Please select your home edition
Edition
Crewsaver 2021 Safetyline LEADERBOARD

Pierre Quiroga leads 52nd La Solitaire du Figaro after Stage 2

by Andi Robertson 1 Sep 2021 19:41 BST 1 September 2021

Winning the 490 nautical miles Stage 2 of the 52nd La Solitaire du Figaro, which finished into Fécamp east of Le Havre this morning, Pierre Quiroga (Skipper Macif 2019) takes the overall lead on the Provisional General Classification by 1hr and 36 mins after Stage 1 winner Xavier Macaire (Groupe SNEF) had to dive on Monday evening to remove a fish pot from the keel of his Beneteau Figaro 3.

Macaire still lies second overall but, after losing touch with the leading pack, crossed the line today in 14th over two and a half hours after 28-year-old Quiroga who scored the first Stage win of his career on his sixth participation.

Quiroga, who was second on the long offshore Stage 1, sailed a textbook leg, twice taking the chance to split from the leading pack and making decent gains to ensure he was 56 minutes and 19 seconds clear of second placed Tom Laperche (CMB Bretagne Performance). Achille Nebout (Primeo Energie - Amarris) took third across the finish line this morning.

Quiroga who originates from Marseille and is a past French Olympic sailing squad sailor who raced in the Laser and the 470, finished ninth overall on the last edition of the race in 2020 and sixth in 2018. He won the long offshore stage of this season's curtain raiser in March, the Solo Maître CoQ.

Quiroga breaks away twice

After the start from Lorient on Sunday at 1400hrs Quiroga took the lead of the 34 strong fleet in the middle of Monday morning on a muscular, breezy close reach up the west coast of Brittany, sailing nearly a mile offshore of the lead group, passing Tom Laperche (CMB Bretagne Performance). Quiroga built his lead on the long beat to the Channel Islands when he tacked north of the group and was twice able to find a more favourable, lifted wind angle. With more than half of the stage raced upwind in NE'ly breezes of up to 20kts when boatspeeds would normally be very close, Quiroga's performance is impressive.

A 28-year-old who has a diploma in international business Quiroga and third placed Nebout, 31, are both sailors who started their offshore sailing careers on their native Mediterranean, both winning talent identification programmes and joining the Med training centre at La Grande-Motte.

Quiroga looked relaxed on the dock in Fécamp, "The general classification? I think about it, but I take everything as it comes, I will first savour this victory. Opening the course among the rocks of L'Aber Wrac'h for a guy from the Mediterranean is not easy. Clearly my six years of experience here have paid off. I am amazed and delighted to have won this stage in such a beautiful way. It was hard, hard, hard! I thought this leg was never going to end. What I do know is that I have now fulfilled my deal. The objective was to achieve a stage victory, and that's it done. On the first stage I was not far off with that second place. And now, on such a complicated stage, with the currents, tacking a lot of the time, it really tested all that a sailor should know how to do.To take the lead in the Raz de Sein and the Raz Blanchard, ahead of the best Figarists, was a thrill. But it was important to stay calm and keep a lid on my emotions."

While Macaire lies second on the General Classification, Laperche who is 24 and has been selected by Francois Gabart as co-skipper of his new giant Ultim, is only 13 seconds behind him in third and has now been second then third on first two stages.

Laperche revealed that he too had problems with a pot in by the rocks and was dealing with that when Quiroga slipped offshore. "He was a mile ahead, I had caught a pot off Portsall. I didn't see him go. I was thinking about my own course, which wasn't too risky, I was going to go with the flow. I took a lot of the fleet with me at the time I think. Then early in the morning, I saw that Pierre was gone, but I wasn't sure where he was. And then it was beautiful to see the cliffs this morning when I arrived, I had not been here for a long time! It's satisfying to be in front, now I would like to win a stage! "

Disappointed Internationals

It was a generally disappointing stage for the top international La Solitaire du Figaro racers. Neither Briton Alan Roberts (Seacat Services) nor Ireland's Tom Dolan (Smurfit Kappa-Kingspan) started the race well from Lorient on Sunday. But Roberts on his eighth La Solitaire climbed through the fleet to lie eighth during the first day but he lost places and time on the beath to the Channel Islands and crossed the finish line today in 16th, 2 hours 32 minutes after stage winner Quiroga.

Dolan, who was fifth overall last year, crossed nearly an hour after Roberts - who wins the VIVI Trophy prize for the leg. On the General Classification they lie 17th and 18th, Dolan leads Roberts by two tiny seconds after six days and 14 hours of racing.

Roberts who restarted, recrossing the start line as he thought he was one of the sailors recalled for jumping the start gun, reported, "To be in the top 10 in the first half and then drop is painful. I know I can battle in the front of this fleet. I feel I have all the pieces of the jigsaw on the table and right now I am struggling to put them together. There are two more legs to go. I pushed hard on the reaching section and was really quick and then had a bit of a break before the Raz Blanchard and after then in on the rocks it was totally full on. I could tell I was bleeding places and did not know why. I played around with my set up, I was not overtired, I was never backing off. I have struggled a little bit in the breeze. Unlike on the first leg the breeze was very gusty and so unlike on the first leg you could not autopilot it. "

And Dolan rued his poor starting: "I made a mess of the start and then for the first 12 hours I was not that good and from there it was generally a rich get richer situation. You forget how harsh the English Channel is when you end up nearly a tide behind. You get further and further back and when the tide changes from the west you get worse."

Twenty-two-year-old Spanish rookie Pep Costa sailed an assured stage to finish 19th on Cybele Vacances Team Play to B, he recalled "On the first leg I had big problems and so on this leg I just wanted to be better. I think it was a good leg for my first La Solitaire du Figaro but the hardest I have done with the least sleep. I am very happy in the way I sailed and in the way I stayed in touch with the fleet. I made a few mistakes, for example on the first night I put the spinnaker down a bit too late. It was so dark I did not see the rest and so I was late on to the gennaker. I lost touch with the little group I was with. In general, I would like to start better than this but I find starts difficult. I managed to do a good tactical move at Alderney and caught up with a different group, I went north a bit and the other side of Alderney and got a good shift and less current. It was a complicated option and so I am happy with that choice and then I stayed with the fleet and sailed well against that group. This is the race I have had least sleep, but I am happy because I learned from Will Harris to just get five minutes here and there and I did that and I was good at deciding where the best bits to sleep at were. I am most happy that I am better on this leg than the last, that was my aim."

www.lasolitaire.com/en

Related Articles

Tom Dolan reflects on his 2024 Figaro season
Full of challenges and lessons but the achievements have taken centre stage With the 2024 Figaro programme drawing to a close, it is the perfect time to take stock of the past season, which will remain etched in my memory in more ways than one. Posted on 22 Oct 2024
2025 Griffin Offshore Pathway announced
Opening opportunities to young sailors in offshore sailing The Royal Ocean Racing Club (RORC) is excited to announce the launch of the 2025 Griffin Offshore Pathway, a programme designed to provide a range of opportunities to young sailors of different abilities, wanting to hone their skills in offshore sailing. Posted on 5 Oct 2024
Interview with Tom Dolan
After winning the La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec Yesterday morning in La Turballe on the French Loire Atlantic coast Irish solo sailor Tom Dolan won La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec, renowned as the toughest single handed multi stage offshore sailing race in the world. Posted on 13 Sep 2024
La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec overall
Ireland's Tom Dolan wins on Smurfit Kappa-Kingspan Finishing in seventh place on the 710 nautical miles Stage 3 into La Turballe on France's Loire Atlantique coast at 05:18:10hrs this Thursday morning, Ireland's Tom Dolan (Smurfit Kappa-Kingpsan) is the provisional overall winner. Posted on 12 Sep 2024
Winning Solitaire du Figaro a dream come true
The suspense was palpable for Tom Dolan throughout the third and final leg The suspense was palpable throughout the third and final leg of the Solitaire du Figaro Paprec! Posted on 12 Sep 2024
La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec Leg 3 Day 4
Minutes in it as the clock ticks down to the finish With less than 100 miles to sail to the final finish line of the 55th La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec the 2024 title looks set to go down to the wire. It was a brutal double crossing of the Channel yesterday and last night. Posted on 11 Sep 2024
La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec Leg 3 Day 3
Final 36 hours will decide winner After a relatively straightforward climb up the Brittany coast the solo racers on the final stage of the 55th La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec are getting into the most difficult part of the monster 710 nautical miles stage from Royan to La Turballe. Posted on 10 Sep 2024
La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec Leg 3 Day 2
Course alteration as fleet contemplate tough conditions ahead in English Channel Into the second day of the final leg of La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec and the 33 remaining solo skippers are pressing hard as they climb north along the Brittany coast. Posted on 9 Sep 2024
La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec Leg 3 Start
All to play for in strong conditions Conditions on the Gironde Estuary were perfect for 36 solo racers who started the decisive third and final stage of La Solitaire du Figaro Paprec this afternoon off Royan. Posted on 8 Sep 2024
Tom Dolan: “Remain humble right to the wire”
The Solitaire du Figaro Paprec final leg starts at 2pm (CET) today This Sunday 8 September at 2 pm local time, Tom Dolan and his fellow competitors in the Solitaire du Figaro Paprec will take the start of the third and final leg of the event. Posted on 8 Sep 2024