When we look closer at the details we just see anomalies and that things are not really in accordance with what is generally claimed at face value.
Indeed: the OP (and your next post) rewards closer study.
In this sort or race for the "around the world sailing record", the goal wasn't necessarily to make a perfect circumference around the globe for obvious reasons, and is really the fastest time someone could sail a distance of 21,600 nautical miles. Francis Joyon and François Gabart made this path:
https://goldengloberace.com/the-route/
This path takes place further northwards near the continents. The total course is 30,000 miles, but they only count the best time to 21,600 nautical miles for the specific record, since this is the circumference of the RE in RE Theory.
Incorrect.
When Joyon
and Gabart and his crew (
edit: Gabart took the solo record on a different multihull) lifted the record for sailing around the world, they also won the
Jules Verne Trophy and it is a condition of that trophy that record setters begin by crossing a line between Créac’h lighthouse on Ushant Island, off the French north west coast and the Lizard lighthouse off the English south coast. Their time is to sail around the world leaving the Capes of Good Hope, Leeuwin and Horn to port (on the left) and re-cross that same line in the western English Channel, not to complete 21,600 miles. There are no restrictions on the type of yacht used, as long as it is capable of sailing around the world unaided.
That map shows the track of the
Golden Globe 2022 race, a race using traditional yachts in the style of Sir Francis Chichester's famous
Gipsy Moth IV, which generally takes 9 months to complete and high-tech aids like GPS are forbidden, it's sextants and chronometers for navigation. It starts and finishes at Les Sables-d'Olonne on the French west coast. about 180 miles from Ushant, and there are also mandatory calling points where each yacht stops in close sight of land for 90 minutes.
It looks like you guys are claiming that she had a bad boat. According to Guinness World Records Lisa Blair holds the record for "Fastest circumnavigation of Antarctica by sailboat". She did it in 92 days 18 hours 21 minutes 22 seconds. We know that hundreds of people are trying to beat world records, and there are even yearly races around Antarctica (which we are often pointed to, but the details are rarely discussed). This represents the best boat, so your arguments are pretty invalid.
Joyon's
and Gabart's IDEC SPORT (formerly
IDEC 3) is 31.5m long, Lisa Blair's
Climate Action Now is half that length.
IDEC SPORT carries far more sail than
Climate Action Now and uses foils which lift the trimaran partly out of the water to reduce drag and increase speed to peaks of over 40 knots; Lisa Blair's boat has none of these. You might think Blair's is a bad boat, others would say it's a completely different boat and so your argument about round-Antarctica times falls.
The race around Antarctica happened in 2008, but does not appear to have happened since. If you know of hard data about more recent
Antarctic Cup yacht races, I'd really like to know, I enjoy keeping up with these kind of events.
Finally, for anyone who is interested in sailing closer to the Antarctic ice and the weather and winds encountered, here's an account of
Katharsis II skippered by Mariusz Koper, which holds the record for a yacht sailing around Antarctica below 62 deg S latitude. The anomalous winds feature prominently.
https://www.yachtingworld.com/voyages/sailing-antarctica-record-breaking-voyage-around-southern-continent-123341