French America's Cup challenger reveals sailing team line up
The French challenger for the 37th America's Cup reaches a significant milestone en route to next year's showdown in Barcelona
Orient Express Racing Team — the French Challenger for the 37th America's Cup — has reached another significant milestone en route to next year's showdown in Barcelona with the unveiling of the sailing squad.
The announcement precedes the imminent arrival of the team's AC40 foiling monohull at the Spanish venue, a vital component in their training trajectory ahead of the delivery of the AC75 America's Cup race boat next year
Quentin Delapierre and Kevin Peponnet will be the helmsmen for both the AC40 Orient Express and AC75, with François Morvan, Matthieu Vandame and Jason Saunders the trimmers. Between them the quintet bring vast experience at an Olympic and international level, with their skills forged more recently in the intense heat of the SailGP racing circuit.
At the same time the squad of 'cyclors' — the literal powerhouse who provide the energy needed to operate the AC75's controls — were named as Germain Chardin, Maxime Guyon, Olivier Herlédant, Tim Lapauw, Antoine Nougarede, and brothers Rémi and Thibaut Verhoeven. The group comes from backgrounds in sailing, rowing, cycling and crossfit, all also with international and Olympic credentials.
"There is no doubt that importing the mutual experience and teamwork honed on the SailGP circuit of Quentin, François, Matthieu and myself to the Orient Express Racing Team is a logical move," said Peponnet.
"Add to that the experienced technical and shore teams, and the depth of talent we have to call on throughout the build-up to the America's Cup, and we are quietly confident that we will be in a position to climb the mountain ahead of us and be fully in contention in September next year.
"We have had great and ongoing high value training on the simulator thanks to the excellent work by our chief designer Benjamin Muyl and his team, and now we are eager to add real time experience on the AC40 on the Barcelona race course from mid-August."
The new developments follow-on from the May announcement of the Women and Youth squads following a selection process entrusted to Team France Association in collaboration with the French Sailing Federation, with the third Official Challenger element now taking its place in what Orient Express regards as a single team.
At the same time construction of the AC75 at Multiplast, Vannes in the Morbihan region of France is ongoing, with French technical expertise front and centre with the development of the sailing simulators, electronics, mechatronics and IT, with the large foiling monohull set for delivery next May.
Also in-build is the team's base in Barcelona under the watchful eye of Louis Viat, which will accommodate first the AC40 along with part of the team, and then the AC75.
Stephan Kandler, co-director of Orient Express Racing Team alongside Bruno Dubois, said: "The collaboration we have evolved already with French service providers, who bring world class levels of skill and know-how to the project, has been great. The technological challenge at the heart of the America's Cup will enhance knowledge and generate economic spin-offs for the French maritime industry, and that is very important to us."
The America's Cup has always been at the cutting edge of technological development, and never more so than in the current campaign. The imperative to create a seamless integration between the state-of-the-art technology and the crew has led to the involvement of the highly experienced Franck Cammas as Head of Performance within the team.
"My role with Orient Express Racing Team is to act as a link between the sailors and the design and technical teams, in the interests of performance," said Cammas.
"To be competitive, you need a well-designed boat and a crew who know how to use it and understand how it works. To achieve this, there needs to be good communication between the departments, so that we can refine and adjust the way we use the boat, going beyond the models and taking into account how the sailors feel about it."
With so much achieved in the short time since the Orient Express Racing Team announced its Cup challenge back in February, the project has also received the support of Amélie Oudéa-Castéra, France's Minister of Sport and the Olympic and Paralympic Games.
"We are proud to have come so far in such a short space of time," said Bruno Dubois.
"We started with a group of sailors who already knew each other from the top level of international competition, like team coach Thierry Douillard, sports coach Killian Philippe, and performance coach Thomas Sammut, and the whole team has grown together.
"There is still a long way to go to the America's Cup and we are not closing any doors on the possibility of adding other talented sailors to the group."
The Orient Express Racing Team will be in Barcelona in August when the team settles into V1 of their base in the Catalan capital, and they start sailing aboard the AC40 Orient Express.