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Thibaut Vauchel-Camus races to Class40 victory in the Big Apple

by The Transat bakerly 20 May 2016 08:06 BST 20 May 2016
Thibaut Vauchel-Camus wins in the Class40 fleet in The Transat bakerly 2016 © OC Sport

At 03:12 BST, Solidaires en Peloton-ARSEP skipper Thibaut Vauchel-Camus crossed The Transat bakerly finish line in New York, taking line honours in the highly competitive Class40 division.

Embroiled in one of the race's most exciting podium battles to date, Vauchel-Camus this morning arrives in the Big Apple victorious - and looking forward to a burger and a hot shower.

Covering a total 3804nm between Plymouth and New York, the 37-year-old sailor was greeted by the iconic Manhattan skyline and Lady Liberty herself after 17 days, 12 hours, 42 minutes and 56 seconds at sea.

His striking sky blue boat recorded an average speed of 9.04 knots, often setting the pace of the Class40 fleet.

Runner up in the 2014 Route du Rhum - Destination Guadeloupe and finishing fourth in the 2015 Transat Jacque Vabre, Vauchel-Camus was an early favourite going into the race and today he is hailed the winner.

www.thetransat.com

News Update

The Transat bakerly is a hard race and you need a certain kind of determination to finish, let alone win it, and Thibaut Vauchel-Camus demonstrated earlier today that he has what it takes.

The 37-year-old Frenchman, a great character who grew up in Guadeloupe but now lives in Brittany, was this morning celebrating the biggest win of his sailing career as he cruised over the finish line to win the hard-fought battle of the Class40 fleet.

Vauchel-Camus's blue and white monohull – Solidaires en Peloton-Arsep – crossed the line off Sandy Hook late on Thursday evening local time after 17 days, 12 hours and 42 minutes at sea. Vauchel-Camus had sailed a total distance of 3,804 nautical miles at an average speed of 9.04 knots.

When he arrived he enjoyed every moment of a sweet victory, shaking his jeroboam of champagne for several minutes before spraying his shore team and supporters and then tucking into a New York burger on the pontoon. His boat looked in reasonable shape save for his main headsail that had clearly suffered serious damage after days of hard upwind racing.

Vauchel-Camus's sailing campaign is helping to raise awareness and money for research into multiple sclerosis. The campaign is symbolised by his mascot, a teddy bear called "Seppy," who has featured in many of his onboard videos during the race with Vauchel-Camus conducting impromptu interviews of him in the cockpit. At the finish his shore team presented him with a matching Stars & Stripes outfit to that of Seppy, much to his amusement.

"It's an amazing race – I don't know why I said I'd do it," Vauchel-Camus said with the Manhatten skyline behind him. "Sometimes I was asking myself 'what am I doing here – this is crazy?' But when you finish, all of the bad memories are just gone and you remember only the good moments – the time you spent with whales and dolphins, the good weather, the good wind and the finish line."

Vauchel-Camus led for much of the race which was arguably the most tightly-contested of all of the four Transat bakerly fleets. He was in a battle for the lead from the off mainly against Britain's Phil Sharp on Imerys and the Franco-German sailor Isabelle Joschke on Generali-Horizon Mixite.

For days the top-three were locked in what amounted to a transatlantic match race as they tackled, successively, periods of big headwinds and ferocious seas and then areas of lighter winds. In the end Joschke had to retire to Newfoundland when the punishing pace took its toll on her boat and Sharp lost performance as a lengthening list of gear failures handicapped Imerys.

But the Frenchman on Solidaires kept it together as the others faltered. "In the good wind we went very fast," he said. "It was rewarding to be able to look at the reports and see just how fast you were going compared to the other competitors and how strong your boat is. The race is one big fight between yourself, the boat and the weather.

"The race is also a kind of meeting with yourself," he added. "Every day you face new weather, new challenges and a new problem on the boat and you have to try and find the motivation to keep going. Sometimes the race was very pleasurable, when the boat was going well – sometimes it was very challenging...and then you arrive in Manhattan and you see the amazing skyline and the Statue of Liberty and everything is good – I hope to visit the city tomorrow after my big night of sleep."

This was Vauchel-Camus' biggest win in a career that started in Tornado catamarans. His best Class40 results prior to this was coming second in the 2014 Route du Rhum – Destination Guadeloupe classic and then second in the Les Sables - Horta - Les Sables race in 2015.

When he reached the finish in New York, his nearest pursuer, Louis Duc on Carac was 66 miles out to sea while Sharp was around 146 miles from the line. Then there was a gap of around 200 miles to Edouard Golbery on Region Normandie in fourth place.

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