All will need to make maximum speed to avoid a growing area of high pressure which looks set to slow this top group. As such there is a good chance that Dalin, the long time race leader, might rebuild some margin.
Christian Dumard the weather consultant for the Vendée Globe explains,"Charlie will pass before the wind weakens too much. The others will be forced to go north around the ridge of high pressure to the north. The gap between them will therefore widen a little from the middle of tonight".
The skipper of MACIF Santé Prévoyance will be then be forced to stay south and do multiple gybes whilst the ‘hunters’ behind him will have the chance to stay north and sail a more direct route.
Along the way Dalin has just set a new record for the passage between the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Leeuwin. At 9d 22h 27min he betters a 16 year old record which was set by Michel Desjoyeaux when he was making en route to the second Vendée Globe win of his career. His super rapid passage across the Indian Ocean – on something of a dream sequence of weather systems – saw him take the race lead on the 35th day of the race after Mike Golding dismasted during a brutal phase which saw successive race leaders Loïck Peyron dismasted, Jean Pierre Dick hit something and the Golding also dismast.
Les Sables d’Olonne’s favourite son, second placed Simon meanwhile reaffirmed his aim not to be hamstrung too much by the loss of his starboard foil,
“I'm hanging in there, I'm staying motivated.” He told the Vendée President Alan Leboueuf on the French live show today, “There was a lot of emotion at the time. I was asking myself why now? why there? it's a tried and tested foils, it's a break that I can't explain. However everything remains to be done, I hope the Pacific will live up to its name. I'd like to do a check-up on my boat, but for the moment it's impossible because the conditions don't allow.”