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Sam Davies, 13th in the Vendée Globe 2024

It was with a huge measure of relief and satisfaction that French based Brit Sam Davies (Initiatives-Coeur) emerged from more than 48 hours of hellish weather to cross the finish line of the Vendée Globe in 13th place at 10:15 hrs UTC today. Her elapsed time for the race is 80 days 22 hrs 13 mins and she finishes 11 hrs 56 mins behind Germany’s Boris Herrmann who she was often close with during her race. Davies finishes the race for the second time after taking fourth in the 2008 race and abandoning into Cape Town on the last race after hitting an object and retiring after a dismasting in 2012.

LORIENT, FRANCE - JUNE 28, 2024 : Initiatives-Coeur skipper Sam Davies(GBR) is pictured on June 28, 2024 off Lorient, France - Photo by Yann Riou / polaRYSE - Polaryse / Initiatives-Coeur
LORIENT, FRANCE - 28 JUIN 2024 : Le skipper d'Initiatives-Coeur Sam Davies (GBR) est photographié le 28 juin 2024 au large de Lorient, France - Photo by Yann Riou / polaRYSE - Polaryse / Initiatives-Coeur

As for Herrmann just in front of her, 13th is not the result the highly talented and vastly experienced Davies wanted when she came into this race, not least as she had recently taken third in The Transat and sixth on the New York Vendée - Les Sables d’Olonne. But on a race which always favoured those who were near the front, in the top peloton, Davies started modestly in the light conditions on the descent of the Atlantic and then was never granted a weather scenario to allow her to make the jump to reconnect with those she would normally be racing beside. She suffered several annoying, time consuming technical problems at just the wrong times, most notably just missing out a few miles behind Herrmann and her close friend and rival Justine Mettraux when they both escaped on to the system in front.

But, unbowed, Davies has been her usual bright, sunny articulate self all the way around the Vendée Globe race course, maintaining an exceptional level of inspirational communication. Even if her position in the fleet was not necessarily what she wanted she visibly cherished every day on the race course on the boat she loves. And whilst she was keen to get finished even a few days ago she was saying how much she would miss the race.

After losing touch with the group in front she had a spirited race up the Atlantic with Clarisse Crémer (L’Occitane en Provence) and Benjamin Dutreux (GUYOT environnement – Water Family). Both were able to take advantage of a weather window which allowed them to get across the finish line in the midst of a building storm which she prudently chose to avoid, in fact turning 180 degrees to backwards down the track to miss the system, the sign of excellent seamanship. Nonetheless after the mental challenges of carrying on out of the race on the last Vendée Globe sailing two thirds of the course on her own, finishing this race today with a respectable place achieves Davies number 1 goal! 

Race in figures

Arrival time (UTC)
Race time 80d 22h 13min 39s
Difference from first 16d 02h 50min 50s
Samantha Davies covered theoretical course of 23 906 miles at an average speed of 12.31 knots.
Samantha Davies covered an actual course of 28 584 miles at an average speed of 14.72 knots.

Passage times

A world map showing the Vendée Globe's strategic waypoints
  • Equator (outward) 11d 15h 59min 16s
  • Cape of Good Hope 21d 21h 24min 01s
  • Cape Leeuwin 32d 15h 27min 35s
  • Cape Horn 52d 09h 07min 15s
  • Equator (return) 65d 23h 29min 59s

Race highlights

  • After a complicated start and passage inside the traffic separation scheme off Cape Finisterre, Sam approaches Madeira in 17th position.

  • Crosses the equator in 12th place, neck and neck with Clarisse Crémer and fighting to get back to the head of the fleet.

  • Samantha Davies enters the top 10 and passes the Cape of Good Hope, following a rapid descent of the South Atlantic.

  • Having initially taken a northerly option in the Indian Ocean, Sam has to dive back to the south to find more wind and rejoins the group with Boris Herrmann, Clarisse Crémer and Justine Mettraux.

  • Total electrical blackout for Samantha in the middle of the night. No autopilot, no electronics, the boat lying on its side at 90°... and Sam ejected from her seat! She also has to lower her mainsail, climb the mast, and sees a whale only a few meters from her boat.

  • Samantha enters the Pacific Ocean with Clarisse Crémer close by, but Boris Herrmann and Justine Mettraux are able to stay for longer in the stronger winds of a depression and escape in front of her. Meanwhile Initiatives-Cœur has a slow period sailing upwind.

  • When 13th in the ranking, the British sailor chooses to pass north of Point Nemo to avoid a big storm, while Clarisse Crémer and Benjamin Dutreux head south.

  • Rounding Cape Horn in calm weather in 13th position Sam is already "a little nostalgic for the South Seas!

  • Samantha, who chooses to approach the coast of Brazil to tackle the semi-permanent cold front of Cabo Frio, which allows her to come back strongly on Clarisse Crémer and Benjamin Dutreux!

  •  Initiatives-Cœur’s second crossing of the equator, still in 13th position.

  • No choice, she has to "put the handbrake on"! A few days before the finish, Samantha is forced to put her race on hold because of a violent storm brewing in the Bay of Biscay and Atlantic coast. "I am so disappointed to extend my race time, but seamanship is the priority and I have to take care of my boat," she explains.

  • Samantha Davies completes her fourth Vendée Globe after a 4th place in 2008 and two retirements in 2012 and 2010. She finished 13th in 80 days, 15 days less than her first round the world trip (95 days 4 hours and 39 minutes).

Passage of the channel of Boris Herrmann, 12th, and Sam Davies, 13th, in the 2024 Vendée Globe

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