With less than a day to run before the Vendée Arctique reaches Les Sables d’Olonne, a sprawling zone of light wind in the Bay of Biscay has turned what seemed like a decided outcome into something far messier. Sam Goodchild holds the lead aboard MACIF Santé Prévoyance, but the margin he built over eight days of racing is shrinking. Competitors below him are clawing back positions as fatigue sets in and weather windows close.

The race has become a war of attrition played out at 15 to 20 knots. Every decision counts. Violette Dorange, racing Initiatives-Cœur just behind Ambrogio Beccaria on Allagrande Mapei, describes a finish line scenario nobody predicted. “Frankly, this end of the race is brilliant,” Dorange said. “It’s the first day since the start where we haven’t had fifteen thousand manoeuvres to chain together. It’s much more peaceful. The sea is flat, the boat glides between 15 and 20 knots, and for once, we can almost breathe.”

But peace on the ocean masks genuine drama behind her. Beccaria sits metres ahead. Élodie Bonafous carries a penalty that could reshape the podium. Goodchild, held back by the same light conditions that favour his rivals, sees his commanding advantage slip. Dorange has managed sleep this past night, recovering some of the fatigue built over the race. She feels sharp. That alertness matters in the final hours when exhaustion breeds mistakes, when skippers make careless calls they’ll regret at the finish line.
The broader picture has turned genuinely unpredictable. A penalty for Bonafous, light winds that favour those lower down the order, and Dorange’s own determination to hold station against Beccaria have combined to keep the final outcome genuinely open. “With this weather, it’s better to stay cautious,” Dorange said of Goodchild’s lead. “For the victory, I imagine Sam has enough margin to stay ahead, but after eight days of racing with significant gaps and very different strategies, we could arrive almost grouped together. That promises a real match until the end.”
The IMOCA fleet has pulled closer than anyone expected by this stage. Dorange herself didn’t think she’d hold contact with Beccaria from the Arctic Circle to here. She arrived with a missing sail that should have cost her ground, yet she’s kept pace. “I always have my handicap with this sail that I’m missing, so I’m just very happy to have stayed in the match. Honestly, I thought I’d lose more ground, even see Francesca Clapcich come back on me. Finally, that’s not the case. So I stay focused on the settings and I’ll keep pushing to the end.”











