Please select your home edition
Edition
RS Sailing 2021 - LEADERBOARD

Maxime Sorel: The big step from being one of the pack to becoming a performer

by Ed Gorman / IMOCA Globe Series 29 Jun 2022 08:08 BST
Maxime Sorel - V and B-Monbana-Mayenne © Pierre Bouras / Team Maxime Sorel

You only have to look at Maxime Sorel's impressive Class 40 career to know that this 35-year Frenchman is a highly competitive sailor who is more than capable of reaching the podium in major IMOCA races.

So far he has not had that opportunity because he has not had the boat under him to show what he can do. But the Breton skipper from Cancale, who finished 10th on debut in the Vendée Globe in 2021 in a VPLP-Verdier daggerboard design from 2007, now has the machinery he needs to make an impression at the top end of this increasingly competitive fleet.

Sorel is regarded as one of the IMOCA Class's complete professionals in everything he does - sailing, communications and management of commercial partnerships. He has no qualms about stating clearly what his goals are as his new boat, V and B-Monbana-Mayenne, comes out of the shed at MerConcept in Concarneau for the first time.

"Our project has changed in scope," he told the Class. "With my former V and B-Mayenne, I wanted to finish races. Today I'm aiming for performance. It's very motivating to have a boat that can race at the front. We are up against boats with much higher budgets, but we also know that in a Vendée Globe there is not necessarily a link between budget and performance."

And this is where Sorel and his team, which includes his brother, Jérémy, in the head management role, have been clever. They have a new boat that is a sistership of Charlie Dalin's current APIVIA, that was originally designed in 2018 by Guillaume Verdier. But they have taken that and modified the bow to increase buoyancy when sailing fast downwind and added new foil designs. The combination could be potent and could benefit from all the experience that Dalin has accumulated in the hull already. "The boat is a sistership of Apivia, so there are a few technical differences," summarises Sorel. "If the architects have optimised the plans, it remains the same boat overall."

The new V and B-Monbana-Mayenne, which includes sustainable solutions using bio-sourced resins and flax for various components, is hitting the water for the first time during what can only be described as the golden age of IMOCA and Sorel is very happy to be part of it. "It's very motivating to be part of a class which is full of ambition," he said. "I think it's one of the most dynamic classes of boats and can offer so much racing at this level of competition. The IMOCAs are Formula 1 boats and the teams are real racing teams."

The first goal is to complete this autumn's Route du Rhum-Destination Guadeloupe to qualify for the Vendée Globe, but Sorel says his new "Dragon of the Oceans" will not be ready to sail at maximum performance until next year's Transat Jacques Vabre (TJV). After that the plan is to race in the Transat CIC and the New York-Vendée in 2024, before setting off on the Vendée Globe.

The sailor with boyish looks, steely blue eyes and a shock of blond hair, who won both the TJV and the Rolex Fastnet Race in Class 40s in 2017, still makes the point that you have to finish the Vendée Globe. But he doesn't mind admitting that the very top end of the fleet is now his goal, even though that is going to be a very busy echelon in a class with 14 new boats coming on stream ahead of the next solo round-the-world classic.

We asked him whether he thinks he can win the 2024 edition. "The Vendée Globe is not a race like any other, it is a non-stop single-handed round-the-world race," he said. "Our goal is not to win it, but first of all to complete it. In the last edition we were top-10; today we are aiming for top-5."

Sorel runs one of the most effective communications campaigns in IMOCA with his old partners, the wine and beer retailer V and B, the Department of Mayenne now joined by the chocolate manufacturer Monbana. Together they support his efforts not just on the ocean, but his commitment to the charitable association Vaincre La Mucoviscidose (Overcoming Cystic Fibrosis). This is symbolised by the enormous dragon motif which has been executed in stunning style on his new sails in black, grey and red, following on from the theme established on his old boat.

The former consulting engineer, who is committed to raising awareness and funds for the charity - he recently climbed Mt Kilimanjaro in aid of it and is even planning an assault on Mt Everest next year - is proud of this aspect of his new boat, which has been promoted with a spectacular pre-launch video.

"We experienced a very strong adventure with our partners and the association Vaincre La Mucoviscidose during the Vendée Globe," said the skipper, who started sailing at the age of eight and who idolised Michael Schumacher as a child. "With this experience we knew we wanted to grow the project and start again with an ambitious project. Monbana, a third partner, came on board to complete the budget and together we dared to build a new boat. It is very motivating for all of us to start again with such a strong project."

Sorel added that if this team has the broken rules in any department, it is in the execution of the graphic design on the new boat's hull and sails. "Our dragon required no less than two months of work, with stencils, hand-painting and a team of 10 painters, plus three people in design, working with the two world famous designers, Yann and Julian Legendre, accompanied by Jean-Baptiste Epron" he said.

Related Articles

Shawyer qualifies for the New York to Vendée Race
The Canadian skipper is preparing to line up with 30 fellow IMOCAs Scott Shawyer, the Canadian skipper of the IMOCA Be Water Positive, will be competing in the prestigious single-handed transatlantic race, the New York Vendée, which starts on 29 May 2024. Posted today at 3:47 pm
The Ocean Race joins world leaders in Athens
Nature's Baton and the Relay4Nature connect at Our Ocean Conference The Ocean Race joined world leaders at the Our Ocean Conference 2024 at the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center (SNFCC) in Athens, Greece on Tuesday, who had gathered to advance measures to protect and restore ocean health. Posted on 17 Apr
The Ocean Race sails into Athens
For the Our Ocean Conference UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy for the Ocean hands Nature's Baton to Greece's Prime Minister's Special Envoy for Oceans and Coordinator of the conference. Posted on 15 Apr
The Ocean Race and IOC UNESCO collaborate
Contributing towards the science we need for the ocean we want In the lead up to the 2024 Ocean Decade Conference, The Ocean Race today shared the impact of the data collected by teams and sailors through the race's science on board programme. Posted on 9 Apr
The Ocean Race gathers critical polar ocean data
From Antarctica and the Northwest Passage The Ocean Race is providing critical data to international scientists studying the impact of climate change and plastic pollution on ocean health. Posted on 8 Apr
Team Malizia's IMOCA yacht is back in the water
Spring has made its way to Lorient, as has a new set of foils Spring has made its way to Lorient. The first flowers are blooming and the IMOCA racing boats are, just like the blossoms, gradually appearing, emerging one by one from their sheds after three months of winter refit. Posted on 27 Mar
The IMOCA Holcim-PRB relaunched in Port-la-Forêt
After a three-months refit to prepare the 60' for the 2024 season This Thursday the IMOCA Holcim-PRB was relaunched after a three-months refit. Since the arrival of "Retour à la Base" on December 11th, the technical team of Team Holcim-PRB has been working in Port-la-Forêt to prepare the 60' for the 2024 season. Posted on 21 Mar
Boris Herrmann awarded German Cross of Merit
One of Germany's most prestigious recognitions Team Malizia's Boris Herrmann received one of Germany's most prestigious recognitions today in a ceremony at Hamburg City Hall. The skipper was awarded the Cross of Merit for his achievements in climate action and sports. Posted on 14 Mar
Transatlantic Race 2025 to allow autopilots
Aiming to ease crew concerns It's the middle of a foggy night in the North Atlantic. The breeze is fickle and there is nary a star or landsight by which to guide the yacht. Posted on 14 Mar
The story of Swiss skipper Oliver Heer
From office to ocean for the Vendée Globe 2024 candidate Swiss sailor Oliver Heer is on track to participate in the gruelling Vendée Globe 2024, widely recognised as the world's most challenging offshore, solo-sailing race. Posted on 13 Mar