Three more skippers are due to finish their solo race round-the-world today

Three more skippers are due to finish their solo race round-the-world today

Kojiro Shiraishi (DMG MORI Global One) and a little further behind Alan Roura (La Fabrique) leads Stéphane Le Diraison (Time for Oceans) ).


They  will likely finish upwind in a bitterly cold easterly offshore breezes which will be very unstable requiring them to be quite conservative in their sailplan. 


Shiraishi will become the first Asian skipper to finish the Vendée Globe and in so doing realise his 30 year dream of honouring the legacy of his mentor Yukoh Tada who took his own life during the 1991 Around Alone race.


Alan Roura and Stéphane Le Diraison are expected this afternoon. Roura has the upper hand still while skipper of Time for Oceans has lost his J3 headsail which tore itself apart yesterday.


Pip Hare is now expected in the small hours of Friday morning, A failed halyard lock strop dropped her Fractional Code Zero to the deck and into the water, damaging the pulpit of Medallia. But the British skipper remains in excellent spirits contemplating the conclusion of the Vendée Globe which has been her dream since being inspired as a teenager by the exploits of Florence Arthaud.


Deprived of her downwind sails Hare was looking at options to get moving fast again

“There is a huge swell running, knocking the wind out of Medallias sails but we are struggling to move with no offwind sails. In the light of day I have surveyed the damage and spoken with Joff about what options I have for getting one of my code zero's back up in the sky. Goodness knows I could do with it now. Without it I am waddling along to the finish and that is not how this story ends.


I am gutted to have to pull out of my fight with the foilers. Last night charging along in the South I knew I would be giving them some grief at the next position schedule, maybe not enough to overtake but certainly to keep them on their toes. Now I will finish alone and probably around 12 hours later. It depends how long I get stuck in this wind hole and whether I can rig up a sail that will get me out of it a bit quicker. One thing is for sure, this is not over and I still have the clock to race against.”