Manu Cousin has Fastnet behind him now. The Vendée Arctique stretch from Les Sables d’Olonne to Vendée still stretches ahead, relentless and unforgiving, but that moment matters more than the bare facts of his position suggest.
The French skipper on Coup de Pouce crossed the Irish lighthouse in the small hours of Friday morning, New Zealand time around 7:45 NZST on 20 June. He remains the sole competitor still racing, weeks after his rivals have finished. Classements—standings—tell almost nothing anymore. What counts is what he does next, one nautical mile at a time.

Fastnet holds a grip on ocean racing that no map can show. The rock has marked the boundary between home waters and the Atlantic for generations of offshore sailors. For the IMOCA circuit, it stands as a checkpoint embedded in the folklore of the sport. Cousin knows it well. He has rounded it before during RORC events and training runs, but knowing a place and reaching it are not the same thing.
The meteorology between Wales and Ireland had other ideas. Wind arrived, then vanished. Squalls broke through calms. Cousin had hoped to clear Fastnet on Thursday afternoon. Instead, he found himself stopped in what he described as relentless on-off conditions, never quite windless but never fast enough either. Light air had him locked in place. He pushed against it, willing the boat forward, but progression refused to match his effort. When wind did return, it came hard and close to the bow—the kind of sailing that wears on a skipper.

“The day wasn’t easy,” Cousin said. “It’s always on, off, on, off. I was hoping to get ahead of the light patch holding me back, but it caught up with me anyway. I wasn’t completely stopped, but I clearly wasn’t moving very fast either.”
The Irish coast behind him now, Cousin faces the long slog home across waters that have already humbled him once. The Fastnet lighthouse marks no finish line. It marks only the moment the race truly begins.











