After nearly three weeks of frustratingly light winds and long waits on the water, competitors in the Figaro Beneteau 3 fleet are set for their moment of reckoning. Tour Voile 2026 concludes this Sunday in Lorient Roads with northeast winds forecast between 12 and 16 knots—the kind of breeze sailors have been craving since the event began.
Race organizers have moved the Sunday start to 8 a.m., with the first gun expected at 9 a.m. The day’s program calls for two windward-leeward races followed by a coastal course, a format teams haven’t competed on in days. The fleet should return to Kernével around 2 p.m., with the prize ceremony at 7 p.m.
Everything Still at Stake
With three races left, the final day remains genuinely open. The sharpest battle is brewing for third place in the overall standings, where PAPREC by Normandy Inshore Program and La Réunion are separated by half a point—a margin so thin that either team could lose ground with one poor start or mistake.
Yet the atmosphere on the docks goes beyond points calculations. After extended periods of near-windless racing, crews are simply hungry to sail hard again. The chance to push boats to full speed, to compete on a meaningful coastal course, and to finish strong motivates everyone stepping aboard.
Florine Bourit, sailing for PAPREC by Normandy Inshore Program, acknowledged the tight spot. “With only half a point between us, we’re almost level,” she said. “This is where the battle is tightest, so the day is really very open.” She indicated her team has two strategic options—either engage in direct match racing or sail their own race—but stressed the importance of enjoying the conditions after weeks of grind. “If we’ve been ahead throughout the Tour, it’s because we know how to sail,” Bourit added. “We need to trust ourselves and let the best team win.”
Noah Guichoux of LGC Sailing – Bretagne Plaisance, pushing for fifth place, shared the optimism. “It’s the last day, the last sprint, and it promises to be beautiful,” he said. “Three races and a coastal course—everything is still possible.” He noted that the fleet’s competitive balance means fortune can swing quickly. “You can have a bad race and come straight back with a fourth or fifth place,” he observed. “It’s going to be another very tight day with plenty of suspense.”
Iona Jan of CER – Ville de Genève welcomed the wind and chance to finish strong. “It’s time to stop overthinking and maximize the pleasure,” she said. The return of meaningful breeze should reduce the tactical burden of light-wind currents that have favored some boats over others. “We’ve missed it since the start of the season,” Jan noted, “so it’s nice to end on that.”











