Charlie Dalin, skipper of MACIF Santé Prévoyance who is the leader of the Vendée Globe crossed the equator back into the Northern Hemisphere this Sunday afternoon at 1438hrs UTC. His elapsed time since the start is 56 days, 2 hours, 36 minutes and 23 seconds.
His time between Cape Horn and the equator is therefore 12 days, 15 hours, 1 minute and 33 seconds and so he only just misses the best ever time from the Horn to the Equator which was set by Germany’s Boris Herrmann (Malizia Seaexplorer) on his climb back up the Atlantic in the 2020-2021 race at 11 days and 18 hours. Dalin has led at various key stages, Cape of Good Hope (November 29), Cape Leeuwin (December 9), Point Nemo (December 20) and now, today, the Equator.
In terms of the constant head-to-head match with Yoann Richomme (PAPREC ARKÉA), Dalin has led at these key stages but Richomme led across Cape Horn by 9 minutes and 31 seconds back on 23rd December.
More than 7,700 miles (14,200 km) separates the leader Charlie Dalin (MACIF Santé Prévoyance) from the 35th placed Denis Van Weynbergh (D’Ieteren Group). Dalin was 123 miles ahead of Richomme when he crossed back into his ‘home’ hemisphere.
The chasing group, from Thomas Ruyant (VULNERABLE, 4th) to Justine Mettraux (Teamwork-Team Snef, 10th), is separated by 400 miles apart while Jean Le Cam (Tout Commence en Finistère – Armor Lux, 16th) is catching up with Romain Attanasio (Fortinet Best Western, 14th) and Damien Seguin (Groupe APICIL, 15th). Switzerland’s Alan Roura (Hublot, 17th) crossed Cape Horn today for the third time on consecutive Vendée Globes, and Denis Van Weynbergh (D’Ieteren Group, 35th) is preparing to go back in time, having two Sundays by crossing the antimeridian.
Still close and Richomme clawing back miles
This final major milestone of the race sees really little between the top duo. They have now been benefiting from SE’ly trade winds for two days. “We can see that they are putting some east in their northerly course as they get lifted progressively and so maintaining constant speeds”, explains Christian Dumard, the Vendée Globe weather consultant
Most recently In their duel Richomme has been slightly faster than Dalin over the last 24 hours, even if the gap has changed little. After the equator the doldrums should not trouble them too much during the night. “Overall, up to 500 miles before the finish, the route looks pretty fast”, adds Dumard. The winner is still expected between 14th and 16th January.
Third and trying to suppress the smile
In third Sébastien Simon (Groupe Dubreuil, 3rd) can hardly suppress his smile as he computes his routing now firming up on his course to the finish line off his home port, which will be set on the waters he first set sail on his Optimist as a nipper. The Vendéen is progressing on starboard tack up closer to the Brazilian coast
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