Please select your home edition
Edition
Ocean Safety 2023 - New Identity - LEADERBOARD

America's Cup: Coaching Corner - Thierry Douillard on French prospects ahead of Prelim Event

by Magnus Wheatley/America's Cup Media 3 Aug 2024 10:00 BST
Thierry Douillard - Coach - Orient Express Racing Team - Barcelona - August 2024 © Alexander Champy-McLean / Orient Express Racing Team

They are, without question, one of the truly great unknown packages of the Louis Vuitton 37th America’s but with a design package from Emirates Team New Zealand revealing an almost identical line to the Defender’s yacht, Orient Express Racing Team will be one of the closest watched teams amongst the Challengers.

The French are back at the top table of competition and are building an impressive challenge from the ground up. For sure, they are well aware that time is the great enemy of any America’s Cup challenge and, as the last to launch their campaign, they know that what is before them will be tough. However, look around the Orient Express Team and there is talent in every corner. On the water they have the exciting helming partnership of Quentin Delapierre and Kevin Peponnet, and the trim team of Jason Saunders and Mathieu Vandame are gelling well.

Performance is coming and in the recent sessions they have looked accomplished and confident on the water, executing manoeuvres and pushing their stunning AC75 at race pace – for certain all the other Challengers are eyeing their progress eagerly. Extracting the considerable French potential is Team Coach Thierry Douillard’s ambition and as a top-flight, high-performance multihull and foiling sailor himself, he can call on a wealth of knowledge as well as huge trust to drive the team to their peak.

Ahead of the final Preliminary Regatta in Barcelona, we caught up with Thierry to try and understand their game-plan for the regatta and what they hope to achieve. With refreshing honesty, he summarised where the team are at right now, saying: “For sure our boat was the latest on the water, we spent quite a bit of time on the commissioning and next we move towards the racing side and then it is racing around the course. We are still on track, and we are following a road map and for sure we are not ahead, but we are moving forward day by day and have a good learning curve.”

With the Cup world eager to see the performance profile of Orient Express Racing Team, the French are keeping close counsel and very much working on themselves as Thierry says: “Right now to be fair we do not have a fully strict clear idea about the opponents. They will for sure have some difference in their moding for example and will figure out ways in the coming days, the coming weeks before the start. Right now, we are more focused on ourselves and learning how to be stronger and stronger each day.”

Moding could well make the difference and the speed with which teams will be able to adjust the nuances of the AC75 could be the fine line between winning and defeat. It’s an area that the French have always been attuned to, especially when conditions get light and tricky and where they could easily spring some big surprises. Go back to the first race of the AC40 Preliminary Regattas where it was displacement sailing in Vilanova i La Geltrú and we all remember that it was the French that won the first race. It’s something not lost on Thierry as he explained: “We have had 27 or 28 days of sailing now so we do not have experience in all the conditions, particularly the strong breeze, but we have started to have the light winds like yesterday and then today, which we love a lot and so are starting to have a better view of our moding in different conditions and I repeat myself, but we learn more each day and the goal is to be better tomorrow than we are today.”

Expected deltas between the boats and outright speeds are looking to be very tight and the pre-start could be an area where fireworks fly as the AC75s jostle for position. The French will be eyeing this with much anticipation and have been preparing hard as Thierry explains: “We are working on a playbook with different tools. We have some simulator, a lot of talking together, some testing on the water. The start line is pretty narrow, so we have to find the good tricks to be able to have a good start and not make big mistakes. We are in that phase, working on it and working on the playbook with the AC75 and it is moving forward.”

The opening day of the Preliminary Regatta will see Orient Express Racing take on Alinghi Red Bull Racing in the first race and then Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli in the final flight of the day on the 22nd August. It will be the first time that the team will have had the opportunity to line-up officially against another AC75 and again, Thierry is honest about their prospects, saying: “Right now, we have never done a pure line-up compared with the others because it is against the rules, so we will see in the coming practice races how confident we are. We have a big margin in how we are timing the boats, so we are working hard with the engineers, with the performance, with Franck Cammas, with Benjamin Muyl, with everyone to be better every day. We can’t know right now if we have a speed deficiency. "I would be dishonest in saying that we did not have a fast boat, we just have to learn it and use it at 100%.”

Thierry is very much keeping expectations in check as he, and the team, are well aware of the huge preparations that have been put in over the past three years by the other syndicates. As the last team to launch, there’s a sense of realism but also a swashbuckling Gallic flair that could well surprise. For now, Thierry is pleased with performance saying: “We are on a big and nice learning curve. We are improving every day, and we are confident in the fact that we are going to improve. We will be more reliable, more precise, will be more able to play our playbook and our settings. Our sailors are in the mindset that they want to be on the water every day and learn new things to be better than the day before. To say we are confident right now ahead of the Preliminary Regatta, is wrong, because there is a huge amount of work ahead of us, but we are confident in the fact that we are adjusting the gap quite quickly and that the boat will be ready, will be competitive and to learn race after race to go to the end.”

The dark horses of both the Preliminary Regatta and the Louis Vuitton Cup, Orient Express Racing are one of the great stories of this Louis Vuitton 37th America’s Cup. As a team they are building to the future but don’t bet against them taking some serious scalps and making a lot of friends along the way. The French back in the America’s Cup is good for the event and they enjoy magnificent support back home from a sailing mad nation. They will be very interesting to watch. Vive La France!

Related Articles

America's Cup: ETNZ's design boss on new AC75 Rule
Kiwi design chief, Dan Bernasconi on recycled AC75 hulls, electric power and other rule changes. Kiwi design chief, Dan Bernasconi on the use of recycled AC75 hulls, the switch to full electric power, and other changes. He claims there is plenty of performance gain left in the AC75 for the designer teams. Posted on 12 Sep
America's Cup: Class Rule and Tech Regs out
The America's Cup Class Rule and Technical Regulations for the Naples Match have been published With the clock ticking down to the start of the Louis Vuitton 38th America's Cup in Naples in 2027, the AC75 Class Rules and Technical Regulations have been issued to all teams and published with a focus on cost containment. Posted on 11 Sep
From The Other Side - The State of the Sport
The editors of Sail-World New Zealand and Inside Great Lakes Sailing discuss the state of sailing. The Editors of Inside Great Lakes Sailing and Sail-World New Zealand got together last week to shoot the breeze in an unscripted video discussion, without any pre-arranged "talking points" about various aspects of the sport. Posted on 5 Sep
Youth America's Cup set to continue in Naples
The Youth America's Cup is a sign-post to the future direction of the America's Cup itself. Since its inaugural event in 2013, the Youth America's Cup, designed as a competition for sailors under the age of 25, has always been the most remarkable sign-post to the future direction of the America's Cup itself. Posted on 4 Sep
America's Cup: A seismic shift for sailing
For the first time in its 174-year history, female sailors will be mandated onboard AC75s This week's announcement from the America's Cup felt momentous. For the first time in its 174-year history, female sailors will be mandated onboard AC75s at the pinnacle of our sport. Posted on 15 Aug
America's Cup: A "ground breaking" partnership
An innovative Protocol for the 2027 America's Cup has been agreed between RNZYS and RYS An innovative 11th hour Protocol for the 2027 America's Cup has been agreed between the Challenger of Record and the Defender. It creates a commercial framework for the current and future Cups, eases nationality rules, and has a quota for female sailors. Posted on 12 Aug
America's Cup impasse close to resolution.
The impasse over the Protocol is expected to be resolved next week - meeting in Auckland. The impasse over the Protocol for the 38th America's Cup is expected to be resolved, one way or the other, next week, with a meeting of the parties in Auckland. Posted on 9 Aug
America's Cup: Naples first taste of the Cup
The America's Cup came to Naples in 2012 and 2013 for two of the most memorable regattas. The America's Cup World Series, a multi-city series in the lead up to the 2013 America's Cup regatta in San Francisco, came to Naples in 2012 and 2013 for two of the most memorable regattas. Posted on 7 Aug
America's Cup: Luna Rossa's beginning
Continuing the walk down memory lane with the past America's Cups and Italy's involvement. Continuing the walk down memory lane with the past America's Cups and Italy's involvement as a Challenger, in particular. This one looks at six times challenger, Luna Rossa from the team's beginnings to the 2024 campaign. Posted on 4 Aug
America's Cup: Italy's five boat Challenge
‘Il Moro di Venezia', a five-boat programme left no stone unturned The transition from colourful and applauded challenges of 1983 and 1987, to Challengers for the XXVIII America's Cup in San Diego, was a pivotal moment in the history of Italy in the competition. Posted on 23 Jul