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The Artemis Transat 2008
www.theartemistransat.com
Übersicht
24.05.2008
Positionstabelle 24.05.08
Press Release No.21
Saturday 24th May – 0730 UT
The Transat 2008 - The record-breaking race
Gitana Eighty wins The Transat 2008 for Gitana Team
Twelve years after his last victory in The Transat (formerly Ostar), Loïck
Peyron has rewritten the record books on crossing the finish line of the
13th edition of the race at 03h15’35” UT this Saturday 24th May. An historic
achievement which surpasses even that of legendary French sailor Eric
Tabarly, by becoming the only person in history to have won this legendary
single-handed transatlantic race between the UK and the United States a
total of three times. With this win in Boston, Loïck Peyron provides the LCF
Rothschild Group and Gitana Team with their second successive victory in a
single-handed transatlantic race in less than two years!
It was at 03h15’35 UT, after what appeared to the skipper to be an
interminable day, that Loïck Peyron crossed the finish line of The Transat
2008. Offshore the lights of Boston sparkled, hailing the performance by the
skipper of Gitana Eighty. The monohull in the colours of LCF Rothschild
Group covered the 2,982 theoretical miles in 12 days 11 hours 45 minutes 35
seconds. It should be noted that 2hr30 were awarded to the triple winner of
the event for diverting to assist Vincent Riou on Tuesday.
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Gitana Eighty finished the 2,982-mile course of The Artemis Transat in a time of 12 days, 11 hours, 45 minutes, 35 seconds (based on corrected time including the deduction of the 2.5 hour time allowance awarded by the jury for his rescue of Vincent Riou). In doing so, he has beaten the existing monohull record of 12 days, 15 hours, 18 mins and 8 secs set by Mike Golding onboard Ecover in 2004, by 3 hours, 32 mins and 33 secs.
Distance on the water : 3185 miles
Average speed on the water : 10.68 knots
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Eric Tabarly himself entered into the history books of Ocean Racing and the
hearts of the French people by taking victory twice – 1964 and 1976 – in the
mother of all the transatlantic races. Tonight, off Boston, the student
surpassed the master by adding his name to the list of winners of this
legendary race for the third time in his career. Previously stealing the
show in 1992 and 1996 aboard a 60 foot multihull, it is at the helm of the
most recent of the Gitana fleet – a monohull launched in June 2007 – that
Loïck Peyron has stood out this year.
Despite the atypical conditions encountered during this North Atlantic
crossing, with numerous passages of light weather which slowed the fleet
considerably, the monohull in the colours of the LCF Rothschild Group have
scored a new reference time for the event: 12 days 11 hours 45 minutes and
35 seconds. In so doing Loïck Peyron dethrones Mike Golding, who covered the
3,000 theoretical miles of the course in 12 days 15 hours 18 minutes and 8
seconds.
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Loick Peyron crossing the finish line of The Artemis Transat, Boston, USA
© Matt Dickens/OnEdition/The Artemis Transat

Loick Peyron, Gitana Eighty, celebrates winning The Artemis Transat
© Matt Dickens/ OnEdition

Loick Peyron showing his record finish time of 12 days, 11 hours, 45 minutes and 35 seconds
© Matt Dickens/OnEdition/The Artemis Transat
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The initial reactions from Loïck Peyron, winner of The Transat 2008
A third historic victory
“This race is where it all began in France, so to win it three times is
obviously incredibly satisfying! I think that when you sail in France, it's
thanks to Eric Tabarly in some way. We are all following in his footsteps…
Paradoxically though, he hasn't been on my mind so much as he was during my
victory in 1996. This is my third victory in this event but the first in a
monohull and I’m particularly pleased to offer it to the Gitana Team. I have
an exceptional team, who are able to work in an atmosphere of complete trust
thanks to the unconditional support of the fleet owner, who is as
enthusiastic as he is fascinating: Baron Benjamin de Rothschild. In the
space of two years, the Gitana Team has won two major single-handed events:
the Route du Rhum 2006 which was brilliant contested by Lionel Lemonchois,
and this year’s The Transat. It's a fine reward for all the teamwork.”
A testing race but one that has taught me a great deal
“I’m happy but tired! These boats are very wearing physically. Making
crossings on these monohulls is a lot less stressful than on multihulls but
it's also a lot more physical. You have to work constantly to get the very
most out of your machine. Gitana Eighty is a fantastic boat, a “beautiful
baby" which I'm entirely satisfied with. And the best news of all about The
Transat is that despite my ripe old age I can still keep up with the pace
(laughs). You learn something new everyday and that's why I continue to
race.”
Two consecutive victories augur well for the Vendée Globe
“My victory in the Transat BtoB last December and this latest win give me
confidence, but the Vendée Globe will be quite a different matter. There are
some very serious contenders taking the start… it’s an incredible cast where
everything will come down to the detail. With these latest generation boats,
we're permanently in race mode: in The Transat it was a Figaro on an
Atlantic scale and in a few months it’ll be a Figaro on a global scale.”
The few days spent with Vincent Riou
“The best way to win a race is most importantly to finish, and I had living
proof of that aboard Gitana Eighty. The first few hours with Vincent were
fairly complicated for me to deal with. It was disruptive but Vincent was
great and very discrete despite the situation being difficult for him. Over
the past three and a half days, I've felt like I was the most senior member
of the faculty being observed by a young talented student… I told myself
that I couldn’t make any mistakes. I had to do things correctly (laughs!).
I’d have preferred to continue our duel, but it was nice to have him aboard.
We had time to talk about technique of course, as well as lot of other
things besides.”
Photo credits: Yvan Zedda / Gitana SA
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