World-record breaking circumnavigator heads home to France
It was Coville's fifth attempt to beat a record set in 2008 by Francis Joyon, another Frenchman
PARIS, FRANCE:
Sailor Thomas Coville was due to arrive in the French port of Brest on Monday hours after smashing the world record for a single-handed non-stop sailing circumnavigation of the globe.
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Frenchman Coville aged 48, crossed a finish line off the Brittany coast on Sunday after a voyage of 49 days three hours seven minutes and 38 seconds, slashing more than eight days off the previous record in his 31-metre trimaran multihull, according to his sponsor Sodebo.
It was Coville's fifth attempt to beat a record set in 2008 by Francis Joyon, another Frenchman.
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His Sodebo Ultim yacht achieved an average speed of 24.1 knots. "Mentally I had my highs and my lows but I knew where I wanted to get to," he told Le Parisien newspaper in an interview after a voyage in which he said he did not sleep more than three hours at a stretch.
"Physically I could not have gone much further," he added.
Sailor Thomas Coville was due to arrive in the French port of Brest on Monday hours after smashing the world record for a single-handed non-stop sailing circumnavigation of the globe.
Sri Lanka's record christmas tree pruned due to work delays
Frenchman Coville aged 48, crossed a finish line off the Brittany coast on Sunday after a voyage of 49 days three hours seven minutes and 38 seconds, slashing more than eight days off the previous record in his 31-metre trimaran multihull, according to his sponsor Sodebo.
It was Coville's fifth attempt to beat a record set in 2008 by Francis Joyon, another Frenchman.
Motorcycle diaries: Riding this way around the world, Moin Khan finds his heart in Pakistan
His Sodebo Ultim yacht achieved an average speed of 24.1 knots. "Mentally I had my highs and my lows but I knew where I wanted to get to," he told Le Parisien newspaper in an interview after a voyage in which he said he did not sleep more than three hours at a stretch.
"Physically I could not have gone much further," he added.