Sam Goodchild has spent the past eighteen months methodically building the case that he belongs among offshore racing’s elite. The British skipper, who recently acquired French citizenship, now stands as the bookmakers’ favourite for the Vendée Arctique, and he knows exactly what that means.
His résumé reads like a master class in calculated progression. Goodchild has piloted everything from Ultim giants to Ocean Fifty multihulls, where he won the championship, plus Figaro monotypes, Class40s, and multiple generations of IMOCA boats. Each class taught him something different. More importantly, he learned how to learn. When he took over MACIF Santé Prévoyance last season to replace Charlie Dalin as that boat’s Vendée Globe skipper, he inherited a proven weapon and spent months absorbing its quirks and strengths until they became instinct.

Victory in the IMOCA Globe Series and the 1000 Race proved he could execute under pressure. Yet Goodchild has done something harder: he has rebuilt himself mentally. Before this season, he admits he carried the psychology of the outsider. During his previous Vendée Globe campaign, he was the upstart. Last year, taking over Dalin’s boat with weeks to spare, he had what he calls “a certain excuse” if things went wrong. Now he has none.
“The mental side is about owning the pressure that comes with being the favourite and delivering on the expectations that go with it,” he said ahead of the race. “That’s something I work on constantly with my mental coach.”

At 40, Goodchild understands what separates truly great sailors from the rest. Technical skills matter, sure, but they matter less than the ability to sustain peak performance hour after hour, day after day, around an entire ocean. He has studied how champions recover from disappointment. He has learned to recognise when his mind is working against him, and he has built systems to push through.
The Vendée Arctique will be his first passage across the Arctic Circle. The race itself is unforgiving, but that is not what keeps him awake. It is the gap between expectation and outcome, the weight of being the boat everyone is chasing, the knowledge that third place will feel like failure.
Goodchild has the boat. He has the experience. He has done the mental work. Whether that proves enough when the Arctic wind picks up and isolation sets in is the only question left to answer.










