Francesca Clapcich, known as Frankie, steers 11th Hour Racing with the restlessness of someone who thrives on adrenaline. At 38, she speaks of mountains and oceans with equal intensity, splitting her time between polar waters and the Utah peaks around Park City. She burns to push harder, climb higher, chase what matters. Yet beneath that hunger lives a navigator who trusts spreadsheets the way other sailors trust their instruments.
The contradiction runs deep. Clapcich is a two-time Olympian and 49er FX world champion, a mother who has already sailed around the world in a crew boat. She prizes freedom above convention. Ask her what drives her, and she will talk about the ocean’s vastness. Ask her how she lives, and she’ll tell you about spreadsheets, right down to planning camping trips and household schedules on colour-coded cells. Structure, she insists, is how she stays calm.

“I like having a plan, but I’m not rigid,” she explained. “I’m flexible, even though I love plans. I adore spreadsheets. I have a main spreadsheet for everything—activities, camping, absolutely everything. It helps me stay calm, plan things, and make sure the people around me know what’s coming. A bit of structure never hurt.”

The Vendée Arctique will test that philosophy. Clapcich is still early in her IMOCA single-handed career, with only one prior race in the class behind her: a fifth-place finish in the 1000 Race this spring. Now she sails further north than she ever has. The race demands a balance she has trained for but never experienced at this level—meticulous strategy married to rapid adjustment. Last autumn, she and Will Harris prepared tactical plans that helped them finish second in the Transat Café L’Or in double-handed format. That precision will matter again. But so will her willingness to abandon it when polar conditions demand improvisation.
Every skipper in this fleet knows the weather will shift violently. The Arctic circle is unforgiving, and it respects neither spreadsheets nor ambition. Clapcich’s strength may lie not in choosing between planning and spontaneity, but in recognising when each one saves you.











