After spending between 36 and 48 hours slowed, now is the opportunity for the pack to put their foot down and take advantage in the Pacific. This should be a good week for the pack spanning Thomas Ruyant (VULNERABLE, 4th) back westwards to Samantha Davies (Initiatives Coeur, 13th).
Davies, Justine Mettraux (TeamWork-Team Snef) and Boris Herrmann (Malizia Seaexplorer) are all making more than 21 knots at the front of the new low pressure, meantime Ruyant must wait for it to arrive to him and was still doing only 12 knots this afternoon.
At the other end of the 38 boat fleet, still not in the Indian Ocean, Hungarian skipper Szabolcs Weöres (New Europe, 38th) – a professional rigger by trade - must deal with the breakage of his port D2 upper shroud. Damien Seguin (Groupe APICIL, 17th) is finally enjoying slightly more clement conditions, Antoine Cornic (HUMAN Immobilier, 33rd) is heading towards Saint-Paul to take shelter and repair his mainsail track, Denis Van Weynbergh (D’Ieteren Group, 37th) reported a weather vane problem and Sébastien Marsset (FOUSSIER, 24th) celebrated his 40th birthday, appropriately in the Roaring 40s – at 41 degrees South in the Indian Ocean.
Charging Richomme (PAPREC ARKEA, 2nd) is continuing to close in on leader Dalin. This afternoon they are back to within 80 miles of each other. Of the reappearance in his rear view mirror of Richomme, who in 2014 and 2015 was a training partner when both were part of the Skipper MACIF Figaro programme, Dalin remains typically sanguine, “We will probably meet again at some point. I was expecting a round-the-world fight with him and so that is what we are gong to start again!”
He explains, “Yoann has overtaken Seb and he has already taken advantage of the compressing weather in the last few days, they caught the front before me and because I had to do a SE/NW course, they gained quite a lot and looking at the situation it should carry on a bit like this right now as he has a bit more left in his wind so he should be able to do a lower course, a lower angle.
If he is keeping a weather eye on Richomme, Dalin assured us this morning that he had not "routed" (made computer projections on their possible optimum routes according to their weather…. editor's note) the chasing group. Thomas Ruyant (VULNERABLE, 4th), Jérémie Beyou (Charal, 5th) and Nicolas Lunven (Holcim-PRB, 6th) are still with this ridge of pressure. After this major regrouping they will slip south under the anticyclone and then lengthen their stride until they get a depression expected at the end of next week. "They could have a very quick crossing of the Pacific," is the opinion of the race’s weather consultant Christian Dumard.
In fifth Jérémie Beyou (Charal) deciphers the situation: "The small anticyclonic center that was created acted as an insurmountable barrier. I tried to go back up north, like Thomas Ruyant but I was a little too fast, I fell into it. Of course it's infuriating but you have to be a bit philosophical, make do with what you have. Here, I tried to gybe to be well positioned and progress in the South-East. But now, as expected if we keep average windspeeds around 25 knots we really can go quite quickly!”