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Maître Coq IV

Client Yannick Bestaven
Year 2019
Project type Offshore racing
Class Imoca

Photo credits: Unknown [claim]

The first IMOCA with foils, winner of the 2020-2021 Vendée Globe

Maître CoQ IV is an IMOCA 60 launched on March 5, 2015 under the name Safran II for Morgan Lagravière. Design VPLP design / Guillaume Verdier, built by CDK Technologies in Port-la-Forêt. It was the first IMOCA with foils — appendages known as "Dali’s mustaches" designed to lighten the hull when sailing downwind in strong breeze.

Design and specifications

  • Length: 18.28 m — beam: 5.80 m — draft: 4.50 m.
  • Air draft: 29 m, rotating wing mast.
  • Displacement: 6.5 t — target speed > 30 knots.
  • First-generation "Dali’s mustache" foils (not replaced during Bestaven’s campaign).

Successive owners

  • 2015-2017Safran II, skipper Morgan Lagravière.
  • June 2017 — after Safran’s sponsorship ended, the boat was taken over by Kaïros (Roland Jourdain) and sailed under the name Des Voiles et Vous!.
  • January 2019 — purchased by Yannick Bestaven (€300,000, knowledge transfer with the Kaïros team). Renamed Maître CoQ IV.
  • Late 2021 — purchased by Damien Seguin after Bestaven’s victory. Sailed since under the colors of Groupe APICIL.

2019-2020 preparation for the Vendée Globe

Before the 2020 Vendée Globe start, the Maître CoQ team did not modify the original foils and focused preparation on reliability and compliance:

  • Added volume to the coachroof to meet the IMOCA rule’s 180° recovery test — enhanced skipper protection.
  • Revised interior layout (bucket seat, chart table).
  • Exposed carbon structure to compensate for added structural weight.

Boat achievements

  • 2015 Transat Jacques-Vabre (Lagravière / Lunven) — retired due to water ingress via foil well.
  • 2016-2017 Vendée Globe (Lagravière) — retired after 17 days.
  • 2017 Transat Jacques-Vabre — 3rd in IMOCA class.
  • 2020-2021 Vendée Globe (Bestaven) — winner in 80 days 3 hours 44 minutes 46 seconds (official time after 10 hours 15 minutes compensation for Kevin Escoffier rescue; actual time 80 days 13 hours 59 minutes 46 seconds).