About Joe Cooper

Australian-born, Rhode Island-based sailing coach and consultant.

Vendee Globe-Akena Vérandas & Skipper Arnaud Boissières

Second in my review of the companies that sponsor IMOCA 60’s in the Vendee Globe

Akena Vérandas & Skipper Arnaud Boissières

Once again this Info gathered is gathered from the Internet so Caveat Emptor

Akena Vérandas is a manufacturer of Verandas…
They are headquartered in the Vendee Region of France-half way down the eastern end of the Bay of Biscay. In fact Google map shows them about 20 miles inland from Les Sable D’lonne and apparently about a block from Rue Eric Tabarly. Yes Toto, the French DO take their sailing heroes seriously. The basin in St. Malo where the boats are gathered for the start of the Route du Rhumb is named for Paul Vatine a Norman lost at sea in the Transat Jacques Vabre in1999.
A brief news bite about A.V posted the site of the Lyon Economic Development site reads as follows. (I think Aderly is the district in which Lyon is sited).
“Convinced of the importance of developing its team spirit around a non work-related event, Akena Vérandas has decided to sponsor Arnaud Boissières who is competing in the Vendée Globe 2008-2009 (my highlight) boat race, bearing the colors of company. The race began on November 9th.
The company began sponsoring skippers of the Vendée Globe back in 2004-2005. Akena Vérandas is the leading manufacturer of verandas in France, with about 80,000 installations a year and 60 million Euros in sales in 2007. The company is continuing its development strategy with the opening of 10 new shops a year through 2010. To meet its needs for expansion, Akena took advantage of Aderly’s assistance to set up a branch to open soon in the Lyon area, in the town of Saint-Priest. Established in 1981, the company is now present all over France.”
Other more recent information I have found says that they have 100,000 installations, have 75 sales offices all over the country with 8 technical centers and have 650 employees.
They further say on their various links that they sponsored their first entry for the Vendee 2004 with Raphaël Dinelli as skipper and although Dinelli did not finish, or count as a finisher, Akena re-up’d, as noted above, again in 2008 this time with Arnaud Boissières as Skipper. Boissières had finished 7th in the Transat, formerly the O.S.T.A.R., earlier in 2008 aboard A.V.
Not only does A.V. sponsor sailing but several other sports too including Soccer, Basketball, Tennis, Cycling and a kind of athletic team (may be race walking) set up as a charity the proceeds of which go to children who are ill.
Arnaud appears to like the number 7. Not only was this his finish place in The Artemis Transat 2008 but also in the 2008/9 Vendee Globe, The Transat Jacques Vabre later in 2009 with Vincent Riou and his finish in the Route du Rhumb in 2010.
So what is interesting here is you have a company with sales of 60 million Euros (OK 5 years ago and the 2008 economic black hole not withstanding) investing, what might be a good chunk of their advertising budget, in a long distance ocean race. Not just once but their sponsorship is on going, even after on their first outing when the boat did not even rank as a finisher. They must have gotten what  they wanted from it because they signed up again in 2008/9 and now again in 2012 AND their guys have not won anything-Yet-The boat they bought is the old PRB, winner in 2008/9.
And these guys build verandas. It is not like they sell a “gotta have”consumer product in demand around the world–or something with deeper pockets, like a bank or insurance company (I’ll get to them-I am going by skipper’s second name alphabetically) AND they keep doing it….

There is hope yet for US solo sailing I reckon.

Vendee Globe Sponsors: Maitre CoQ

Many of the sponsored boats in the Vendee globe are names familiar to anyone who is interested in sailing, especially at this level-But what about the new comers? I spent a little time trying to find out.

Jeremie Beyou and Maitre CoQ

Jeremie Beyou is sailing under the colors of French food retailer Maitre CoQ which is a division of a larger food business called LDC.  They, LDC, are, listed on the Paris Bourse and as best as I can tell did something like 640 million Euros last year. LDC operates all over France in several sectors-Prepared food-Frozen food-Chicken, Turkey Rabbit, Pork, Pizza, Pre-made sandwiches. LDC is active in Spain and now Poland also.

On the actual Maitre CoQ website, as opposed to the LDC site, there is a definite promotion of the entry in the Vendee Globe with a link to a dedicated Matire CoQ/Vendee Globe page. This link is a mini VG site in itself, with daily updates, videos, comments from Jeremie at sea and so on. All this is on the left side of the site: and on the right….? Yup, ads of products sold by Maitre CoQ. The ads are smallish, say 2” x 2” and in a slide show on about an 8 second cycle. There is also have a radio controlled model yacht in the livery of the IMOCA 60 that you can either buy or enter some contest to win (My French fails here). You can sign up for regular updates-Thus having potential email ad prospects coming to you and not the other way around…. There is a section with their partners, LDC, (the parent company)  Musto, a TV station, A radio station, a sports website-Think ESPN on line except that there is a sailing page, an on line “newspaper” and a computer company called Intempora whose mission seems to be doing taking information on active “things” cars, boats people and seeing how the actions can be made to be more effective.

I find it interesting that if LDC/Maitre CoQ spends say (a number I have heard floating in the ether…) 20 million Euros on a 4 year program-5 mil Euros a year-as part of a 650 Million Euro conglomerate they must think there is a viable return on the 20 mil. Admittedly they brought a second hand boat, but it was Foncia, organized and sailed by Micheal  Desjoyeaux, one of the masters in the solo ocean racing game, and the fact that they have entered sailing sponsorship at a pretty high level, financially, technically and complexity as their first outing and in this economic climate must make one wonder what they know that US companies do not.

Next up, Arnaud Boissieres aboard Akena Verandas

Vendee Globe—Why Francois Gabart?

Since the Vendee Globe started, 5 days ago, one young skipper has led virtually the whole race, putting some of the best IMOCA skippers in the world in his wake which frankly is saying something. To paraphrase Butch and Sundance—Who is this guy?

More to the point how did a 29 year old get to be at the helm of a brand new IMOCA 60 Sponsored by a major publically traded (on the Paris Bourse) insurance company?

Turns out he pretty much earned the spot. I have found no evidence at all of nepotism.

The following info is all garnered from the Internet, so “Caveat Emptor”

Francois Gabart is of course French. He sailed with his parents as a 7 year old on a circle cruise of the Atlantic so starting in at least 1990, this fellow has been around the water.

By 1997 he was skilled enough to win the French Optimist Championship. Two years later, now 16, He also won the French Moth Championships and came 4th in the Junior European Championships for the Moth, in 2000. All pretty impressive in itself I reckon.

Between 2001 and 2005 his various on line CV’s cite him as “Olympic Tornado Preparation” and winning the Tornado Junior Worlds in 2003 in the process. Certainly sailing a Tornado is excellent practice for sailing an IMOCA 60. By 2006 he had gotten into the Figaro 2 and finished second in the Cap Istanbul race, one of the major events in the Figaro solo series. The Cap Istanbul sails from Toulon to Turkey with several stops: the race is almost as long as the Figaro itself. In 2006, or 7, he was second. He won it in 2010. In the same 2006/7 time he won the Student class in the Tour De France a la Voile. This is a crewed race in the Archambault 34.

Come 2008 he was sailing as the skipper of the Figaro 2 Espoire Region Bretagne, the Brittany Region of France. This is a common proposition among the French maritime districts. It is as though say Rhode Island & Massachusetts had joined forces to promote the region. Years ago I interviewed the late  Paul Vatiene, then skipper of an ORMA 60 foot tri, in New York to set up for a shot at the solo Transat record. His boat was the same idea-Regional promotional except his was promoting the region of Normandy.

This was also when  Gabart won Rookie of the Year in The Figaro that serious training ground for Soloistas.
And somewhere in there he managed to get an engineering degree.

In 2009, it gets really interesting.

In this year he won the “Skipper Macif Selection, for 2010-meaning I imagine that he was to join the Macif Sailing Team for the 2010 season-Goodbye Espoire Region Bretagne. On the Macif Vendee Globe website for Sponsors, there is a very professionally done website covering everything the Macif company is doing in sailing, including sponsoring the IMOCA 60, and two new skippers for the Figaro team-As far as I can read in my limited French.

So in ’09, he joins Macif, is third in a Transatlantic Race from Brittany to Guadeloupe in the Figaro2, singlehanded. He is out of first by about an hour,  two minutes, fifteen seconds…After 3,400 miles or so. The first and second skippers are 4 minutes apart-The winner is 40 year old Gildas Morvan a fixture on the Figaro circuit for FOURTEEN years, with a record including a second and 3 thirds in The Figaro. Second is Erwan Tabarly  (8 years on the Figaro Circuit) & Gabart is third.

He is 23 years old.

Later he wins the French Solo Offshore Racing Championship sailed in the Figaro 2’s….. Wha? Think about this for a minute- he beats out, over a 10 or so race series, over the summer, some of the best names in one design and solo offshore racing, in the world. No wonder Macif hired him. This is in itself an interesting change of events. Used to be solo skippers would go around with their pitch looking for sponsors-I know I have done it. Think also of Mike Plant, Hal Roth, Phil Steggall, Bruce Schwab, Rich Wilson and so on. In France companies are now looking for talent, so successful is sailing as a medium for getting one’s company recognized

Towards the end of 2009, he gets a third with Kito de Pavant, another luminary from the Figaro world in the Transat Jacques Vabre.

In case you thought this was the boost he needed, it was not.

The gist of a quote from Francois, on the Barcelona World Race site for 2010 says “When I learnt Michel Desjoyeaux was building a new boat for the Route du Rhumb then the Barcelona World Race, I sent him a message right after his press conference in Paris making the announcement—“I’m up for it” He did not learn of his new job until May 18th. But Desjoyeaux reports in the same quote that “opting for Francis was practically a done deal in my head in February but I was focused on the boat building and did not want to be distracted”.

Desjoyeaux goes on to say-“I discussed it with Christian Le Pap, the coach at Port-La-Foret and we concluded it was the right choice.” This was an interesting insight too.

Christian Le Pape is the head guy at something called “Pole Finistere, Center of Excellence in the Nation” in essence a training center for French solo sailors. It’s Mission, in my poor French is the training at a high level for sailors in the IMOCA and Figaro class for ocean racing. It appears to be supported by the FFV, and the regions of Brittany and Finisterre, the Town of Port La Foret & the French Ministry of Sport, amongst others.

So our hero is hired onto the Macif program sailing in the Figaro Class up to 2011 with a side gig of a lap around the planet on a new Foncia, Desjoyeaux’s long time sponsor with The Professor as Desjoyeaux is called. Despite this being like learning computers from Bill Gates or Politics from Bill Clinton, Desjoyeaux  says he was impressed by Gabart’s” mindset, different view of things, and being younger, of a different culture. I want Francois to exercise his opinion and free will”, says Desjoyeaux. “Yes men are no good”.

Unfortunately for both Gabart and The Professor, they did not get too far in the Barcelona World race. The mast broke near Cape Town to which they were able to sail with what was left of the spar.

So, Francois Gabart is one very promising young sailor and one cannot but wonder what might happen if he was at the help of an AC 72…..?

And this just in at 1835 EST Thursday  Armel Le Cleac’h has pulled to within striking distance of the “golden Boy” as the VG press site calls him now. Still 5 days into a 90 day race…..

And another OOP’s: -Sam Davies, the sole woman and 1/3rd of the GBR contingent has apparently dropped her rig near Maderia. She is well and the boat is afloat. More to follow.

Vendee Globe on Face Book

When we are so focused on something, we might tend to think everyone is fascinated by “it” too. When your 6 year old kicks a goal in Soccer, we might wonder, at least for two or three seconds, why such a momentous event is not on CNN.…? So since I am so excited by things like the Vendee Globe, I have to remind myself that the audience for this, world wide, is pretty small. This got me going on the subject of just how big is the Vendee Globe, outside of France anyway. As is normal for the race over a million souls passed through the village in the week before the start last Saturday.

One convenient way to measure how popular something is these days might be the number of Friends on Face Book. This dawned on me when I noticed the race had the ubiquitous Like button on the race’s home page.

At the time, Sunday afternoon, the race had on the order of 33,000 likes. (As of Wednesday afternoon 14 November at 1600 EST, the VG was up to 50,000 & at 1825 that number was up to almost 52,000 Likes).

I wondered how that compared with other sailing events, so I spent some time digging around in Face Book and I offer the following results of my research. The big numbers are in round figures.

The Big Names

America’s Cup: 120,000

Oracle Team USA: 63,000

Emirates Team New Zealand-AC: 11,500

Artemis Racing-AC: 7,500

Volvo Ocean Race: 211,000-(Puma Ocean Racing, 27,000)

Barcelona World Race: 5,266

Mini Transat (the 650 class) 2,421

Global Ocean Race: 1,000

 And for the “lesser” or Normal races:

Cruising Yacht Club of Australia The Hobart Race organizers: 428

RORC: -The rating office-512

Sydney-Hobart Race: 1224

Bermuda Race:  (2012) 872

Trans-Pac Race: 2,365

So then I looked to see what the level of interest in the sailors themselves was.

Alex Thompson Racing: 34,500

Ben Ainslie: his fan page-32,000

Ainslie, the athlete: 4,000

Mike Golding Yacht Racing 4,000

Loick Peyron: 5,400–His brother, Bruno, has a FB page but no Likes.

Coutts: 4,950

Cayard: 3,769

Francois Gabart-29 year old new Wunderkind presently leading the Vendee Globe: 1250

Dennis Connors, actually his shop in San Diego: 986

Samantha Davies: 838-Sole woman in the current VG, from GBR

Paul Elvstrom: 552.

Ken Read: Could not find any page for Ken. (I guess it’s hard to keep up circling the world at 25 knots…)

Sailmakers:

Quantum Sails: 2,700

Quantum Racing: 5,600

North Sails: 36,000

Doyle Sailmakers: 1,800

Ullman Sails: Could not find any page for them

UK Sailmakers: 603

Sailing websites forums and news:

Sailing Anarchy: 26,000

Scuttlebutt: 5,700

Cruising World: 8,800

Sailing world: 8,800-Since they are owned by the same company maybe this is 8800 together….

Sail Magazine: 6,900

Latitude 38: 4,200

Wind check: 800

Wooden Boat 5,500

Compared to:

NASCAR: 3 million

NBA-Basketball: 14.8 Million

NFL-American Foot ball: 6.4 million

FIFA world cup Football 2014: 22,000

Formula One Car racing-On their website there is no Face Book link and yes that seems odd to me too, but there you are.

And compared to Politics:

Pres. Obama: 33 Million

Mitt Romney: 12 million, May be this ratio tells a story too…

What does it all mean? Not sure, but I do find it interesting. When I figure it I’ll post here…

 

Cheers

Coop

 

 

 

 

Vendee Globe-the depth of the human condition

Last Saturday dawned sunny and mild in Newport. Yet before we had slurped our first sip of coffee, 6 hours to the east, 20 intrepid souls were making their way to sea to start a 3-4 month adventure that makes climbing Mt. Everest look like a nice stroll in the hills.

I refer of course to the Vendee Globe. Not to disparage those who have attained the Summit of Everest, all 3,000 of them, this number according to Rich Wilson, the second all time US finisher in this race in 2008/9 but Wilson further cites 50 as the number of souls who have made non-stop solo circumnavigations.

Engaged and attracted as I am to all the issues that surround sailing alone or short-handed I am following the Vendee pretty closely. As part of my personal “pre game” show I sat with the entry list for a while and contemplated just what the depth of this event is beyond the pictures in the Sailing Magazines and You tube.

Late on Saturday morning I watched 90 minutes of Daily Motion replay of the preparations to the start with commentary by  three time circumnavigatrix Dee Caffari. Her impressive CV includes–once around the “wrong way” crewed, once wrong way, same boat-modified for solo (setting a new record to boot) & once the right way on IMOCA 60 Aviva in the 2008 Vendee Globe. For those of us used to watching solo races start with all the boat’s being late for the start, one measure of just how competitive this race has become was the five boats breaking the start, it looked more  like a J-105 one design start than 20 fire breathing 60 footers with only one person aboard.

As I have mused on elsewhere, the logistics and mechanics of the Vendee Globe are impressive.

A minimum of 3 months physically alone: When was the last time you had 24 hours alone?
A serious lack of sleep perhaps 5 hrs in 24 on a good day

FOOD
Just think for instance of going to the store to buy food for the next three months- Meaning you cannot go to the store until, oh say after Valentine’s day, 2013.

And you do not have a fridge or freezer, no oven, no hot water unless you boil it on your one burner stove.

Several competitors have reported on the physicality of a simple maneuver like hoisting the (450#) mainsail.   Most of the spars are in the 95 foot high range with a 2:1 halyard. Rich Wilson relates in his fascinating book on his completion in the 2008/9 race of simply hoisting the main after shaking out ONE REEF required 175 turns in low gear. So when you are next at a venue where the Harken guys have their mock up grinder pedestal try putting 175 turns on it and see how you feel afterwards.

We live in a world now, at least the first and second worlds, where we are in contact with others all the time almost constantly-I read of people sleeping with their smart phones in their hands……We have 24/7 Customer Service lines, for recreational boaters, especially powerboat operators, there is Sea Tow and related services. If at sea, well the Coasties will always (I suppose) be there.

Much has been made in the last election of the concept of self reliance and responsibility, that we are masters of our destiny. Sailing is one of the last arenas where this is really true and the Vendee Globe is the highest test of this philosophy.   Stop for a minute and contemplate the last time where you were completely responsible for what was going on in your life, totally alone in the middle of nowhere with the likelihood of anyone coming to your assistance pretty thin. Unless we are at sea, this condition is in fact pretty difficult to get into, certainly in the US.

And consider for a moment the simple act of getting to the starting line in this Uber-Maxi-Ultra-Marathon. Even an old, used IMOCA 60, and there are several for sale on the internet boat sales sites for, in many cases, under US$300,000 a number that is I think well within the financial scope of many US yachtsman. But that is just the start.

There is the finding of a couple of competent guys to run the boat, move it around, coordinate with you and the yard and so on-Boat Captains in other words. There is fundraising-For a professional single handed racing event in the US, well that is possibly the only thing harder than the race itself. There is getting the boat to a location, in the US where the artisans skilled in the equipment these boats require are available and in the same time zone as you. Then there is the usual refit. Rod rigging out, Composite in, an interior re-do, updated performance meters, Autopilots, cordage, deck layout systems, Autopilots, safety kit, Sails, the list goes on as anyone who has even bought a used 38 foot cruising boat is intimately familiar with. If I was doing it I would want to have the two guys be a minimum of 50K a year guys who know what they are doing, so right there is $100,000 right at of the bat. You get the idea. The good news is there is in fact a remarkable history of excellent return on investment on these campaigns. The Vendee Globe is arguably better, certainly less cash cost than the Volvo and the Americas Cup.

With the telecommunications available today the sailors never actually sail out of sight over the horizon and reappear 4 months later as was the case from the 1960’s through the late 1980’s.

But at the end of the day, it is what the skipper is made of, to what depths he (and they are almost with few exceptions universally men) can plumb the depths of the will, resourcefulness: the Stuff of Heroes, almost at the Greek Tragedy level.