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La Solitaire du Figaro

4th December 2009

La Solitaire du Figaro

2005 Race

1st Leg – Perros-Guirec to Getxo-Bilbao (390 miles) – A clean and fast start to the race for all. There is a downwind spinnaker crossing of the Bay of Biscay and then fight to the finish among the great and experienced of La Solitaire. 8 knots of top average speed on a race that is won by Gildas Morvan (Cercle Vert). Cercle Vert finishes 1 minute and 47 seconds ahead of the Jérémie who finishes 2nd. Gildas Morvan sets the pace and ensures his place as a serious contender for the remaining 3 legs.

2nd Leg – Getxo-Bilbao to La Rochelle (368 miles) – The leg goes to the Italian rookie sailor Pietro D’Ali on Nanni Diesel, a triumphant win in La Rochelle. The high pressure ridge to negotiate in the Bay of Biscay becomes the dangerous trap in which Jérémie gets caught, forces him to fight it out on the last arduous run to the finish line, to keep the time difference to a minimum. He finishes 10th and 27 minutes and 5 seconds behind the leader. Now he finds himself in 4th place in the overall provisory rankings with a 17 minute and 25 second deficit over the new leader, Pietro D’Alí.

3rd Leg – La Rochelle – Cork (456 miles) – It is a long and arduous leg upwind with rough seas to Ireland. Jérémie leads the fleet for the fist 24 hours on a path to victory only to see it snatched away. A 5th place finish with a 26 minute and 20 second time difference on the first. However, due to his consistency and perseverance he remains only 10 minutes and 32 seconds behind a new overall leader, Laurent Pellecuer (Cliptol Sport).

4th Leg – Cork to Port Bourgenay (428 miles) – We know the outcome… Jérémie, on this leg, that will forever be remembered by the Figaro sailors for the tough conditions endured, makes history and become the newly crowned winner of La Solitaire Afflelou Le Figaro for 2005. A worthy winner at 29, Jérémie Beyou is welcomed by thousands of visitors who turn to welcome the new hero of La Solitaire.

1/ Jérémie Beyou - 2/ Michel Desjoyeaux - 3/ Kito de Pavant (46 starters, 43 ranked)

 

2006 Race

Leg 1: Cherbourg-Octeville/Santander – 590 miles – tactical, technical and downwind... For the 37th edition of La Solitaire Afflelou le Figaro race, the first leg from Concarneau to Santander was the longest at 590 miles. The race between France and Spain was set over a course that took the 44 single handed sailors round two marks off the south coast England; Shambles and Wolf Rock. After a start in the Bay of Cherbourg in light winds, a rookie sailor, Corentin Douguet (E.Leclerc Bouygues Telecom) lead the fleet from the Radio France offset mark across the English Channel on a long downwind run to Shambles buoy. The next 135 miles along the south coast is fought upwind. Gildas Morvan (Cercle Vert), who positions himself furthest north, rounds Wolf Rock in the lead ahead of Charles Caudrelier (Bostik) and Gérald Veniard (Scutum). Spinnakers are hoisted in 25 knots of breeze and then it is fast run south to the Bay of Biscay. The wind gradually slackens and becomes variable on the final approach to the Cantabrian town of Santander. At 1 am on the 9th of August, Scutum, particularly fast downwind, moves into the lead, a lead he maintains right to the finish. At 18h31 that same day, Gérald Veniard crosses the finish line after 79 hours and 24 minutes of racing (at an average 7,43 knots) ahead of Gildas Morvan (Cercle Vert) and Charles Caudrelier (Bostik). Gérald is to later loose his first place after the jury applies a 24 minute penalty for exceeding the weight limit 3 hours prior to the start in Cherbourg.

Leg 2: Santander/Saint-Gilles-Croix-de-Vie – 314 miles – West gives runaway leaders huge advantages... Against all odds, it is on the shorted leg of the 37th edition of La Solitaire, that a winner is decided. Following a wonderful inshore race in the bay of Santander, set with the backdrop of the Magdalena castle, Eric Drouglazet (PIXmania.com) is the first skipper to pass the Radio France offset mark. The 44 competitors proceed on to the Birvideaux Lighthouse on one long run. The conditions, unclear from the start, complicate the sailing for all but two ingenious sailors. Nicolas Troussel and Thierry Chabagny head off west off the course and are the only two sailors to find wind. First and second in Saint-Gilles-Croix-de-Vie after 62 hours racing, these two sailors manage to gain more than 4 hours advantage over Armel Le Cléac’h (Brit’Air), the third to finish in the Vendee town. The advantage the winner gains over the rest of the competitors is vast (ranging from 7 to 16 hours). This marks the deciding point of the 37th edition of La Solitaire Afflelou Le Figaro.

Leg 3: Saint-Gilles-Croix-de-Vie / Dingle – 545 miles - A windy 30 hour run upwind for a lottery ticket finish... With barely any time to rest in Saint-Gilles-Croix-de-Vie, the 44 skippers leave the Vendée for Ireland just 36 hours later. The race organisers reduce the leg by 70 miles, cutting out the trip down to the Ile de Ré. The boats head north, led by Armel Le Cléac’h (Bit’Air), in a big sea swell and on an abeam reach. Jeanne Grégoire (Banque Populaire) moves in to take the lead, which she holds for the next 30 hours of upwind tacking in strong 25 to 30 knots of north westerly wind. Ingeniously, the rookie sailor, Erwan Israël (Delta Dore) momentarily takes the lead from Jeanne. The fleet regroups at the Fastnet Rock for the final run along the southern Irish coast to Dingle. Liz Wardley (Sojasan), who flies up the fleet having taken a westerly option, joins Jeanne Grégoire, who still maintains control of the fleet. Everything boils down to the 21st of August, just five hours before the finish; a calm settles over all those close to shore, among these Jeanne Grégoire and Nicholas Troussel (Financo), whom are forced to drop the anchor as they watch despairingly those further out hoist their spinnakers and avoid the treacherous calm. Samantha Davies (Roxy), Corentin Douguet (E.Leclerc-Bouygues Telecom), Gérald Veniard (Scutum), Nicolas Bérenger (Koné Ascenseurs), Marc Emig (A.ST Group) and Gildas Mahé (Le Comptoir Immobilier) all benefit from their fellow competitors wrong footing. As the sun sets, the calm settles once again over the fleet in the Bay of Dingle. The myriad of green red and white lights appear out of the darkness making it impossible to say who can win in the night. Gérald Veniard, with his masterstroke of genius, crosses first again. The second leg will be remembered for the huge gaps built at the finish and the third leg for the minimal ones. 35 boats cross the finish line after 83 hours and 479 miles in under 35 minutes!

Leg 4: Dingle/Concarneau – 458 miles - Full pelt under spinnaker to the Scilly Isles and the calm for the finish... A third for Gérald Veniard. The skipper of Scutum wins the fourth and final leg between Dingle and Concarneau. The exhausting race, 458 miles long pushes the sailors to the absolute limits; 36 hours of strong downwind sailing under spinnaker in a huge sea swell and then a nerve-racking day spent in frustratingly calm conditions before the finish. Nicolas Troussel (Financo) who leads the overall ranking at this point, starts well to round the Radio France offset mark in Dingle first and then the trio Le Cléac’h, Veniard and Bérenger (Kone Ascenseurs) take control of the fleet in this marathon spinnaker run to the Scilly Isles. Veniard pips Le Cléac’h at the post at the Seven Stones lighthouse boat to take the Grand Prix Suzuki. The frightening gybes in 30 knots, is not for the weak or faint hearted; blown spinnakers or wrapped round the forestay and then faulty autopilots or electronics are some of the problems encountered. Everything changes at Ushant, the wind drops and the fleet set the counter to zero for a new start just 100 miles from the finish. Once again, the West proves best. Christophe Lebas (Armor Lux) makes an astounding climb up the fleet whilst Le Cléac’h, Eliès and many others are forced to drop anchor. Feeling the wind come in further ashore, Veniard heads out together with Krauss (AXA Plaisance) and Marc Emig (A.ST Group). It is these three who eventually win in Concarneau. Nicolas Troussel and Thierry Chabagny manage to keep their time advantage and therefore 1st and 2nd places overall, so masterfully established in Saint Gilles-Croix-de-Vie. Le Cléac’h relinquishes his third place to Gérald, the triple leg winner.

1/ Nicolas Troussel - 2/ Thierry Chabagny - 3/ Gérald Veniard (44 starters, 44 ranked)

 

2007 Race

Leg 1: Caen to Crosshaven (415 miles) – Tactical with currents and rocky coastlines… “I can’t ever remember as a young Figaro sailor having seen so many changes to the leadership. It was like musical chairs, well that is what the first leg of the 2007 edition of La Solitaire was like”. The “young” Figaro sailor, talking that morning of the 3rd of August, was none other than Michel Desjoyeaux who finished third in Ireland, behind Nicolas Troussel (Financo) and the victor, Frédéric Duthil on Distinxion. The leg was full of changes, each part of the racecourse requiring careful strategy: passing the Barfleur mark, the English Channel crossing, navigating along the south coast of England with the currents and calm areas…right up to the “re-start” between Lands End and the Scilly Isles where the fleet re-grouped to cover the last 140 miles of the leg. Just one Figaro sailor did not get to the start line: James Bird (GFI Group) who missed the first leg after hitting something upon leaving the port. The other 49 skippers did not have a moment’s rest on the 415-mile leg. It was a continuous tactical game with currents and wind shifts to deal with leading to seven lead changes: Duthil at the Radio France mark, Gérald Veniard (Scutum) at the Fairways buoy, Michel Desjoyeaux (Foncia) along the south coat of England, Gildas Morvan (Cercle Vert) and then Nicolas Bérenger (Koné Ascenseurs) at the mark at Hand Deeps, Thierry Chabagny (Brossard) at Cape Lizard and finally Fred Duthil, who at 33 years of age won his first leg after 4 participations. He covered the leg in 2 days, 19 hours, 49 minutes and 55 seconds at an average speed of 6,12 knots.

Leg 2: Crosshaven/Brest (344 miles) – An exhausting sprint... The second leg to Brest via the Fastnet, 344 miles long, proved to be exhausting. For 41 hours the sailors went without sleep, stuck to the helm as they reached their way round the southern shores of Ireland before rounding the Fastnet and then tackling the 200 mile downhill run south to Ushant. Shattered and full of stories of hallucinations, the sailors all tried their best to shine out by the time they reached Brest. In the end it was Michel Desjoyeaux who won the leg, the sixth Figaro leg win of his career, ahead of Frédéric Duthil and the local Brestois sailor, Gildas Mahé (Le Comptoir Immobilier). The 50 solo sailors set off from the Bay of Cork in the rain, with Foncia leading the fleet round the Radio France mark. There then followed a 10-hour sail along the stunning Irish coastline with Gildas Morvan (Cercle Vert) heading the fleet followed by Frédéric Duthil, who rounded the Fastnet Rock in the lead. Then conditions got tough with 20 knots of wind and a rough sea…the downhill run proved to be exhilarating but also exhausting. On the 7th of August Michel Desjoyeaux moved into the lead and never lost it. After a final game of cat and mouse in the vast bottleneck harbour of Brest with Duthil, Mahé, Lebas, Bérenger, Morvan and Chabagny, Foncia crosses the finish line at 05h20 the next day to win the leg.

Leg 3: Brest / La Corogne via BXA (562 miles) – Corentin Douguet – the king of upwind sailing... On Saturday 11th of August the weather forecasts at the Fastnet rock were predicting 55 knots of wind and huge seas. Because of this, the Race Committee decided to avoid sending the 50 solo sailors in that direction. And so the longest leg of the race was reduced from 762 miles to 562. The new course left out the Fastnet and had the fleet heading down to the Gironde Estuary and the BXA mark before heading for La Coruña in Galicia. After a third start in light winds; some skippers were forced to anchor over the evening to hold their position against the turning tide at the Raz de Sein. Shooting stars and wonderful spinnaker sailing conditions followed for the first night at sea. Michel Desjoyeaux (Foncia), Gildas Mahé (Le Comptoir Immobilier) and Thierry Chabagny (Brossard) enjoyed the lead initially, but it was Jean-Pierre Nicol (Gavottes) and then Christian Bos (Belle Ile en Mer) who managed to get out of the calm area after BXA first. The calm was deceptive because soon after the fleet endured a 300-mile battle in winds gusting 45 knots and 5 metre waves to get to the finish in La Coruña. Corentin Douguet (E.Leclerc/Bouygues Telecom) proved strongest in these hellish conditions. He decided to tack South for the finish last and won his first leg with a healthy margin over the rest of the fleet. Only Nicolas Troussel (Financo) and Michel Desjoyeaux (Foncia) were able to limit the damage by finishing in 2nd and 3rd place, 24 and 47 minutes behind respectively. Huge gaps built after that and the overall time rankings were completely changed: Michel Desjoyeaux moved into first place with a 9 minute lead on Corentin Douguet and 14 minutes ahead of Nicolas Troussel.

Leg 4 : La Coruna/Les Sables d’Olonne (340 miles) – Second leg win for Fred Duthil/Michel Desjoyeaux triumphs for the third time... From an upwind thrashing to a downwind one! After a start in sunny conditions in a big swell, the wind increased and continued to increase throughout the race. For the first part of the race, the idea was to work out where to position oneself on the race course, either north or south for the crossing of the Bay of Biscay to reach Les Sables d’Olonne. Butin the end it came down to the gruelling weather conditions - 40 knots of wind, gusting to 50 with 5 metre high waves in the pitch-black night. For some it was a matter of survival, for others it remained a full on battle to the finish with the maximum amount of sail up. Fred Duthil, a former windsurf champion, and Gérald Veniard (Scutum) sailed furthest south and on the most direct route to the finish. Duthil refused to even put a reef in and overtook Veniard who close to the finish blew out his spinnaker. With waves thundering over the boats, Jeanne Grégoire (Banque Populaire) dismasted just 25 miles from the finish. Douguet, Mahé, Troussel and Desjoyeaux took the most northern course in search of the best angle for the final approach based on the wind shift due to come in, but when it did it was not for long. Fred Duthil took a second amazing win followed by Gérald Veniard and who other than… Michel Desjoyeaux, who joined the legends of La Solitiare, Jean Le Cam and Philippe Poupon as the only ever triple winners of the race. Fred Duthil moved back onto the podium to take second place 26 minutes behind Michel Desjoyeaux with Corentin Douguet taking 3rd. Nicolas Lunven (Bostik) takes the Bénéteau Rookie class lead off Vincent Biarnes (Côtes d’Armor) and Aymeric Belloir (Cap 56).

And so Michel Desjoyeaux remains the undisputed King of Solo! 

 

2008 Race

Leg 1: Caen to Crosshaven (415 miles)– Tactical with currents and rocky coastlines… “I can’t ever remember as a young Figaro sailor having seen so many changes to the leadership. It was like musical chairs, well that is what the first leg of the 2007 edition of La Solitaire was like”. The “young” Figaro sailor, talking that morning of the 3rd of August, was none other than Michel Desjoyeaux who finished third in Ireland, behind Nicolas Troussel (Financo) and the victor, Frédéric Duthil on Distinxion. The leg was full of changes, each part of the racecourse requiring careful strategy: passing the Barfleur mark, the English Channel crossing, navigating along the south coast of England with the currents and calm areas… right up to the “re-start” between Lands End and the Scilly Isles where the fleet re-grouped to cover the last 140 miles of the leg. Just one Figaro sailor did not get to the start line: James Bird (GFI Group) who missed the first leg after hitting something upon leaving the port. The other 49 skippers did not have a moment’s rest on the 415-mile leg. It was a continuous tactical game with currents and wind shifts to deal with leading to seven lead changes: Duthil at the Radio France mark, Gérald Veniard (Scutum) at the Fairways buoy, Michel Desjoyeaux (Foncia) along the south coat of England, Gildas Morvan (Cercle Vert) and then Nicolas Bérenger (Koné Ascenseurs) at the mark at Hand Deeps, Thierry Chabagny (Brossard) at Cape Lizard and finally Fred Duthil, who at 33 years of age won his first leg after 4 participations. He covered the leg in 2 days, 19 hours, 49 minutes and 55 seconds at an average speed of 6,12 knots.

Leg 2: Crosshaven/Brest (344 miles) – An exhausting sprint... The second leg to Brest via the Fastnet, 344 miles long, proved to be exhausting. For 41 hours the sailors went without sleep, stuck to the helm as they reached their way round the southern shores of Ireland before rounding the Fastnet and then tackling the 200 mile downhill run south to Ushant. Shattered and full of stories of hallucinations, the sailors all tried their best to shine out by the time they reached Brest. In the end it was Michel Desjoyeaux who won the leg, the sixth Figaro leg win of his career, ahead of Frédéric Duthil and the local Brestois sailor, Gildas Mahé (Le Comptoir Immobilier). The 50 solo sailors set off from the Bay of Cork in the rain, with Foncia leading the fleet round the Radio France mark. There then followed a 10-hour sail along the stunning Irish coastline with Gildas Morvan (Cercle Vert) heading the fleet followed by Frédéric Duthil, who rounded the Fastnet Rock in the lead. Then conditions got tough with 20 knots of wind and a rough sea…the downhill run proved to be exhilarating but also exhausting. On the 7th of August Michel Desjoyeaux moved into the lead and never lost it. After a final game of cat and mouse in the vast bottleneck harbour of Brest with Duthil, Mahé, Lebas, Bérenger, Morvan and Chabagny, Foncia crosses the finish line at 05h20 the next day to win the leg.

Leg 3: Brest/La Corogne via BXA (562 miles) – Corentin Douguet – the king of upwind sailing... On Saturday 11th of August the weather forecasts at the Fastnet rock were predicting 55 knots of wind and huge seas. Because of this, the Race Committee decided to avoid sending the 50 solo sailors in that direction. And so the longest leg of the race was reduced from 762 miles to 562. The new course left out the Fastnet and had the fleet heading down to the Gironde Estuary and the BXA mark before heading for La Coruña in Galicia. After a third start in light winds; some skippers were forced to anchor over the evening to hold their position against the turning tide at the Raz de Sein. Shooting stars and wonderful spinnaker sailing conditions followed for the first night at sea. Michel Desjoyeaux (Foncia), Gildas Mahé (Le Comptoir Immobilier) and Thierry Chabagny (Brossard) enjoyed the lead initially, but it was Jean-Pierre Nicol (Gavottes) and then Christian Bos (Belle Ile en Mer) who managed to get out of the calm area after BXA first. The calm was deceptive because soon after the fleet endured a 300-mile battle in winds gusting 45 knots and 5 metre waves to get to the finish in La Coruña. Corentin Douguet (E.Leclerc/Bouygues Telecom) proved strongest in these hellish conditions. He decided to tack South for the finish last and won his first leg with a healthy margin over the rest of the fleet. Only Nicolas Troussel (Financo) and Michel Desjoyeaux (Foncia) were able to limit the damage by finishing in 2nd and 3rd place, 24 and 47 minutes behind respectively. Huge gaps built after that and the overall time rankings were completely changed: Michel Desjoyeaux moved into first place with a 9 minute lead on Corentin Douguet and 14 minutes ahead of Nicolas Troussel.

Leg 4: La Coruna/Les Sables d’Olonne (340 miles) – Second leg win for Fred Duthil/Michel Desjoyeaux triumphs for the third time – From an upwind thrashing to a downwind one! After a start in sunny conditions in a big swell, the wind increased and continued to increase throughout the race. For the first part of the race, the idea was to work out where to position oneself on the race course, either north or south for the crossing of the Bay of Biscay to reach Les Sables d’Olonne. Butin the end it came down to the gruelling weather conditions - 40 knots of wind, gusting to 50 with 5 metre high waves in the pitch-black night. For some it was a matter of survival, for others it remained a full on battle to the finish with the maximum amount of sail up. Fred Duthil, a former windsurf champion, and Gérald Veniard (Scutum) sailed furthest south and on the most direct route to the finish. Duthil refused to even put a reef in and overtook Veniard who close to the finish blew out his spinnaker. With waves thundering over the boats, Jeanne Grégoire (Banque Populaire) dismasted just 25 miles from the finish. Douguet, Mahé, Troussel and Desjoyeaux took the most northern course in search of the best angle for the final approach based on the wind shift due to come in, but when it did it was not for long. Fred Duthil took a second amazing win followed by Gérald Veniard and who other than… Michel Desjoyeaux, who joined the legends of La Solitiare, Jean Le Cam and Philippe Poupon as the only ever triple winners of the race. Fred Duthil moved back onto the podium to take second place 26 minutes behind Michel Desjoyeaux with Corentin Douguet taking 3rd. Nicolas Lunven (Bostik) takes the Bénéteau Rookie class lead off Vincent Biarnes (Côtes d’Armor) and Aymeric Belloir (Cap 56).

And so Michel Desjoyeaux remains the undisputed King of Solo! 

 


 

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Ireland & La Solitaire du Figaro

The Solitaire du Figaro, was originally called the course de l’Aurore until 1980, was created in 1970 by Jean-Louis Guillemard and Jean-Michel Barrault.

Half a decade later, the race has created some of France's top offshore sailors, and it celebrated its 50th anniversary with a new boat equipped with foils and almost 50 skippers Including novices, aficionados and six former winners.

The solo multi-stage offshore sailing race is one of the most cherished races in French sailing and one that has had Irish interest stretching back over 20 years due to the number of Irish stopovers, usually the only foreign leg of the French race.

What Irish ports have hosted The Solitaire du Figaro?

The race has previously called to Ireland to the following ports; Dingle, Kinsale, Crosshaven, Howth and Dun Laoghaire.

What Irish sailors have raced The Solitaire du Figaro?

So far there have been seven Irish skippers to participate in La Solitaire du Figaro. 

In 1997, County Kerry's Damian Foxall first tackled the Figaro from Ireland. His win in the Rookie division in DHL gave him the budget to compete again the following year with Barlo Plastics where he won the final leg of the race from Gijon to Concarneau. That same year a second Irish sailor Marcus Hutchinson sailing Bergamotte completed the course in 26th place and third Rookie.

In 2000, Hutchinson of Howth Yacht Club completed the course again with IMPACT, again finishing in the twenties.

In 2006, Paul O’Riain became the third Irish skipper to complete the course.

In 2013, Royal Cork's David Kenefick raised the bar by becoming a top rookie sailor in the race. 

In 2018, for the first time, Ireland had two Irish boats in the offshore race thanks to Tom Dolan and Joan Mulloy who joined the rookie ranks and kept the Irish tricolour flying high in France. Mulloy became the first Irish female to take on the race.

Tom Dolan in Smurfit Kappa competed for his third year in 2020 after a 25th place finish in 2019. Dolan sailed a remarkably consistent series in 2020 and took fifth overall, the best finish by a non-French skipper since 1997 when Switzerland’s Dominique Wavre finished runner up. Dolan wins the VIVI Trophy.

Dolan finished 10th on the first stage, 11th on the second and seventh into Saint Nazaire at the end of the third stage. Stage four was abandoned due to lack of wind. 

Also in 2020, Dun Laoghaire’s Kenneth Rumball became the eleventh Irish sailor to sail the Figaro.

At A Glance – Figaro Race

  • It starts in June or July from a French port.
  • The race is split into four stages varying from year to year, from the length of the French coast and making up a total of around 1,500 to 2,000 nautical miles (1,700 to 2,300 mi; 2,800 to 3,700 km) on average.
  • Over the years the race has lasted between 10 and 13 days at sea.
  • The competitor is alone in the boat, participation is mixed.
  • Since 1990, all boats are of one design.

2023 La Solitaire du Figaro Course

Stage #1 Caen – Kinsale : 610 nautical miles
Departure August 27 (expected arrival August 30)

Stage #2 Kinsale – Baie de Morlaix : 630 nautical miles
Departure September 3 (expected arrival September 6)

Stage #3 Baie de Morlaix – Piriac-sur-Mer : 620 nautical miles
Departure September 10 (expected arrival September 13)

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