Vendee Globe: Yannick Bestaven wins ninth edition after time bonus
Last updated on .From the section Sailing

Yannick Bestaven was declared the winner of the Vendee Globe sailing race after being handed a time bonus for his role in rescuing a fellow competitor.
He crossed the line in the solo round-the-world race third in 80 days, 13 hours, 59 minutes and 46 seconds.
But compensation of 10 hours and 15 minutes for helping rescue Kevin Escoffier saw Bestaven, 48, win by more than two hours from Charlie Dalin.
"I feel like I'm living a dream," said Bestaven, skipper of Maitre CoQ IV.
A third Frenchman, Louis Burton, completed the podium, with the top three crossing the finish line within eight hours of each other.
Bestaven was one of the two skippers who led the fleet for the longest time - 26 days, or 32% of the race, which begins and ends in Les Sables d'Olonne, France.
He passed Australia's Cape Leeuwin in third place and emerged first at Cape Horn, before being one of four skippers asked to locate Escoffier.
The Frenchman was eventually rescued in heavy seas off the Cape of Good Hope, more than 11 hours after his yacht broke in two on 30 November.
Germany's Boris Herrman was in the reckoning for a podium finish on Wednesday but his hopes faded when he struck a fishing boat around 90 miles from the finish line.
An international jury announced time compensations for Herrmann, Bestaven and Jean le Cam after the closest finish in the race's history.
"I thought I would win at Cape Horn, but then I thought that if I finished 25th, then that would be good enough," said Bestaven.
"But I managed to pull myself together and regain some ground on Charlie [Dalin], enough to make up the time. It was an amazing regatta."
This was the ninth edition of the Vendee Globe, which is held every four years, and saw a record entry of 33 skippers.