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Armel Le Cleac'h holding off Alex Thomson as finish nears

French skipper Armel Le Cleac'h holds a lead of 74.9 nautical miles over closest rival Alex Thomson as both raced towards the French coast
French skipper Armel Le Cleac'h holds a lead of 74.9 nautical miles over closest rival Alex Thomson as both raced towards the French coast
Organisers expect the race winner to cross the line between 0700 and 1500 GMT on Thursday.
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Despite the valiant attempts of Alex Thomson to reel him in, Frenchman Armel Le Cleach appeared headed for victory Tuesday in the Vendee Globe solo round the world race with 600 nautical miles to go.

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Thomson, in his Hugo Boss, has been shaving down his rival's lead in recent days and Sunday set a 24-hour speed record for distance covered in a single hulled yacht in 24 hours, skimming across 536.81 nautical miles of ocean at an average speed of 22.36 knots.

But Le Cleac'h has steadied his Banque Populaire VIII and held a lead of 74.9 nautical miles as both raced towards the French coast.

With the wind having dropped, the Frenchman was still under pressure to keep the dogged Thomson at bay as they steered towards the English Channel, where northeasterly winds awaited, at an average 17 knots.

Thomson has been fighting to close the gap for 45 days since Le Cleac'h ended his brief spell at the head of the race.

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But the chances of his actually becoming the first Briton to win look slim given that the distance he has to make up exceeds 10% of the total remaining distance.

Le Cleac'h is straining to go one better than two runner-up showings and those who know him think he will not let the chance of glory slip.

"They don't call Armel The Jackal for nothing. He is a few miles ahead and I think he won't let our British friend pass," said Conrad Colman, standing 10th with Foresight Natural Energy.

"Alex is plugging away and coming back very strongly but I think that Armel has what it takes to defend his lead," added Fabrice Amedeo, 11th in Newrest-Matmut. "It'll be tight -- but he will hold on."

With the winner expected to finish between 0700 and 1500 GMT on Thursday, a new record for the race will be set.

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If the winner finishes before 1202 GMT then he will come in just under 74 days at sea. In any case, both leaders are set to smash Francois Gabart's 2012-2013 record mark of 78 days 2hr 16min.

Leading positions Tuesday at 0800 GMT:

1. Armel Le Cleac'h (FRA/Banque populaire VIII) at 553 miles from the finish.

2. Alex Thomson (GBR/Hugo Boss) at 74.88 miles

3. Jeremie Beyou (FRA/Maitre Coq) at 852.41

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4. Jean-Pierre Dick (FRA/StMichel-Virbac) at 1,697.57

5. Yann Elies (FRA/Queguiner-Leucemie Espoir) at 1,826.56

6. Jean Le Cam (FRA/Finistere Mer Vent) at 1,828.53

7. Louis Burton (FRA/Bureau Vallee) at 2,898.66

8. Nandor Fa (HUN/Spirit of Hungary) at 4,596.53

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9. Eric Bellion (FRA/CommeUnSeulHomme) at 5,149.54

10. Conrad Colman (NZL/Foresight Natural Energy) at 5,202.32

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