HomeSailingVendée ArctiqueCorentin Horeau: "a great dress rehearsal for the Vendée Globe

Corentin Horeau: “a great dress rehearsal for the Vendée Globe

Written by

Corentin Horeau has spent the northern winter fine-tuning his IMOCA. The modifications made to the boat during the off-season will face their first real test on the water during the Vendée Arctique, a race the 36-year-old Frenchman describes as essential preparation for the Vendée Globe proper.

Corentin Horeau:
// Photo credit: MACSF | Vendée Arctique 2026

The MACSF skipper finished second in the 1000 Race earlier this season, a result he treats with deliberate restraint. “The classification is secondary in a way,” he explained. “It’ll just be the icing on the cake. But that doesn’t stop you from trying to do things right. Everyone races to finish as high as possible.” What matters more to him is continuing to build his solo handling of the boat, especially now that the Vendée Arctique promises stronger winds than the lighter conditions he encountered before.

Corentin Horeau:
// Photo credit: MACSF | Vendée Arctique 2026

Horeau comes from the Figaro ranks, where he proved the sort of relentless durability that defines ocean racing. His ascent to IMOCA level has been measured and methodical. Friends and rivals have watched him gain confidence with each outing, yet he remains wary of overcommitting to predictions. “I’m always ambitious,” he said with a grin, “but generally I keep it to myself.”

The Vendée Arctique matters not for the trophy but as a working laboratory. This is his longest solo offshore race in an IMOCA. The boat is capable, the crew ashore is sharp, and the winter work is done. Where previous races taught him the rhythms of single-handed sailing in modern ocean racing, this one will tell him whether the technical changes work—whether the boat responds as intended when the going gets rough.

- Advertisement, article continues below -

For a man heading toward the Southern Ocean’s most punishing circuit, the chance to sail hard, make mistakes that don’t cost him the race, and refine both boat and method is worth more than any podium finish in June. The humility is not false modesty. It’s the clarity of someone who knows the Vendée Globe demands everything, and who isn’t about to squander this chance to get the fundamentals right.

Share this
// Photo credit: Sam Goodchild | Vendée Arctique 2026
Vendée Arctique

When the fastest route is not always the one you choose

The Arctic is slipping away in the boat wakes. Seven of the eight remaining comp...
Read more
// Photo credit: Lucie Bonhomme | Vendée Arctique 2026
Vendée Arctique

Scientific research being conducted today in the Arctic

As the first skippers crossed into the Arctic Circle, attention turned inland. A...
Read more
// Photo credit: DR | Vendée Arctique 2026
Vendée Arctique

Magic in the air at the polar circle

Seven skippers in carbon-fibre racing yachts have just done something no sailor ...
Read more

Comments

This conversation is moderated by Boating New Zealand. Subscribe to view comments and join the conversation. Choose your plan →

This conversation is moderated by Boating New Zealand.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Boating New Zealand
Boating New Zealandhttps://www.boatingnz.co.nz
Boating NZ is New Zealand’s premier marine title devoted to putting its readers behind the wheel of the latest trailerboats, yachts and launches to hit the market. It inspires with practical content and cruising adventures, leads the fleet with its racing coverage and is on the pulse of the latest maritime news and innovation.

Recent articles