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Arkea Ultim Challenge Skippers Ready to Go

  • By OC Sport Pen Duick
  • January 2, 2024

Arkea Ultime Challenge-Brest

Compared with previous generations of round the world racers and adventurers, the six skippers ready to take on the Arkéa Ultim Challenge – Brest on January 7 are a new, different breed. Physically most are fitter and stronger than those who preceded them. Bear in mind each manoeuver is usually nearly 45 minutes of hard, physical work, not least requiring long periods at max effort on the pedestal winch.  


The “coffee grinder” is what Armel Le Cléac’h (Maxi Banque Populaire XI) calls “the hand bike.” The heart rate climbs, the arms, shoulders, chest and lower back are fully engaged and the beads of sweat very quickly become rivers of perspiration.

“I keep up a level of exercise so that we prepare all throughout the year, to just be able to maintain that level of sustained power output endurance and a good recovery,” says Le Cléac’h, skipper of Banque Populaire.

“It’s not really about all out power, max work rate like on an inshore grand prix boat, but it requires really excellent cardio, and core strength too.” He says

“In fact, it’s more like a trail run rather than a sprint,” adds Charles Caudrelier (Edmond de Rothschild). He ensures he does at least three physical preparation sessions per week and among them enjoys boxing, climbing, board sports, running and cycling. And in his build up Armel Le Cléac’h says he has worked out almost every day with swimming sessions, time in the weights gym or out on the bike.

Anthony Marchand (Actual Ultim 3) is mainly happy to just ensure he does a lot of water sports, regularly going kiting, winging, and surfing. “These allow you to work your cardio,” he says. “All your muscles and I like that it’s always in the same watery environment!”

At the same time everyone has also really focused on working on mental strength.

“If we have to deal well with the many different types of physical challenge that this race will bring, the mental dimension is almost more important,” says Tom Laperche (SVR-Lazartigue). “We just can’t overlook the mental demands of these boats and the impact that this stress can have over time.”

Tom Laperche signing autographs

“The mental aspect is undoubtedly actually more valuable than the physical tests on this race,” agrees Charles Caudrelier.

“It’s not a race, it’s an expedition,” says Thomas Coville, skipper of Sodebo Ultim 3. Coville is the skipper who has completed the most round-the-world passages on a multihull—competing in five, completed the loop three times and was once the record holder around the world (49 days and 3 hours in 2016).

“We need to find the right approach to sustain the right level on this unique and singular challenge,” he says. “There is a very big psychological dimension. We are constantly seeking to work at or near our limits, to go beyond normal effort levels despite the accumulated lack of sleep, the risk, the frustrations, the anxiety, the ice.”

For Coville, the Arkea Ultim Challenge goes far beyond the scope of a sporting competition. “I like to tell myself that we are not racing but that we are on a tough expedition. There are days when you burst into tears, days when you scream, days when you go crazy. You end up being a mix between euphoria, exhaustion and elation.”

“What I’m looking for is a good level of balance” says Le Cléac’h. Yet all the skippers have their methods. Charles Caudrelier and Tom Laperche work with mental coaches. Caudrelier, the Edmond de Rothschild skipper, says, “with my physical trainer, I am very Cartesian, very numbers driven. We talk about fatigue, recovery, nutrition. And, of course, there are the times when you are exhausted without realizing that you are in the red zone.”

Ultim Sodebo racing trimaran

Laperche adds: “We know that there will be moments of euphoria, moments that are really challenging on the morale, so we work out how to manage this and to smooth out these emotions as much as possible to create the best possible performance.”

There are also those who do not have a mental trainer. This is the case with Anthony Marchand and Armel Le Cléac’h. Marchand says, “If you’re doing your second round the world you’ve seen the problems, you know what to focus on. Me, I’m a rookie: I go in ready to fight and obviously I ask myself fewer questions.” And blessed with so much experience, Armel Le Cléac’h prefers to focus on preparation. He wants to enjoy a level of confidence because he has mastered everything that makes up the pre-race preparations. “I try to tick all the boxes before the start,” he admits. “Above all what I am looking for is a balance in physical and technical preparations, in terms of recovery as well.”

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Published on January 7th, 2024 | by Editor

Underway for the ARKÉA Ultim Challenge

Published on January 7th, 2024 by Editor -->

As a new chapter in ocean racing history was opened with the start of the inaugural ARKÉA ULTIM CHALLENGE-Brest as a winter chill and modest NE’ly wind was scarcely enough to lift the giant ULTIM multihulls on to their foils as they got underway on January 7 In Brest, France.

Tom Laperche (SVR Lazartigue) made the dream start, as after arriving a day earlier following six weeks of repairs, Laperche hit the line at speed before building a narrow lead.

Considering the weather forecast for the six solo skippers in the first ever solo multihull race round the world on 32mx23m giant ULTIM trimarans, it is agreed that François Gabart’s 2017 mark of 42 days 16 hours was not in imminent danger. The fleet could be more than two days behind the record time when they get into the big south.

Much of the passage down to the Equator will be upwind, slowed first by a low pressure trough off Portugal and then by a big Atlantic depression to be negotiated later this week. As yet there is no sign of any fast trade-winds sailing before they pass into the Southern Hemisphere.

trimaran ultime arkea

However, none of these latest generation, cutting-edge, giant foiling trimarans have ever been sailed at max speed across the southern Indian and the Pacific oceans, so any initial deficit could still be overturned before Cape Horn.

But first, the leaders should pass Cape Finisterre, off the NW corner of Spain, early on the second day after a relatively straightforward passage of Biscay. But the first major weather hurdle is off the Portuguese coast which will be the precursor to the big Atlantic depression.

“It is quite tricky for the skippers because they have a thalweg (a trough) which they have to cross to the other side of, that means a transition zone of the wind from the north to the wind from the east,” noted Spanish weather ace Pep Costa.

Australia-based Will Oxley, who is in the weather routing cell for Thomas Coville’s Sodebo, notes how the Elephant in the room is the large front and low pressure the fleet it due to encounter on January 10.

“All the set-up revolves around when and where will we interact with the system?” said Oxley. “As we know, the weather routing programs know no fear and left to their own devices, they are happy to send the Ultims into 6m swells and 45 knot gusts, so we need to manage that carefully.”

Details: https://arkeaultimchallengebrest.com/en

The Ultim Class trimarans have a maximum length of 32 meters and a maximum width of 23 meters.

The solo speed record around the world was set in 2017 by François Gabart (FRA) on the 30m Macif trimaran in a time of 42d 14h 40m 15s for an average speed of 21.08 knots. This yacht has been rebranded and will be raced by Marchand.

Entrants: • Charles Caudrelier (FRA), Maxi Edmond de Rothschild (2017 Verdier 32/23) • Thomas Coville (FRA), Sodebo Ultim 3 (2019 VPLP/others 32/23) • Tom Laperche (FRA), Trimaran SVR-Lazartigue (2021 VPLP 32/23) • Armel Le Cléac’h (FRA), Maxi Banque Populaire XI (2021 VPLP 32/23) • Anthony Marchand (FRA), Actual Ultim 3 (2015 VPLP 30/22) • Éric Péron (FRA), Trimaran Adagio (2014 VPLP 31/21)

Five rules from the Sailing Instructions: • The start line is kept open for 168 hours and the finish line is closed after an elapsed time of 100 days after the start time, that is to say 16th April 2024.

• The skippers can communicate and exchange with their teams on shore, so they have the freedom to get weather information and be routed by their team on shore and get technical help and advice to help with technical problems.

• The solo skippers can stop but there are two distinct operations. A technical stop is unassisted and requires the sailor to drop anchor, take a mooring, or tie up alongside an anchored or moored boat with no external help. There is no time penalty for a technical stop. But for a technical stopover (escale technique) where one or more crew or technical team come on board to help, there is a mandatory 24 hours minimum. This does not apply to the start port of Brest where all means are authorized to reach or leave the port within a radius of 50 miles.

• For the first time in ocean racing, zones where there are known to be a high concentration of whales and sea mammals are determined. Establishing these zones should both protect the marine wildlife and reduce the chance of a collision. These zones are around the Azores, the Canaries, south of South Africa, the Kerguelens, and parts of the Antarctic.

• There are ice exclusion zones to protect the skippers and their boats.

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Tags: ARKEA ULTIM CHALLENGE – Brest , Ultim Class

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Berthon Winter Collection

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August 2024

In the August 2024 issue of Yachting World magazine: News Few finish a tempestuous Round The Island Race European rules are eased for cruising to France and Greece Olympic sailing…

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Yachting World

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Six solo skippers ready to race 100ft foiling multihulls around the world

James Boyd

  • January 4, 2024

Is this the most audacious race ever? Six skippers are getting ready to race 100ft foiling maxi trimarans solo around the world – James Boyd looks forward to the Arkea Ultim Challenge Brest

trimaran ultime arkea

There are very few ‘firsts’ left in the world of sailing, but one such remaining barrier could be smashed when the Arkea Ultim Challenge Brest sets off from north-west France on 7 January 2024.

Since the Sunday Times Golden Globe in 1968/69 – the ‘impossible feat’ – there have been all manner of non-stop laps of the planet, from fully crewed Jules Verne Trophy and solo records, to races such as the single-handed Vendée Globe , and The Race in 2000 for fully crewed maxi-multihulls. This January sees a new pinnacle-of-pinnacles event: the first solo, non-stop, round the world race in Ultim trimarans. Six brave French skippers on their 100ft multihulls are entered.

The advancement in human endeavour and technology in this cutting edge area of sailing has been extraordinary. Thirty years ago we were in Brest for the first tentative Jules Verne Trophy attempts. Back then no one knew if sailing around the world in under 80 days was even possible: three boats set off and only one made it – Bruno Peyron’s maxi-catamaran Commodore Explorer in 79 days 6 hours.

Since then the record has been reduced by titans such as Peter Blake/Robin Knox-Johnston, Olivier de Kersauson, Loïck Peyron, Franck Cammas and, ultimately, Francis Joyon . In a quarter of a century, the record has halved with Joyon’s 105ft IDEC Sport setting the present benchmark of 40d 23h 30m 30s (at 26.85 knots average) five years ago.

You might assume that a solo around the world would be much slower, but Joyon destroyed this notion. In 2004, when the Jules Verne Trophy record was 63 days, he completed a lap in just under 73 days alone on his 90ft trimaran IDEC (also the first successful solo non-stop circumnavigation by a trimaran). The following year the UK ground to a halt for an afternoon, television dominated by live coverage of Ellen MacArthur’s arrival into Falmouth after she’d taken more than a day off Joyon’s time.

trimaran ultime arkea

Gabart on his previous Macif Ultime. Photo: Rolex/Carlo Borlenghi

Thomas Coville took the time below 50 days in 2016 with 49d 3h, broken the following year by François Gabart ’s 100ft Macif , establishing the present solo non-stop record: 42d 16h 40m 3s (just 4% slower than Joyon’s fully crewed).

While these times are impressive, they are records set in optimum, carefully selected conditions (for the first two weeks at least), whereas the Arkea Ultim Challenge Brest is a race. The solo sailors will have onshore routers, but their departure day is set, and pace likely dictated by their opponents. It’s a very different test of man and machine.

“It is something new,” says Gitana’s Charles Caudrelier . “The first time racing around the world with these big flying boats. It is a bit like the first Vendée Globe – not quite the same because we know where we are going! But it is a bit of an adventure, and I’m happy about that.”

trimaran ultime arkea

Armel le Cléac’h in solo mode on Maxi Banque Populaire XI. Photo: Benoît Stichelbaut

The contenders

Surprisingly, skippers at all stages of their careers are competing. Amiable sea-dog Thomas Coville will be 55 when the race sets off. There is almost no major event Coville hasn’t done, from the America’s Cup to winning the Volvo Ocean Race.

Having sailed ORMA 60s, Coville moved into the record breaking business on maxi trimarans and is now on his third, Sodebo having backed him continuously. Of the six skippers Coville is the most experienced racing Ultims single-handed and is laudable for his sheer tenacity – he finally set a solo round the world record on his fifth attempt, after 11 years of trying.

At the other end of the scale, it was a surprise to learn that SVR-Lazartigue will not be raced by François Gabart, the single-handed round the world record holder and the blue trimaran’s initial skipper. Instead, taking over for solo races will be 26-year-old Tom Laperche. An engineer and highly talented sailor, Laperche is a graduate of the classic French offshore racing pathway; and has been involved with SVR-Lazartigue since its launch, racing as Gabart’s co-skipper in the last two Transat Jacques Vabre .

Anthony Marchand, 38, has also newly taken on a campaign, replacing Yves le Blevec on Actual Ultim 3 (ex-Macif) in early 2023. Meanwhile an 11th hour entry is Eric Péron on Adagio , the previous Sodebo Ultim. The boat is something of a ‘Frankenstein’ creation – recycling the 2001 maxi-tri Geronimo with appendages from 2010 America’s Cup winner USA17 – but a fast one.

trimaran ultime arkea

Thomas Coville, on Sodebo Ultime 3. Photo: Vincent Curutchet/Team Sodebo

“I’ve been preparing for this kind of thing for years now,” said Péron. I haven’t done much preparation on the boat, but for everything else, the boxes are ticked. So, in the short time I’ve got left before the start, I hope to become at one with the machine. What motivates me most of all is the fact that it’s an extreme race, and that’s why I want to take up the challenge. Obviously, I’m not leaving totally confident. But I’m not going to give up.”

In the absence of Gabart, the two favourites are likely to be Armel le Cléac’h on Maxi Banque Populaire XI and Charles Caudrelier on Maxi Edmond de Rothschild (Gitana 17) . Theirs are two of the best funded and oldest teams.

Banque Populaire first sponsored Joyon’s ORMA 60 in 1989 and has campaigned seven trimarans since, including building two Ultims. The team’s first Ultim had a disastrous 2018, before a final crash left it utterly destroyed during the Route du Rhum . Undeterred, the French bank set about building a replacement. Now, alongside SVR-Lazartigue, their two-year-old Maxi Banque Populaire XI is one of the newest Ultims.

SVR-Lazartigue and Banque Populaire XI are essentially VPLP designs (Ultim teams have their own in-house designers, engineers, aero- and hydrodynamists, foil and hydraulics experts), while Maxi Edmond de Rothschild is from Guillaume Verdier – Emirates Team New Zealand’s long term naval architect who has applied much of his Cup experience to the offshore trimaran .

trimaran ultime arkea

Adagio, the previous Sodebo Ultim. Photo: Yvan Zedda

Impressive statistics

An Ultim’s length can be anything from 24-32m (78ft 8in-105ft) with a maximum beam of 23m (75ft), though in practice all six are trimarans built to, or near to the rule’s maximum. Overall mast height is less than 120% of length of the longest hull, so 38.4m (126ft). Additional rules cover minimum air draught below the beams and float volume. Water ballast, autopilots and automatic anti-capsize systems are permitted, but stored energy (produced by the crew) or the creation of inertial energy and computer or electromechanical assistance for adjusting any of the appendages is forbidden.

As with all things yachting, their quantum performance leap has come since going airborne. Today all six use a similar, complex foil configuration: on each hull is a rudder with an elevator where lift can be adjusted via a flap on its trailing edge. Midships in each float is a giant J-foil, which can be raised, lowered and its rake adjusted. Unique to the Ultims (apart from Adagio) is the daggerboard, which is fitted not only with a trim tab on its trailing edge to prevent leeway, but an elevator.

trimaran ultime arkea

Maxi Edmond de Rothschild (Gitana 17). Photo: Yann Riou/Gitana

The foils and elevators are adjusted hydraulically in combination to alter, for example, fore and aft trim and ride height, depending upon the point of sail and sea state. Generally the aim is for the platform to have zero heel/pitch. Thanks to the rudder elevators the ride is very stable in pitch (unlike IMOCA 60s ), the foils effectively ‘locking’ the boat to the water.

Just as America’s Cup catamarans that raked their windward rudder elevator to produce downforce (like crew on the rail), so Ultims can produce downforce with their daggerboard elevator. According to Gabart this is vital: racing an Ultim solo is about maximising efficiency so, when a gust hits, the rake on the daggerboard elevator is increased, sucking the trimaran’s main hull down. “If you release the hydraulic main sheet, it takes five minutes to pump it in again,” explains Gabart. “With this, when you are sailing at 40 knots you can add two tonnes [of down force] in one second using minimal energy.”

With their latest substantially larger foils, Ultims can fly in less wind. Originally it required 15-20 knots of wind or 26-27 knots boat speed for Macif to fly, this is now down to 12-14 knots of wind and 21-23 boat speed for SVR-Lazartigue – remarkable considering an Ultim’s 15-17 tonne displacement.

It’s similar on Banque Populaire XI, says Armel le Cléac’h. “We fly in 12-13 knots of wind or 22-23 knots of boat speed. In 15-17 knots of wind we fly upwind at 27-30 knots – that is the big step. Compared to older Ultims like IDEC in the last Route du Rhum, it’s an 8-9 knot improvement.”

trimaran ultime arkea

Actual Ultim 3, formerly Gabart’s Macif. Photo: Thierry Martinez

Such speeds permit Ultims to become ‘masters of the weather’ – to some extent at least – often travelling so fast that their skippers can choose the weather system they can sail in. Optimum conditions for an Ultim are 15-25 knots (more than this and the sea state becomes too choppy for foiling), so they aim at the sweet spot of weather systems (flat water ahead of a warm front), which they then ride, like a surfer on a wave.

Le Cléac’h says their top speed has been 47 knots, “But that is not an objective. We want to have a good average speed: 40-42 knots for one or two hours is very good. 35-37 knots for 24 hours is very good too.”

Riding a rocketship

So how can skippers handle such a monster-sized boat that is foiling single-handed? Autopilot technology has improved to extraordinary levels of accuracy. According to Gabart, once set up, speed sailing in a straight line is not much different between solo and crewed. “Upwind or downwind VMG you are a little bit better if you are steering and others are trimming. At 65-70° TWA it is no different.”

Naturally manoeuvres are slower alone. Gabart says that going from reefed to full main might take two minutes fully crewed, but at least 10 solo. Some technology helps, like Harken’s latest generation Air 900 winches and pedestal grinders with bespoke gearing for single-person operation.

trimaran ultime arkea

The newest of the Ultims, SVR-Lazartigue is perhaps the most advanced design. Photo: Guillaume Gatefait

While foils and many sail controls are hydraulic (SVR-Lazartigue has 23 rams), the pedestals are able to drive twin hydraulic pumps – though it requires serious manpower: “80% of the grinding is for the hydraulics,” says Gabart. SVR-Lazartigue will race with just five sails, including main and J0-J3, two permanently rigged on furlers.

Sailing at such high speeds has several effects. With apparent wind factored in, on deck there is constantly storm force, or at best gale force, winds. Human beings cannot operate for long in this and so cockpit protection has drastically increased with some Ultims now fully enclosed.

On the latest Sodebo and SVR-Lazartigue these have moved forward. On the former, the ‘bridge’ is forward of the mast, USS Enterprise-style, while on the latter it is just aft of the mast, with jet fighter-style steering cockpits each side, complete with sliding canopies. The end result is that an Ultim’s crew rarely ventures outside, viewing the world via CCTV.

While foiling reduces hydrodynamic drag, all the teams have been focussed on reducing aero-drag. Crossbeams now have trailing edge fairings made from robust vinyl, while on SVR-Lazartigue, moving their ‘cockpit’ forward has enabled them to have an AC-style ‘deck sweeper’ boom where the deck creates an endplate for the foot of the mainsail (improving efficiency).

trimaran ultime arkea

Tom Laperche steering, jet fighter-style, on SVR-Lazartigue. Photo: Guillaume Gatefait

To finish first…

For the teams, the principal hurdle of the Arkea Ultim Challenge Brest will be finishing. The major worry on such a long race is reliability. To prevent structural failures Ultims have load cells, the output from which is monitored in real time. Otherwise teams have simply been racing and sea trialling as often as possible in all conditions.

This year’s Transat Jacques Vabre’s heavier conditions were ideal, enabling the double-handed teams to really push the boats harder. While all the Ultims finished, some were in better shape than others, Maxi Edmond de Rothschild suffering rudder and foil issues while Sodebo Ultim’s starboard rudder sheared off after a collision with an underwater object.

“The main problem will be to have all of the boats finishing the race in good shape,” says Caudrelier, who says it will take a new approach from his previous crewed around the world races. “Always you push to the maximum, but this time you can’t do that and we will have to find a good balance between performance and safety for the boat. That is quite an interesting exercise and also managing a boat like this alone for 45 days.”

Éric Péron explains: “On these boats, a small incident can immediately put us out of the race, because nothing can be replaced on our own. The boat is so big that there’s not much we can do to fix it with what we’ve got on board.”

Antoine Gautier, head of the design office at Mer Concept (behind SVR-Lazartigue) adds that their enormously complex boat will be simplified: “We are going to have less systems on board to make it simpler and more reliable. There are some things which won’t make much difference on a round the world race.”

trimaran ultime arkea

Armel le Cléac’h at Banque Populaire’s mission control/protected pod. Photo: Vincent Curutchet/ Hublot Sailing team

Capsize was once a major concern, but for Ultims today is – apparently – almost a non-issue. The multihulls are simply huge, and their rigs are now stepped almost two thirds of the way back from the bow, to prevent pitchpoling. As Gautier explains: “The boats are definitely safer than any multihulls before. There are no more pitchpoling issues and in terms of heel stability, you almost can’t heel because the leeward foil is pushing up so much. That is why they are able to sail so fast, even short-handed – because the boats are very safe and you don’t feel in danger.”

Nonetheless they do still have inclinometers which can automatically dump hydraulics (eg mainsheet) or mechanically release headsail sheets if heel is excessive.

Of greater concern are elements beyond the skipper’s control: collision. AIS and radar target alarms substantially reduce the chance of an Ultim hitting another vessel, but the threat of a ‘UFO’ (unidentified floating object) remains. As Gautier says: “Collision is the biggest fear for all of us. If you hit something at 30-plus knots it is the end of your race. The boat which is going to win will be the one which has all its appendages at the finish. It is Russian roulette and you can’t do anything about it. This is not a fun part of the sport, but it is the same for any race like this.”

To help prevent such collisions Ultims are all fitted with SEA.AI (previously known as OSCAR) a camera mounted at the masthead that can ‘see’ ahead both in daylight and at night, using infra-red. Images are compared in real time with a giant database to establish whether something ahead represents a collision threat.

trimaran ultime arkea

Ultims raced each other double-handed in the November 2023 Transat Jacques Vabre – won by Armel le Cléac’h/Sébastien Josse in Banque Populaire XI. Photo: Jean-Marie Liot/Alea

There are other factors too that will come into play: a good deal of luck, undoubtedly, but also the skill, experience and motivation of the skippers. Caudrelier has perhaps the most experience in his boat and over the last three years has won most races, but he has never raced solo around the world. “This is my Vendée Globe” he acknowledges.

By contrast Le Cléac’h has completed three Vendées, on the podium every time. However his recent victory in the Transat Jacques Vabre was his first in an Ultim. For Coville, this might be his last lap? While for Laperche this will be his first big Ultim event and proving himself is a key objective.

What is certain is that this will be the ultimate contest between some of the world’s most talented offshore sailors. How many will make it round? And for those that do, it could be the fastest ever round the world race, so all the action will unfold quickly. Follow at arkeaultimchallengebrest.com

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Niewiadoma au bout du suspense

Au bout d'un scénario renversant et palpitant jusqu'au bout, Kasia Niewiadoma (Canyon//Sram Racing) a sauvé son Maillot Jaune et remporté la 3e édition du Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift pour quatre petites secondes sur Demi Vollering (SD Worx-Protime), lauréate de cette 8e et dernière étape à l'Alpe d'Huez. Distancée par la Néerlandaise à 2,5 kilomètres du col du Glandon et 54 kilomètres de l'arrivée, la Polonaise a compté jusqu'à 1'30" de retard sur sa grande rivale, qui n'avait que 1'15" à combler pour renverser la course. Mais au prix d'une ultime ascension héroique, et avec l'aide dans les derniers kilomètres d'Evita Muzic (FDJ-Suez), 4e au classement final, la Polonaise remporte son premier Tour après avoir pris la 3e place ces deux dernières années. Seule à pouvoir accompagner Vollering dans sa fugue, la surprenante Pauliena Rooijakkers (Fenix-Deceuninck) complète le podium final, à 10" de Niewiadoma seulement, après avoir elle aussi longtemps entrevu la victoire finale.

Ghekiere reprend sa chasse aux pois

Shayla Gutierrez (Movistar), Barbara Malcotti, Marit Raaijmakers (Human Powered Health) et Josie Talbot (Cofidis) ne prennent pas le départ de la 8e et dernière étape du Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift. Les 116 coureuses demeurant dans le peloton s'élancent à 14h05 sous les nuages du Grand-Bornand. Lauréate la veille dans la station haut-savoyarde, Justine Ghekiere (AG Insurance-Soudal Team) a encore des fourmis dans les jambes. La Belge forme une première échappée avec Amber Kraak (FDJ-Suez) puis se retrouve dans un large groupe dans la première ascension du jour, le col de Tamié (2e catégorie, km 27,2), qu'elle franchit en tête pour marquer cinq points et consolider son maillot à pois.

Une échappée de 22 coureuses pour commencer

Dans cette échappée de 22 coureuses, Ghekiere est accompagnée de Bredewold, Majerus, Vas, Wiebes (SD Worx-Protime), Koch (dsm-firmenich PostNL), Brand (Lidl-Trek), Adegeest (FDJ-Suez), Markus, Van Empel (Visma|Lease a Bike), Smulders (Liv-AlUla-Jayco), Arzuffi (Ceratizit-WNT), Faulkner, Ruegg (EF-Oatly-Cannondale), Lippert, Baril (Movistar), Persico, Magnaldi (UAE Team ADQ), Aalerud, Ottestad (Uno-X Mobilty), Fahy et Le Mouel (St-Michel-Mavic-Auber93). L'écart grimpe à près de trois minutes. Il est réduit de moitié au pied du Glandon (Hors catégorie, 19,7 km à 9,2%).

Vollering distance Niewiadoma dans le Glandon

Brand attaque pour réduire l'échappée à sept unités. Après le tempo imposé par l'équipe FDJ-Suez, la grande sélection est opérée par la formation SD Worx-Protime de Demi Vollering. La Néerlandaise place sa grande offensive à 2,5 kilomètres du sommet. Kasia Niewiadoma ne peut pas suivre. L'écart se creuse rapidement. Au col du Glandon, à 51 km de l'arrivée, la porteuse du Maillot Jaune accuse une minute de retard sur Vollering, qui forme un trio de tête avec Pauliena Rooijakkers (Fenix-Deceuninck) et la surprenante Valentina Cavallar (Arkéa-B&B Hotels). Distancée, Puck Pieterse (Fenix-Deceuninck) n'est pas dans les cinq premières au sommet, validant ainsi la victoire de Ghekiere au classement de la montagne.

Kerbaol fait la descente

De son côté, Niewiadoma se trouve en compagnie de Gaia Realini, Lucinda Brand (Lidl-Trek), Sarah Gigante (AG Insurance-Soudal Team) et Evita Muzic (FDJ-Suez). Un groupe Maillot Jaune que Cédrine Kerbaol (Ceratizit-WNT) parvient à rejoindre dans la descente du Glandon. La Bretonne, qui avait déjà fait admirer son adresse en s'imposant à Morteau, parvient à s'isoler pour partir seule à la chasse du trio de tête. Mais Niewiadoma fait l'effort pour la reprendre dans l'un des petits raidards qui entrecoupent la descente du Glandon.

L'étape pour Vollering, la victoire finale pour Niewiadoma

Après avoir distancé Cavallar, Vollering et Rooijakkers se présentent avec 45" d'avance sur le groupe Maillot Jaune au pied de l'Alpe d'Huez, ascension finale longue de 13,8km à 8,1% de moyenne. Niewiadoma accélère et seules Muzic et Realini parviennent à la suivre. L'écart remonte à une minute à dix kilomètres de l'arrivée. Le suspense est total pour la victoire finale, Rooijakkers et Vollering ayant respectivement 1'13" et 1'15" à combler sur la Polonaise pour la devancer au général. Le bras de fer finit par tourner en faveur de Niewiadoma, qui sauve son Maillot Jaune et remporte le Tour pour 4 secondes sur Vollering, lauréate de cette 8e étape.

18/08/2024 - Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift 2024 - Etape 8 - Le Grand-Bornand / Alpe d'Huez (149,9 km) - NIEWIADOMA Katarzyna (CANYON//SRAM RACING)

Vous aimerez aussi…

Rooijakkers : « Encore plein de choses à travailler » image

Rooijakkers : « Encore plein de choses à travailler »

Ghekiere: « Une manière fantastique de finir le Tour » image

Ghekiere: « Une manière fantastique de finir le Tour »

Pieterse : « J'ai trouvé mes limites aujourd'hui » image

Pieterse : « J'ai trouvé mes limites aujourd'hui »

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J Composites J/45

Major damage to the trimaran SVR-Lazartigue in the Arkéa Ultim Challenge - Brest

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COMMENTS

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    François Gabart will be inspired to design his first Macif, a 32-meter trimaran with which in 2017 he will erase the previous performances of Francis Joyon in 2008 (57 days 13 hours 4 minutes), of Thomas Coville in 2017 (49 days 3 hours 4 minutes), with a new reference time of 42 days 16 hours 40 minutes which should not make us forget the ...

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  17. The boats

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  18. All set for The Arkea Ultim Challenge

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  19. Arkéa Ultim Challenge Brest 2024: a tremendous showcase for composites

    The first edition of the Arkéa Ultim Challenge sets sail from Brest on Sunday, January 7. It brings together 6 skippers on Ultim 32/23 boats for a high-stakes solo around-the-world race. The « flying » trimaran SVR Lazartigue skippered by Tom Laperche captures a lot of attention.

  20. Arkéa Ultim Challenge

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    Kasia Niewiadoma ne peut pas suivre. L'écart se creuse rapidement. Au col du Glandon, à 51 km de l'arrivée, la porteuse du Maillot Jaune accuse une minute de retard sur Vollering, qui forme un trio de tête avec Pauliena Rooijakkers (Fenix-Deceuninck) et la surprenante Valentina Cavallar (Arkéa-B&B Hotels).

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