Please select your home edition
Edition
Leaderboard brokerage

Youth to Challenger pathway at centre of Orient Express Racing Team

by Orient Express Racing Team 12 Sep 15:32 BST
Orient Express-L'Oréal Racing Team ahead of the UniCredit Youth America's Cup © Alexander Champy-McLean / Orient Express Racing Team

Since its first appearance in 2013 the Youth America's Cup has earned its place in the sailing world, not only as a challenging and entertaining event, but also as a now proven pathway to the heights of professional yacht racing.

A decade on and in 2024 the UniCredit Youth America's Cup is all set to deliver more of the same, and with no fewer than 12 teams taking part — six from the Louis Vuitton 37th America's Cup defender and challenger teams, including France's Orient Express-L'Oréal Racing Team, and another six invitees representing yacht clubs in Spain, Holland, Canada, Germany, Sweden and Australia.

As with the New Zealand Defender and a number of the challenger squads, Orient Express Racing Team is now home to several high-calibre racers who owe at least a part of their success to the extraordinary experience that is the Youth America's Cup.

Among them is power sailor Timothé Lapauw: "My first experience in the world of the America's Cup was during the Youth America's Cup in 2017 in Bermuda," he says. "I was lucky enough to be part of the Team France Jeune for the Youth America's Cup skippered by Robin Follin in the early days of foiling.

"That was the year that Peter Burling won his first real America's Cup. And we knew that during the previous edition of the America's Cup in 2013, he was on the Youth America's Cup team and he won it. So there was this sentiment of being able to do something big and potentially to be able to leapfrog into another campaign off the back of it. Why not?"

Another element of the 2017 campaign which remains embedded in the Orient Express Racing Team ethos, is that the Youth Team were part of, not independent of the Challenger Team organisation, as is the case now with the Women's Team as well.

"What I really remember from that Youth America's Cup was the way we were integrated into the challenger team with all the sailors, and the technicians," says Lapauw.

"Learning different trades, whether in technology, technical or pure sailing, I think we've all grown from that and that contributed enormously to where we are today."

Another member of the current French challenger organisation is Antoine Rucard, the team's AC75 Coordinator, who was a crew mate of Lapauw's in Bermuda on Team France Jeune's AC45 foiling catamaran.

"We were six on board, with Robin Follin at the helm, Valentin Sipan doing tactics, Robert Solune trimming the wing, Bruno Mourniac trimming the headsail, and Timothé Lapauw on the bow. I was a floater, so I was on the bow with Tim," he recalls.

As for so many others he recognises the role that the Youth America's Cup has played in his racing career, and pays tribute to the extra impetus provided by the French sailing team.

"We got a foot in the door of professional sailing. We arrived in Bermuda at the heart of a team that was racing for the America's Cup. After that, the transition was fairly easy because we were made very welcome by the Challenger team at the time, which was led by Franck Cammas.

"All of the team members are on professional teams today, so it has been a great experience."

The Youth America's Cup also played a pivotal role in the career of Jason Saunders, trimmer on the French challenger's AC75 foiling machine. He recalls: "The 2013 Youth America's Cup came just after my first Olympic Games in London, where I finished fourth in the 470s.

"It was the first Youth America's Cup and I was selected with a great team that included Peter Burling, Blair Tuke, and Sam Meech, all the sailors racing the Cup now.

"We were able to sail in San Francisco, so we'd seen what the America's Cup was like because we were with the Kiwis. We saw how they prepared for the 2013 challenge. I remember being on the water and seeing the boats sailing around doing 40 to 45 knots, they were incredible machines.

"And that certainly made me dream. It was an incredible experience that helped us a lot, we got a foot in the world of the America's Cup for the first time, so I only have good memories."

The UniCredit Youth America's Cup in Barcelona runs from the start of the Qualification Series on 17 September to the Final Match Race on 26 September.

The 12-strong fleet is divided between the six invited teams and six Louis Vuitton 37th America's Cup teams. Both groups will compete in eight fleet races in the Qualification Series, with the top three in each group going into a Final Series of four fleet races. The top two will then compete in a single winner-takes-all Final Match Race.

Stay posted for the Orient Express - L'Oréal Racing Team Youth America's Cup team line up on Monday! For a taster, visit orientexpressracingteam.americascup.com/en/team/youth

Related Articles

French team ready for Puig Women's America's Cup
Orient Express - L'Oréal Racing Team sailors ready to make their mark at the top The America's Cup is the first international sporting event to organise the three major trophies - the America's Cup, the Youth America's Cup and the Women's America's Cup - at the same venue, Barcelona, during the same period. Posted on 2 Oct
Orient Express-L'Oréal Racing Team bows out
Repeatedly dogged by technical issues in the Youth America's Cup Three races completed out of the eight planned in the Qualifiers - including one impressive victory - as the French youth team were repeatedly dogged by technical issues that prevented them from showing what they could do. Posted on 24 Sep
Orient Express Racing Team focused on future
As the UniCredit Youth America's Cup gets underway The young and talented French sailors making their final preparations for this week's start of the UniCredit Youth America's Cup all know they can play a pivotal part in the overall 37th Louis Vuitton America's Cup event. Posted on 16 Sep
From a dream to reality
It is very much the start of something special for the Orient Express Racing Team As we say 'au revoir' to the enigmatic French Challenger for the Louis Vuitton 37th America's Cup, there's a very strong feeling that although this may be the end in 2024, it is very much the start of something special for the French syndicate. Posted on 10 Sep
Orient Express bow out of the 37th America's Cup
Quentin Delapierre's crew had to beat INEOS Britannia team to have a chance of remaining in the Cup Orient Express Racing Team's remarkable journey in the Louis Vuitton 37th America's Cup ended in Barcelona today, with the French challenger disappointed but proud of the amount they had been able to achieve in a short space of time. Posted on 9 Sep
Dramatic progress for Orient Express Racing Team
An extraordinary race today against INEOS Britannia today Orient Express Racing Team demonstrated how far they have progressed in their challenge for the 37th Louis Vuitton America's Cup with an extraordinary race today against INEOS Britannia. Posted on 1 Sep
Orient Express Team ready for Louis Vuitton Cup
It promises to be an intense first round Orient Express Racing Team head into the Louis Vuitton Cup knowing how much they have already achieved, and completely aware of what they now have to accomplish. Posted on 28 Aug
Orient Express Team wrap-up Preliminary Regatta
With one of the tightest races of the entire event Orient Express Racing Team today signed off from the Louis Vuitton Preliminary Regatta after one of the tightest races of the entire event against the British INEOS Britannia team. Posted on 25 Aug
Orient Express Racing Team ready for challenge
Of the final America's Cup Preliminary Regatta France's Orient Express Racing Team is all systems go to make the most of this week's Preliminary Regatta, their final opportunity to test themselves against the other challenger teams before the Louis Vuitton 37th America's Cup Barcelona gets under way. Posted on 20 Aug
Putting the focus on performance data
Orient Express Racing Team's Cammas and Foucher abandon any preconceived ideas There is no clearer indication of the central role that data now plays than Orient Express Racing Team's Head of Performance Franck Cammas saying the racing sailors "have to abandon any preconceived ideas" and adopt the shared language it offers. Posted on 11 Jul