joyon defied the odds to conclude a thrilling outright race win on Sunday night in the ULTIME class, so Tripon brought his Multi50 safely across the finish line to a well-earned victory. He finished three days, 17 hours and 10 minutes after Joyon crossed the finish line on IDEC Sport.
A proven all-rounder, this is Tripon's second transatlantic race win and comes 15 years after his victory in the 2003 Mini Transat, the entry-level solo ocean racing championship, sailed in 6.5-metre prototypes.
"This is my second transatlantic victory but this is one is about maturity," said Tripon. "Fifteen years after the Mini Transat, this is about a project delivered by a great team. With Réauté Chocolat we set ourselves a two-year project for the Route du Rhum and here we are, reaching that goal. It's fabulous. Now it is time to celebrate."
With stormy conditions in the Bay of Biscay and North
Atlantic during the first few days of the race, Tripon profited from a
prudent, safety-first strategy in the first half of the course when he
stayed more south and east than his rivals and so avoided the worst of a
malicious Atlantic depression which caused multiple problems among the
123-strong fleet.
"The key, I think, was sneaking a little passage through the front
better than the others,” he said, explaining that he sailed 500 miles to
the east of the leaders. But the stress remained until the finish line.
"I had a few frights, believe me,” he continued.
“Two nights ago it was so squally - that was the worst night of the
race. And then last night you are just afraid something will break so
close to the finish. Scares? I had lots. I remember one night when the
boat was heeling and heeling I could not dump the mainsail because the
sheet was jammed."
While all four of the top-placed skippers in the early running in the
class made stops, Tripon managed to complete the course non-stop. He
came close to the Portuguese coast at one stage but headed back out to
sea and then sailed a lonely race in the trade winds hundreds of miles
to the south of his rivals
He was well-positioned to profit when the two leaders of the six strong division, Thibault Vauchel-Camus (Solidaires en Peloton-ARSEP) and Erwan Le Roux (FenêtréA-Mix Buffet), both had to make pit-stops in the Azores to make repairs.
By the time they resumed, Tripon was well ahead and he remained
unchallenged through the last six-and-a-half days of racing. He was well
out in front when Lalou Roucayrol capsized his Multi50, Arkema, early yesterday morning about 1,000 miles from the finish.
Over the years Tripon has proven his versatility, moving through
sailing's solo and short-handed classes, from the Mini to seven barren
years in the Solitaire du Figaro fleet, to Class40 and then IMOCA. He
finished fourth in the last Route du Rhum-Destination Guadeloupe in the
IMOCA class on Humble Heroes.
But his victory today is an excellent stepping-stone for him as he
heads back into the IMOCA class. The Frenchman has a brand new 60-footer
in build, designed by Sam Manuard and backed by a major sponsor. Now he
is looking to take this success up to the next level, racing solo
non-stop around-the-world in the 2020 Vendée Globe.
The next finisher in the race is expected to be Britain’s Alex Thomson on Hugo Boss who
is on course to win the IMOCA class. He is now less than 140 miles from
the line. Behind him Erwan Le Roux is set to be the runner-up in the
Multi50s behind Tripon and has just over 200 miles to go.
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