Please select your home edition
Edition
X-Yachts Leaderboard 2

Yoann Richomme on Paprec Arkéa wins the 15th edition of The Transat CIC

by The Transat CIC 6 May 13:00 PDT 6 May 2024
Yoann Richomme on Paprec Arkéa wins the 15th edition of The Transat CIC © Julien Champolion / polaRYSE

French skipper Yoann Richomme made it two back-to-back solo Transatlantic wins today when he brought his PAPREC ARKÉA across the finish line first on the historic Transat CIC race across the North Atlantic from Lorient in Brittany to New York.

Richomme on his Finot Conq-Antoine Koch designed PAPREC ARKÉA crossed the finish line at 18:23:32 UTC (14:23:32hrs local time NYC) to conclude a very close battle with German skipper Boris Herrmann (Malizia Seaexplorer) who was less than 30 miles behind when he crossed. His elapsed time for the 2,950 nautical miles course since leaving Lorient on Sunday 28th April is 8d 6h 53mn 32sec.

After winning his first ever solo IMOCA Transat, the Retour à La Base, a race from the Caribbean to Lorient in December, Richomme highlights again his outstanding potential for the solo non stop round the world race, the Vendée Globe, which starts early November.

It is the first time since 2016 that this historic Transatlantic race, which originated in England in 1960 as the Observer Transatlantic Race, has been contested. Richomme, 40, follows up the success on that edition of Armel Le Cléac'h who then went on to win the 2016-17 Vendée Globe the following winter.

Richomme's elapsed time bears some comparison with Le Cléach's 12 days, at least in proving how much faster the latest generation of foiling IMOCAs are compared with Le Cléach's Banque Populaire VIII which was one of the first ever IMOCAs with hydrofoils.

He was second for a big part of the race, chasing his long time rival Charlie Dalin (MACIF Santé et Prévoyance) who looked to be odds on to win on his return to solo racing after missing last Autumn's two Transats with a medical issue.

But Richomme out-manoeuvred him as they negotiated the north side of a nasty Atlantic depression whilst Dalin was reported to have suffered a technical problem which required him to stop for a few hours the following day.

The Frenchman who was born in Fréjus but spent three and a half years at a tough public school near Philadelphia while his father was working there is a renowned, data driven perfectionist - as is Dalin who is also a Southampton trained yacht designer. He is perfectly bilingual with a distinct US accent.

He has said in the past that staying on top of his target numbers all the time and living in his own bubble, sailing his own race, has been the passport to his key successes to date, winning the solo Route du Rhum twice in Class 40 and winning La Solitaire du Figaro twice.

After an outstanding win on his solo IMOCA debut last December he told Yachting World magazine, "I am really in my own world, I don't look at the others, a little bit now and again, but I am in my own world and then what works well is all the data analysis we do before to be able to have the right polars, to make the right decisions, to have the right sails. Yes, it is that digital thing, the numbers. Otherwise if you do routings all the time and it shows you to go different ways, it messes you up. It is all about the work I do before that pays off in these races. And then the thing is it works, I am not making big mistakes. You cannot change a big gennaker twice in a day, next day you are dead. You need to make the right sail choices all the time and know what you are doing when, otherwise you are going to fuck up. You will never recover. All the learning curve from sailing the boat here, and analysing the data and being able to use that on the race course, efficiently and not making mistakes is what makes it work."

And he likes to fulfil his goals, on the Saturday before he left his home base in Lorient he said: "I would really like to win this damn race!" He said he loved the idea of entering New York as a winner and cherished the idea of adding his name to the who's who of winners of this legendary race.

Since launching in February 2023 the successes of PAPREC ARKÉA have been striking, Richomme and Yann Eliès finished second in the Rolex Fastnet race and on the Transat Jacques Vabre Normandie Le Havre and now he adds victory on the 'original' fiercest 'north face' Transat to his growing list of accolades.

The key moment was last Thursday when he overtook Charlie Dalin (MACIF Santé Prévoyance) to the north who was visibly suffering from technical problems. Richomme echoes how winning cyclists know how to attack and deliver a blow as soon as the peloton seems to be running out of steam. When fatigue sets he attacks with striking lucidity and composure.

In light, light winds the two lead skippers were making less than five knots with 140 miles to the finish line. "Boris is putting me under pressure, I would have much preferred to finish in a more relaxed way".

But he had to fight all the way to the line, earning his win the hard way. They say adversity makes victory all the sweeter. Now Yoann Richomme will have the opportunity relax, recover and savor the ten or so hours of sailing between the finish line - which is 110 miles offshore and his arrival in New York Bay, passing by the Statue of Liberty before celebrating tomorrow morning at Brooklyn's One15 Marina.

After crossing the line Richomme said, "It is so good to win this crazy, hard, historic race which really launched ocean racing with the victory of Eric Tabarly and so on. So I am super proud to accomplish this and this is my first time arriving by sea into New York so now I can really look forwards to that. I am happy and proud of the work the team has done and winning two back to back Transats shows we are working well. I had a few little problems after the star, making choices with sails and some energy problems, but I made some good trajectories and am happy with the speed of the boat. I am proud of my course through the depression, we had a good race Charlie (Dalin) I made good executions of my strategy. But everything is wet, wet through and it is difficult to contemplate two or three months living like that on the Vendée Globe. And the race was Boris was good too, he has a very fast boat downwind."

Transat CIC, IMOCA Class. Subject to jury, provisional:

1 PAPREC ARKÉA, Yoann Richomme (FRA) finished 18:23:32 UTC (14:23:32hrs local time NYC), elapsed time 8d 6h 53m 32s. Average speed over actual course sailed of 3293.55 miles 14.83 kts, speed over theoretical course 16.56kts

www.thetransat.com

Related Articles

Clarisse Crémer finishes The Transat CIC
Completing the race in 20 days after a technical stopover in the Azores to repair her boat On May 19 at 20d 12h 38min, after 20 days since the start of The Transat CIC, Clarisse Crémer finally crossed the finish line of this legendary race. Posted today at 1:11 am
Oliver Heer finishes 25th IMOCA in the Transat CIC
“I went through a nightmare” It was with a huge measure of relief that the Swiss German solo skipper Oliver Heer brought his Transat CIC solo race across the North Atlantic from Lorient to New York to a satisfactory conclusion Thursday at 22:19:32hrs UTC, finishing in 25th place. Posted on 17 May
Perseverance is Clarisse Crémer's middle name
Back racing hard in The Transat CIC and today is some 700 miles from the finish line After a strong, solid start to the Transat CIC, Clarisse Crémer suffered damage to the J3 bulkhead of her L'Occitaine en Provence on May 1st which required her to divert 500 miles to the Azores for five days whilst her technical team completed repairs. Posted on 14 May
The Transat CIC Prizegiving
Podium finishers honoured Competitors and invited guests honoured the IMOCA and Class40 podiums of the 15th edition of The Transat CIC at the prizegiving Sunday in New York. Posted on 13 May
The Transat CIC Update
New York offers finishers sunshine but still dark clouds over the Atlantic At 13 days since the fleet left Lorient just seven solo racers are still racing across the Atlantic on the 3,500 miles Transat CIC. Posted on 11 May
Ambrogio Beccaria wins The Transat CIC in Class40
Crossing the line of the historic race at 03:47:55 hrs this morning Italy's Ambrogio Beccaria on his all Italian designed and built Musa 40 Alla Grande Pirelli added the hugely prestigious Transat CIC Class 40 title to his steadily growing collection of solo and short handed ocean racing honours this morning. Posted on 10 May
The Transat CIC Update
Ambrogio Beccaria has Class 40 finish line and victory 'in sight' With less than 140 miles to go to the finish line of the Transat CIC solo race across the North Atlantic from Lorient to New York Italy's Ambrogio Beccaria appears to have dealt with the last weather hurdle earlier today. Posted on 9 May
Transat CIC: Le Turquais top daggerboard finisher
Half the IMOCA fleet in now in New York The top 13 finishers - that is to say half the IMOCA class on the Transat CIC solo race across the North Atlantic - are now either in New York or en route from the finish line which is 110 miles offshore. Posted on 8 May
Transat CIC IMOCA podium arrive in New York
Finishers dock in the heart of the Big Apple Freezing fog banks, a light winds head scratcher at 150 miles from the finish, deciphering the vagaries of the Gulf Stream....all these final challenges, and more, were all but forgotten when The Transat CIC IMOCAs enjoyed a sunny arrival in New York. Posted on 7 May
Sam Davies third in The Transat CIC
British sailor completes an international IMOCA podium in the race An exhausted but delighted Sam Davies sailed her Initiatives Coeur across the finish line of the Transat CIC at 20:11:37hrs local time NYC (00:11:37 hrs UTC) to take a well earned third place on the legendary solo race across the North Atlantic. Posted on 7 May
PredictWind - Routing 728x90 BOTTOMZhik 2024 March - FOOTERDoyle_SailWorld_728X90px-05 BOTTOM