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Maritimo 2023 S-Series LEADERBOARD

Macif and Actual Leader complete the Brest Atlantiques podium

by Sabina Mollart-Rogerson 7 Dec 2019 08:36 PST 7 December 2019
Macif completes the Brest Atlantiques podium © Alexis Courcoux / Brest Atlantiques

After 31 days, 20 hours, 43 minutes and 50 seconds at sea, François Gabart and Gwénolé Gahinet took second place in Brest Atlantiques.

MACIF crossed the finish line on Saturday at 07:43:50, two days, 21 hours, 19 minutes and four seconds after the winner, Maxi Edmond de Rothschild, having covered 17,890 miles at an average speed of 23.4 knots. At 12:29:22, four hours, 45 minutes and 32 seconds later, Actual Leader crossed the line to bring the race to a close.

The Brest Atlantiques race had fans glued to the website, constantly checking the latest updates over the nail-biting final hours. MACIF managed to hold on to second place, which they had been in ever since passing Cape Town, fighting off Actual Leader's attempts to overtake.

Having past Robben Island on November 21st, 14 hours and 28 minutes behind the leader Maxi Edmond de Rothschild, and 3 hours and 11 minutes behind Actual Leader, François Gabart (36 years old) and Gwénolé Gahinet (35 years old), accompanied by media man Jérémie Eloy (41 years old), gradually gained on the Yves Le Blevec/Alex Pella pair along the Namibian coast, before opting for a more westerly option in the mid-South Atlantic.

A strategy which, although it meant the two skippers had to cross a front and take a considerably longer route, finally paid off, as it allowed them to reach the Northern Hemisphere two hours and 32 minutes ahead of Actual Leader.

"This was a good option for us, and we really have to thank our weather routing team, made up of Jean-Yves Bernot and Julien Villion. It wasn't easy, because we spent three to four days heading west, not really in the direction of Brest, but in the end, it really paid off. We are proud of sticking to our guns," explains Gwénolé Gahinet just after MACIF's arrival at the pontoon in Brest on Saturday morning.

Despite two technical pitstops in Rio and then Cape Town, MACIF managed to fight off their rivals' attempts to overtake. In fact, François Gabart managed to keep secret for the entire month the level of damage suffered to the boat. First, a damaged daggerboard which meant they were not able to foil, then a central rudder which was out of action for a large part of the race, and finally their starboard rudder which became damaged when sailing along the Namibian coast. "It was very frustrating, because you know from training how fast the boat can really go, but now it wasn't moving. It was pretty difficult to deal with," explains Gabart.

Back in close contact at the start of the week to the west of the Azores high, Actual Leader remained a constant threat to MACIF who, at the price of a thrilling final and after a series of gybes on the approach to Brittany, finally crossed the finish line on Saturday at 07:43:50, completing the course in 31 days, 20 hours, 43 minutes and 50 seconds (having covered 17,890 miles at an average of 23.4 knots).

"It wasn't easy, but we could see that we could sail to Brest safely and focus on getting second place," explains François Gabart. A further string to the bow for MACIF which, since its launch on 18 August 2015, won the solo round the world record in December 2017, as well as finishing on the podium of all the major offshore races in which it has competed, including victories in the Transat Jacques Vabre 2015, the Transat 2016 and The Bridge 2017, as well as placing second in the Route du Rhum 2018.

Four hours, 45 minutes and 32 seconds after MACIF, at 12:29:22, Actual Leader completed the podium of Brest Atlantiques. Yves Le Blevec and Alex Pella, the only ones not to have made a pit-stop, completed the race in 32 days, 1 hour, 29 minutes and 22 seconds, and covered a total of 17,061 miles, at an average speed of 22.17 knots. A great reward for the two skippers whose priority during this big month at sea was to preserve their boat. It certainly paid off, as it allowed them to stay in the game from start to finish....

To find all the videos from on board and also ashore, please go to the Brest Atlantiques YouTube channel.

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