![]() |
| Crowds on the dock at the Vendée Globe |
Every four years, in a cold, dreary
location on the west coast of France, the very best single-handed sailors
gather for an epic battle of courage, wits and supreme technical showmanship.
It’s the start of the Vendée Globe and the scene here in Les Sable d’ Olonne is
a madhouse. Twenty of the most high-tech, futuristic monohulls are assembled,
and while the boats are simply stunning and worlds apart from any other class
of sailboat, it’s the crowds and atmosphere that takes ones breath away. As a
sailor who has loved the sport and tried for more than three decades to
convince non-sailors that racing sailboats really is more exciting that watching grass
grow, all I can say to them now is “come to France and witness this event.”
![]() |
| France TV interviewing skipper |
For the last three weeks over a
half million visitors have traipsed through the race village and for some of
the lucky ones, made it down onto the docks to gawk wide-eyed at the boats. Old
men carrying poodles, young children scampering about with note pads seeking
skipper autographs and of course legions of perfectly turned out men and women
all looking the part, all enjoying being a part of one of the biggest sporting
events to take place in Europe this year.
“This is more exciting than
football,” a man munching a baguette told me. “In football you can’t get to
meet the players, but here you can talk to them face-to-face and they give you
their time even though they are busy.”
It’s true. I can’t think of any other big sporting event where the players
are so accessible and so grateful to have the attention. Even those skippers,
who are household names in France and for whom this is their daily routine,
seem surprised by all the attention and humble in their response to their fame.
Tomorrow will be mayhem. This is my
fourth visit to a Vendée Globe start and I can attest that if you are not up
before dawn and making your way into town, you will not make it. Traffic jams
15 miles long force people to pull over and start walking in order to get to
some vantage point to watch the boats leave. There is a channel that separates
the inner harbor from the open ocean and on race day it will be 20-deep with
screaming, cheering fans. Four years ago there were massive “Yes We Can”
banners hanging; I suspect that they will be back again this year. The French, afterall,
are pretty liberal minded.
![]() |
| Just a small part of the media center |
So once again I am inspired to “be
all I can be.” We have had a thrilling few weeks with SpeedDream but we have
worked largely out of the spotlight sail testing and refining the boat. But
again I can see what’s possible. Sailing is mainstream, high tech, sexy as heck, and there is a thirst for speed. The Vendée Globe has had a head start but we
hope to one day create the same kind of excitement and global media interest
around SpeedDream.



No comments:
Post a Comment