June 17, 2006 New Zealand skipper and America’s Cup legend Russell Coutts crossed the finish
line of the 68th Geneva Bol d’Or Rolex shortly before 2100 to take line honours.
After some extraordinary close contact racing, keeping his crew of amateur doctors
on their toes right until the last breath of wind, Coutts narrowly beat Philippe
Cardis (Julius Baer), Loïck Peyron (Okalys) and Alain Gautier (Foncia.ch).
At the entrance to the ‘petit lac’, just 5 miles from the finish, there were
still four Decision 35 catamarans in the running for victory. From La Baule on
France’s Atlantic coast, Loïck Peyron was the first to come within sight
of the line, driving hard down the French side of the lake under gennaker. At
that point, Russell Coutts and Philippe Cardis were on the other side of the
lake. Gybe after gybe, from wind pockets to wind holes, a different set of cards
was dealt over and over again, the advantage changing ever few yards. Rooted
to the helm, Coutts remained concentrated to the finish to ake victory on the
last gybe.
577 crafts with one, two or three hulls set off at 0902 hours this morning on
the 68th Bol d’Or Rolex’s lengthy start line off ‘la nautique’ – spanning right
across the western end of Lac Léman or Lake Geneva as it is better known
outside Switzerland. The wind was absent at the start, made a timid appearance,
gradually building under the pallid sun as the boats made off towards the French
side of the lake, the majority on port tack under large gennakers. The main players
within the spectacular Décision 35 class were quick to gain the advantage.
Alain Gautier (Foncia Switzerland), was on the warpath with the dynamic M2 catamarans
Team New Wave and Flam, momentarily taking the lead ahead of Loïck Peyron
(Okalys) and Ernesto Bertarelli (Alinghi). Once the 5-6 knot easterly wind had
established itself the small M2s were able to fly a hull and hang onto the wake
of the 35 footers. Two hours later, the leaders fleet passed Yvoire, leaving
the lower part of the Léman, known locally as the ‘petit lac’.
Despite the weak easterly wind, the magic of the Bol d’Or Rolex was once again
experienced this morning as the starting gun sent the fleet off on the 80 mile
dash from one end of the lake to the other. In their wake spectators on a hundred
or so boats of all shapes and sizes watched as the yachts filled the entire race
zone, accelerating away towards the French side of the lake The diversity of
the fleet was particularly impressive this year. High performance prototypes
such as Jo Richards’ ‘Full Pelt’, Jean Psarofaghis’ Psaros 40 ‘Sys and Co’ or
Alex Schneiter’s ‘Tilt’, quickly streaking ahead of the huge monohull fleet,
transforming the slightest breath of wind into speed.
Thonon in 3 hours.
Shortly before noon, with the wind still struggling to reach 6 knots, the leading
Decision 35s were making 5 to 10 knots of boat speed as they hooked onto any
breath of wind they could find. Only with great concentration and energy spent
trimming did the crews succeed in flying a hull with the wind on the beam, causing
them to accelerate to more than 12 knots. At Versoix was Bertarelli’s Alinghi
was in the lead but Jean-François Demolle (Cadence) and Philippe Cardis
(Julius Baer) came right back into the thick of the action. Further back, still
at the exit from the ‘petit lac’, the leading monohulls, the canting keel water
ballasted Psaros 40s, fell into a wind hole; Alex Schneiter (Tilt), Nicolas Engel
(Taillevent II) and Eric Delaye (Oyster Funds) momentarily finding themselves
at a complete stand still. At that point, part of the M2 fleet opted to split
away; Tilt, Orusla and Flam heading off for Rolle on the north shore, while Team
New Wave, GLG Finances and Star Logistiques threaded their way towards Tonon
on the opposite bank.
Le Bouveret in 5 hours 40 mins!
It took the leaders 5 hours and 40 minutes for the front runners to round the
Bouveret mark and begin the return trip to Geneva. The D35 Cadence was the first
to round at 1442, followed by Alinghi, Banque Gonet skippered by Russell Coutts,
Julius Baer then Foncia. Before the mark, Loick Peyron on Okalys was totally
becalmed resulting in him being overtaken by the M2, Team New Wave, skippered
by Bertrand Geiser, who had taken a a more northerly course around the lake,
close to Lausanne. Peyron eventually rounded the mark and immediately set off
towards the Swiss (northern) side of the lake. This proved to be a winning option
as Okalys and Julius Baer, then Banque Gonet and Alain Gautier’s Foncia hit nearly
10 knots as they approached Cully. Meantime Alinghi and Cadence were locked in
a series of gybes in the light airs on the French side – a shorter but higher
risk course in the wind shadow of the mountains. Here they passed the first monohulls
still on their outboard leg to Bouveret, led by Taillevent II. Wile the multihulls
headed off again under gennaker, the first of the hundred strong fleet of ‘Surprises’
were passing Rolle, the boats spread out across the entire width of the lake.
“We got off to a great start” said Xavier Lecoeur, helmsman on ‘Mirabaud 2’ “but
our extended route towards Yvoire didn’t bear fruit. We battled the whole day
in a light 3 to 4 knot wind, enough to keep the sails filled and race with the
boats in our class. The difference is down to the quality of the trimming and
the extent of concentration.” Well positioned in the centre of the lake as the
D35s were closer to the shore, Bertrand Geiser and Christophe Stamm’s M2 ‘Team
New Wave’ momentarily took the lead in the overall results.
The storm dictates
It was forecast.and it happened. A little after 1700 hours the fleet were struck
by a sudden, violent squall, complete with rain and a violent 20+ knot gust of
wind and a massive W’ly rotation. This enabled the bigger leading multihulls
to dive south towards Evian, and the monohulls still en route to Bouveret to
hoist a spinnaker and accelerate downwind. The storm wreaked havoc among the
fleet, race management having to deal with around 20 incidents including broken
masts and capsizes. Rock solid on the helm during the fierce gusts, Russell Coutts
shot back into the lead off Rolle, snatching pole position from Loïck Peyron
who was still fending off Philippe Cardis (Julius Baer). Ernesto Bertarelli (Alinghi)
was the worst victim of the gusts. His D 35 dismasted off Evian in the worst
of the thunderstorm. At the entrance to the ‘petit lac’ and with Alain Gautier
chasing him closely, the outcome was far from certain. Even the ‘little’ M2 Team
New Wave still looked set to upset the hierarchy of the bigger D 35s. At the
end of a breathtaking final full of suspense, Banque Gonet and Coutts came good;
Philippe Cardis taking second place for the second year running.
Quotes from the Boats:
Russell Coutts:
“Congratulations to the crew. It was very close racing. We remained within contact
for the majority of the race after rounding Bouveret in 3rd. We staked everything
we had at the end”.
Pierre Pinodeau (crew):
“The suspense was intense right to the last moment. The sudden reversal of positions
was really hard on the nerves. It’s hard to take in this victory. The gusts we
encountered off Yvoire will always be the high point of this race. Russell showed
what he was made of there. We wanted to drop everything. He stayed on the helm
and told us to trust him. He handled the boat fantastically with impressive power
and control.”
Didier Pinodeau (crew):
“This was a very tactical race but without wind holes. Our series of manoeuvres
were well coordinated and we stayed calm right to the end”.
Patrick Carlson (crew):
“It’s a unique moment! We didn’t believe we could do it until the last good tack
at the end. Then there was this big gust and then Russell’s reaction. Incredible!”
Alain Thébaud, skipper of Hydroptère and patron of the
68th Bol d’Or Rolex :
“An amazing scenario. I believed Loïck (Peyron) had won the race for a long
time. You really have to have nerves of steel to sail here. It’s decided though.
They invited me back and I’ll be racing here next year.”
