Marc Pajot

Summary

Marc Pajot (born 21 September 1953 in La Baule) is a French sailor. He has been a crew member on Éric Tabarly’s boats.

Marc Pajot
Marc Pajot in Le Havre, November 2013
Born
Marc Pajot

(1953-09-21) 21 September 1953 (age 70)
HonorsOfficer of the ordre national du Mérite

Knight of the Mérite Maritime
Vermeil de la Ville de Paris medal

Double laureate of the Guy Wildenstein Prize of the Académie des sports
Medal record
Sailing
Representing  France
World Championships
Bronze medal – third place 1994 Crouesty 5.5m

Noted for winning the silver medal at the 1972 Olympics at 19 with his older brother Yves, 5 times world champion, winner of the cross-Atlantic Route du Rhum, twice semi-finalist representing France at the America’s Cup as a Project Manager and Skipper, he has been representing French sailing achievement around the world.

Member of French Maritime Academy, the French Yacht Club, and the Monaco Yacht Club he is now settled in Cannes, Côte d’Azur, running a Yacht Selection activity and a consulting activity in marina landscaping.

Sailing career edit

From the age of 14 to 23, with his brother Yves edit

Marc Pajot accumulates national and international titles :

  • Olympic Silver Medal winner, in 1972 in Flying Dutchman.
  • 5 times World Champion
  • 7 times French Champion

10 years competing on the oceans edit

Marc Pajot sets out to conquer the oceans under the wing of Eric Tabarly and crosses the Cap Horn at the age of 20 during the first team race around the world, the Whitbread (See Volvo Ocean Race) in 1973.[1]

He sets the professional standards for high seas regattas by promoting his sponsors, amongst which Paul Ricard and Elf Aquitaine with whom he will lead on to accomplish extraordinary performances.
He takes the 2nd place in 1979 at the double handed transatlantic race Lorient-Burmuda-Lorient with the hydrofoil Paul Ricard.

Elf Aquitaine – Titan of the seas edit

His Elf Aquitaine catamarans – will enable him to accomplish a series of performances between 1980 and 1983:

  • Winner La Baule Dakar race 1980
  • Atlantic record holder in 1981
  • Winner singlehanded race Route du Rhum 1982

Marc Pajot has so far crossed 15 times the Atlantic Ocean as a skipper, crew member, or single handed.

The America’s Cup edit

As a project manager, Skipper and helmsman, Marc Pajot has been able to federate the best in the profession, sponsors, naval architects, engineers, tacticians and crew, to run after the America’s Cup for four challenges:

  • French Kiss team 1987, Perth, Australia
  • Ville de Paris team 1992, San Diego, USA
  • France 2 team 1995, San Diego, USA
  • First America’s Cup Swiss team 2000, Auckland, NZ

Twice he succeeded in skippering the French challenge to the semi-finals of the Louis Vuitton Cup.

  • with French Kiss in 1987
  • with Ville de Paris in 1992

During those 25 years of competitions, Marc Pajot has managed and overseen the conception and creation of over 15 boats from 45 to 100 ft.

Other areas within the sailing world edit

Since 2000 Marc Pajot has also become a yacht broker providing yacht selection services and does consultancy in Marina landscaping around the world.

Yachting accomplishments edit

Distinctions edit

  • only sportsman to be a two time laureat of the Guy Wildenstein Prize from the Académie des sports, in 1975 (with his brother Yves) and in 1981.
  • Officer of the Ordre national du Mérite
  • Knight of the Ordre du Mérite Maritime
  • Vermeil medal of the Ville de Paris

Publications edit

  • Elf Aquitaine, un catamaran pour vaincre (édition Pen Duick)
  • Voile Racontée par Marc Pajot (édition Hatier Rageot – 1985)
  • Défi à la Coupe de l’América (édition Rivage – 1987)
  • Des J.O. à la Coupe de l’América (édition Robert Laffont – 1991)

References edit

  1. ^ "Archive Volvo Ocean Race". Retrieved 2019-03-16.
  2. ^ "Course du Rhum". ina.fr. 29 November 1982. Retrieved 16 December 2011.
  • Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Marc Pajot". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 2020-04-17.

External links edit