Alan Roura (SUI), skipper de Hublot, est photographié après avoir pris la 18e place du Vendée Globe, le 03 février 2025 aux Sables d'Olonne, France - (Photo by Vincent Curutchet / Alea)

Alan Roura (SUI), skipper de Hublot, est photographié après avoir pris la 18e place du Vendée Globe, le 03 février 2025 aux Sables d'Olonne, France - (Photo by Vincent Curutchet / Alea)

Alan Roura, 18th in the Vendée Globe 2024

Sport

03/02/2025 - 15:26

Today the Swiss skipper Alan Roura, at the age of just 31, completed his third consecutive Vendée Globe. The solo skipper of HUBLOT crossed the line off Les Sables d’Olonne at 11:57.48 hrs to take 18th place in an elapsed time of 84 days 23hrs 55 mins. Despite the beautiful sunshine and blue skies it was something of a bittersweet moment for Roura as he took his finish gun. He was overtaken in the final miles first by Benjamin Ferré and then by Tanguy Le Turquais who went on to take 16th and 17th places respectively, Ferré 37 minutes ahead and le Turquais 20 minutes in front of him.

Among his goals and aspirations pre-start Roura simply wanted to race in the Big South again and to be able to push his IMOCA, the former boat of Alex Thomson on which it is hard to do anything else. It was certainly  big step up in performance potential to his two previous races, both completed on modest budgets with older, non foiling daggerboard boats.

In 2016 Roura set off at just 23 years old – reminding us of a certain Violette Dorange – and four years later in 2020 he was still the youngest of the edition.

Now at 31 years old with so much experience under his belt Roura was able to manage his race and his boat, setting the cursor between the innate needs of  hard bitten competitor and the prudence and reasonableness of a businessman- entrepreneur.

Unfortunately his race started modestly, as it did for many others. He saw the head of the fleet escape quickly whilst he was stuck in a calm off Cape Verde. But Roura pushed hard all the way. He crossed the equator in 33rd position and then drove hard in the South Atlantic, then in the Indian and Pacific evolving into a quartet he formed with Jean Le Cam and Italian Giancarlo Pedote and Isabelle Joschke.

He impressed coming into Cape Horn where he chose not to slow down despite typically stormy conditions. It was a courageous choice but it did not really pay off. A few days later in anticyclone off the coast of Brazil would all his hard earned gains evaporated like snow off a dyke.

The end of the Atlantic was thus a series of elastic gains and losses, one blow against, one blow in favor of the Swiss sailor.

But the last depression north of the Azores allowed the Hublot skipper to finally have a great match up, a tough close battle with Seguin, so finishing his race with the intensity he had set off looking to find. And so he crossed the finish. bearded, happy, and proud to have succeeded on the world’s toughest solo race for a third time.

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Tanguy Le Turquais, 17th in the Vendée Globe 2024