HIS RACE IN FIGURES
Finish time: 19:11:49 (UTC)
Elapsed time: 12d 01h 46min 49s
Delta to first: 1d 22h 02min 19s
Distance sailed: 4 205.44 miles
Average speed (on the great circle): 10.96 knots
His first reaction
"Like all the others I was trapped from the start. After that, it was a different race. Yes it’s a 3rd place, but it’s also a win in terms of our group. When I saw that I couldn't win the race, I said to myself that I could win our race. In the end, it wasn't really a race that boosts my confidence. It's been tough but I'm happy to have shown that I can put everything into it, constantly like on La Solitaire du Figaro over the course of 10 days.”
HIS RACE
Beyou arrived in New York looking hungry for a result, desperate to get back into the thick of the action after having to retire from the westwards solo Transat with J2 forestay damage. He had to bring the Sam Manuard designed IMOCA across the Atlantic with a crew in delivery mode.
He’s renowned as a fierce competitor but he had to be patient. Even in New York Beyou could only focus on the race and found his peace of mind at his boat foregoing any time for relaxing sightseeing or tourism in the Big Apple.
Even so Charal was the fastest in his group during the Vendée Liberty, the prestigious speed runs competition contested on the Hudson between the Statue of Liberty and Manhattan.
When the race began on Wednesday 29th May he made a good start and worked well in the very difficult, unpredictable conditions as the Gulf Stream current, a moving low pressure front proving an obstacle which in the end only winner Charlie Dalin (MACIF Santé Prévoyance) and runner up Boris Herrmann (Malizia – Seaexplorer) managed to break through and away.
“It came down to five miles which became 500 miles,” rued Beyou at the time.
But the skipper of Charal regrouped and drove relentlessly. He led the pack to the south of the Azores and then on the climb to Les Sables-d’Olonne. This peloton of top boats and skippers had it all, downwind, upwind, boat-breaking seas, a big scare (the dismasting of Sam Goodchild) whilst all the time sustaining the intense, close boat for boat racing, mostly within sight of each other. “It’s been like a Figaro race” commented Hubert Lemonnier, the race director.
As leader of the pack Beyou was more often in the uncomfortable position being hunted rather than the hunter. But he held on and this is his second podium in seven months, his sixth over all races for Charal which was launched in 2022. And with another podium in his pocket on this key final race before the Vendée Globe, Beyou can look forwards to a more relaxed summer, confident he has all the tools needed to deliver a podium finish on the upcoming 10th edition of the solo race round the world.