Alan Roura, the young Swiss skipper of La Fabrique, crossed the finish line of the Vendée Globe at 19:29:56hrs UTC today (Thursday 11th February) to secure 17th position after 95 days, 6 hours, 9 minutes and 56 seconds of racing. Completing his second Vendée Globe today at just 27 years of age, Roura was the youngest competitor among the 33 solo skippers who left Les Sables d’Olonne on Sunday November 8th.
In the 2016-17 edition, Roura made history, then at 23 years old, as the youngest ever sailor to finish the race. This time, and racing a more modern, competitive boat than in 2016-17, Roura suffered technical problems with his keel hydraulics early in the race which reoccurred until he finally had to fix his keel in a central position resulting in a loss of performance.
Roura grew up very much as a child of the oceans graduating from his native Lake Geneva as a typical six-year-old in an Optimist to extended blue water family cruising from the age of eight where his classroom was learning the lore and the skills of ocean passages. Encountering Mini Transat competitors in Lanzarote in 2001, Roura was inspired and bought his own Mini 650 on which he cruised extensively at the age of 15 around the Caribbean Islands, learning and training on his own.
Roura did the Mini Circuit from 2009 before moving to the IMOCA class with the Superbigou on which he did the Route du Rhum (2014), the Transat Jacques Vabre (2015, finishing 10th) and then his first edition of the Vendée Globe (2016).
To be considered an adventurer does not sit well with Roura; he regards himself as racer and his solo North Atlantic record of 7 days 16 hours and which he set in 2019 underpins his competitive drive. He is a tough, accomplished skipper capable of incredible feats when fate is against him. Four years ago, the skipper crashed into an unidentified floating object near Point Nemo and replaced his rudder despite 45 knots of wind.
For this 2020 edition, Roura set up his programme to be more competitive, taking on the 2007 Finot Conq design which finished second in 2009 with Armel Le Cléac’h. His aim was to finish in the top third of the fleet and he fitted foils to enhance the boat’s performance.
In the first days before the intertropical depression Theta, which sweeps the Atlantic, the fronts followed one another. The skipper of La Fabrique spoke of his doubts at the time, confiding: "Sometimes I wonder what I'm doing here.”
But he held firm until at the end of November, Roura faced his first major oil leak from his keel rams. "With every movement of the keel, oil spurts out,” he explained. With difficult repairs to make, the gaps to the leaders got bigger all the time.
Roura struggled with the disappointment that he was no longer competitive within the front runners and at losing touch with the top group. "I have a sadness deep inside me that I find hard to accept," he explained when racing south of Madagascar.
After entering the Pacific on Christmas Day, he was the victim of another oil leak on the 26th December. And so, he began another repair session that took him more than 12 hours to get the keel hydraulic system fixed with the keel in the middle of the boat. Then he had to climb the mast and also repair his hydrogenator whilst always keeping an eye on his keel problems. "I'm in survival mode," he said at the time.
The climb back up the Atlantic wasn’t good either with tough and changeable weather. But a stoic Roura observed: "My rivals out here probably have their worries too, but I really feel that my situation is the worst possible. I really see this Vendée Globe as such a mental and physical test.”
Finally, after over 80 days of racing, he was rewarded over the final ten days with a close battle. His match race with Stéphane Le Diraison saw them side by side for the final 48 hours before the finish. "It adds spice, it's really cool," Roura reported.
It is not the first time the two skippers have found themselves in such a situation, and two years ago only 4 minutes and 43 seconds separated them on the finish line of the Route du Rhum - Destination Guadeloupe. Roura won that match between the near identical Finot Conq designs and was able to repeat the feat again today, after gaining in the final miles of the race.
Although he was not spared his troubles on this Vendée Globe, the Swiss racer finished it for the second time in a row and that is a feat in itself. And he is already dreaming bigger again.
THE STATS OF ALAN ROURA’S RACE
He covered the 24,365 miles of the theoretical course at an average speed of 10.66 knots.
Distance actually travelled on the water: 28,603 miles at 12.51 knots of average speed
THE GREAT PASSAGES
Equator (outward)
18th on 20/11/2020 at 14h53 UTC after 12d 01h 33min of racing, 2d 01h 34min after Alex Thomson (HUGO BOSS)
Cape of Good Hope
14th on 06/12/2020 at 14h38 UTC after 28d 01h 18min of racing, 5d 15h 27min after Charlie Dalin (Apivia)
Cape Leeuwin
15th on 21/12/2020 08h13 UTC after 42d 18h 53min race, 7d 20h 47min after Charlie Dalin (Apivia)
Cape Horn
15th on 11/01/2021 13h01 UTC after 63d 23h 41min of race, 8d 23h 18min after Yannick Bestaven (Maitre CoQ IV)
Equator (back)
16th on 27/01/2021 14h58 UTC after 80d 01h 38min of race, 10d 19h 46min after Louis Burton (Bureau Vallée 2)
His boat
Architect : Finot – Conq
Builders : Multiplast
Launched: 2007