Hobart Brief

Hobart Luxury Yacht Charter & Superyacht News

Significance of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

December 31, 2012

According to Phil Waugh, the Australian rugby union star as well as crewmember of the first yacht that completed the 2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart: “It would not be the same growing up in Australia not watching the Boxing Day Test [cricket match] followed by the start of the [Rolex] Sydney Hobart, one of the great sailing challenges.”

Sailing yacht Wild Oats XI leads fleet out of harbour after start of 68th Rolex Sydney Hobart

Sailing yacht Wild Oats XI leads fleet out of harbour after start of 68th Rolex Sydney Hobart - Photo credit: Rolex/Carlo Borlenghi

Such is the significance of the Rolex Sydney Hobart in the Australian national psyche that the 2011 Young Australian of the Year Jessica Watson, the youngest person to sail alone around the world, took on the race in 2011 as “her next big challenge”.

Robert Oatley, the owner of Wild Oats XI yacht the race record holder, six times first to finish, and twice overall winner keeps returning because: “it is one of the hardest yacht races in the world to win, and I am very proud to win it.”

Media Matters
The start in Sydney and first arrivals in Hobart receive blanket coverage from every major print and television news outlet in Australia. The start is broadcast live to a television audience measured in hundreds of thousands and, should they be considered an assessment of media impact, 14 helicopters hovered over the fleet on 26 December 2012. The race finish elicits similarly intense attention; Australian Traveller includes witnessing it as one of the Top 100 things to do in Australia. It is listed ahead of a seat at the Australian Open tennis tournament and just behind going to the Melbourne Cup horse race.

The Rolex Sydney Hobart justifies a page of its own on the Tourism Australia website confirming the country’s recognition of its importance to ‘brand Australia’ abroad; that it is emblematic of the nation. The site describes the race as “an Australian summertime tradition” and an “iconic Australian summer experience”. This local fervour for the race has caught on around the world. It is not just in its own backyard that it is deemed a moment worthy of mainstream news attention. From The New York Times in the US, the BBC and The Daily Telegraph in the UK, La Stampa in Italy, Neue Zürcher Zeitung in Switzerland, Der Spiegel in Germany to El Mundo in Spain, news about the event competes successfully for broadcast and column space globally.

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race in numbers - Photo credit: Rolex/KPMS

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race in numbers - Photo credit: Rolex/KPMS

Traditional Values
From where does this intense scrutiny and passionate interest originate? The event boasts a rich history despite the first edition in 1945 being a humble affair. Only nine yachts took part, yet the fledging event immediately seems to have caught the imagination of those outside the sport. The most significant trophy awarded at the Rolex Sydney Hobart is the George Adams Tattersall Cup: 65cm of hand-wrought sterling silver.

It was presented to organizers, the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, in 1946 by the estate George Adams, a Hobart businessman, philanthropist and founder of the Tattersall’s Lottery, at the instigation of his great-nephew William, who clearly felt the race worthy of a grand piece of silverware. The Tattersall’s Cup goes to the overall victor and is one of the most coveted trophies in yacht-racing. Last year’s winner Stephen Ainsworth tried for 14 years to capture the prize: “It is a huge thrill to win this race. I know how hard it is to win. I have been trying for a long time.”

Throughout its existence, the Rolex Sydney Hobart has attracted the participation of international yachtsmen and women, some of who are more famous for their prowess outside the sport. Communication mogul, Ted Turner, IT supremos Larry Ellison, Niklas Zennstrom and Hasso Plattner, and, British statesman Sir Edward Heath have all competed at various points, drawn to the challenge. Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, the first person to sail single-handed and non-stop around the world competed for the first time in 2010, offering a simple reason: “The Rolex Sydney Hobart Race is seen as one of the world’s great classic yacht races.”

Hobart in a festive mood between Christmas and New Year's Eve - Photo credit Rolex Daniel Forster

Hobart in a festive mood between Christmas and New Year's Eve - Photo credit: Rolex/Daniel Forster

Human Nature
The race’s status as a classic is drawn from many elements. For the average crew the chances of winning are extremely low. The attraction lies in the many unknowns of racing 628 nautical miles, the exhilaration and the sense of accomplishment at the finish. It has earned a fearsome reputation, justified by the route touching some of the toughest open waters on the planet; stories of derring-do, storms and even tragedy echo in its wake. Briton Mike Broughton, a regular competitor and highly experienced navigator, whose first experience of offshore racing was the infamous1979 Fastnet Race, has observed many finishers over the years: “There’s a look in people’s eyes when they get to Hobart; quite often it is bloodshot and tired, but there is an elation at having done the race. It means a great deal, a huge amount.”

Competitors are drawn to the raw nature of testing themselves against the elements. The mix of hard physical challenges is well documented, and for some sailors there is fear to overcome; something Broughton is adept at explaining: “We start in Sydney where it is lovely and sunny, 26 degrees, and we’re going on yacht race. But, you turn right (south) out of the Heads and often on the first night you are straight into a southerly bringing much colder winds from Antarctica and the sea state can be pretty brutal. Fear is not something you want to talk about. It is kept in the back of your mind, but it is one of the challenges of this race.” The Rolex Sydney Hobart confronts human spirit and endeavour, and that pulls people towards it, participants and public alike.

Non-sailors may find it difficult to understand the intricacies of yacht racing and the handicap system that means the first to finish is not necessarily the winner. What they do comprehend is enterprise, courage and adventure. The element of personal challenge that inhabits this race plays a full part in attracting the wider appreciation.

Respected Australian sport journalist, Amanda Lulham, is captivated by the legend, and over many years has made it her mission to impart the character of the race and its competitors to her newspaper readership: “It has a wonderful tradition; it is a tradition about stories, about people, about boats, about technology. There is so much humanity and heart ache in the race, great stories of survival, stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary things that capture the imagination.”

Sydney landmarks at night ahead of start of 68th Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race - Photo credit Rolex Carlo Borlenghi

Sydney landmarks at night ahead of start of 68th Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race - Photo credit: Rolex/Carlo Borlenghi

Live Theatre
The start each year on Sydney Harbour is something that has infiltrated the public consciousness. It is a rendezvous moment in one of the world’s great cities. The time of year, the ever-growing folklore, the spectacle: all have an impact and the result is dramatic. According to Lulham, “There are only three things you do on Boxing Day in Australia. One is to watch the start of Rolex Sydney Hobart on Sydney Harbour, the second is to fire up the barbeque, and the third is to watch the cricket.”

Hundreds of thousands of people pack the foreshore and Harbour is congested with big boats, little boats, kayaks, dinghies. Everyone in Sydney who can get on the water does so, the rest watch from shore or join the international television audience. No other sailing event in the world commands such avid attention, bringing a nation to near standstill for an hour.

The finish is no less extraordinary. Hobart is a summer destination, and is in festive mood between Christmas and New Year. Hobart resident Bruce Montgomery is another respected member of the Australian media. He has covered the race since 1968 and for him: “the Rolex Sydney Hobart is strategically very important to Tasmania from a tourism point of view; it is what places Hobart and Tasmania on the world map. Most people are aware of the race for good and bad reasons, but above all they know this is one of the great, blue riband ocean races.”

It is a remarkable fact that start and finish are both regarded as something to witness; something one would tell his friends ‘I was there’. Few sailing events in the world can truly claim to cross the boundary between niche sport and major attraction. Montgomery says the proof of this event’s grand prix draw is plain to see: “The start is always a spectacle, and, here in Hobart whatever the time of day or night the docks can be absolutely crowded. People come out in the thousands. On the docks, out in boats, Hobart is at its best.” In 2011 when the first two yachts to finish were separated by three minutes, 10,000 were estimated to be on the dock captivated by the moment.

The first yacht to finish receives a royal welcome in Hobart - Photo credit Rolex Daniel Forster

The first yacht to finish receives a royal welcome in Hobart - Photo credit: Rolex/Daniel Forster

Legend in the Making
There is no single factor that has formed the legend. Starting and finishing in major cities, the timing, the human endeavour, the romance and the show: all are equally important. With Wild Oats XI yacht capturing an historic, second treble of first to finish, overall winner and the race record at the 68th edition, the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race shows no sign of letting go of its grip on the imagination, or the status as an iconic sporting event.

Sailing Yacht Wild Oats XI sets new race record at 2012 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

December 28, 2012

Bob Oatley’s sailing yacht Wild Oats XI crossed the finish line at Hobart at 07.23.12 AEDT taking the line honours in the 68th edition of the 628 nm regatta – Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, setting a new race record in the process.

Line honours presentation - (L to R) Bob Oatley (Wild Oats XI owner), Mark Richards (Wild Oats XI skipper) and Patrick Boutellier (Rolex Australia) - Photo Rolex - Carlo Borlenghi

Line honours presentation - (L to R) Bob Oatley (sailing yacht Wild Oats XI owner), Mark Richards (Wild Oats XI skipper) and Patrick Boutellier (Rolex Australia) - Photo Rolex - Carlo Borlenghi

Reichel/Pugh designed Wild Oats XI  yacht completed the course in 1 day 18 hours, 23 minutes and 12 seconds; 16 minutes 58 seconds inside the course record she set in 2005. This is sailing yacht Wild Oats XI’s sixth line honours victory in eight years

At a ceremony at Constitution Dock, Bob Oatley and skipper Mark Richards were presented with a Rolex Chronometer and the Illingworth Trophy for being first yacht across the finish line.

Second day at the 2012 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

December 27, 2012

The second day at the 2012 Rolex Sydney Hobart showed the largest yachts profiting massively from the overnight change in the wind direction to the northeast. One yacht in particular, sailing yacht Wild Oats XI, a five-time Rolex Sydney Hobart line honours winner, raced about 40 nm ahead of her own record pace as she got closer to Tasmania, brutally exposing the shortcomings of her competitors in straight-line speed sailing, even coming to an 50nm lead over maxi sailing yacht Ragamuffin Loyal.

Sailing yacht WILD OATS XI at sunrise - Photo credit Rolex - Carlo Borlenghi

Sailing yacht WILD OATS XI at sunrise - Photo credit Rolex - Carlo Borlenghi

Wild Oats XI yacht appears on the cusp of a remarkable repeat of her 2005 triple-crown success: first boat home, new course record and overall win. Well in front of her rivals and the record on the water, all day long she has been trading the top handicap position with Peter Harburg’s sailing yacht Black Jack, according to the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia’s position tracker. Harburg has his own history making in mind: to become the first yacht from Queensland to lift the Tattersalls’ Cup. He will not be getting over-excited. This being a yacht race, the organizers are a long way from inscribing names onto silverware.

Wild Oats XI’s dream run will come to an end as the second weather transition kicks in during the night. The wind is forecast to die and to gradually back to the west, before steadily building into an, at times, strong southwesterly. The timing of this change, and the ability of skipper Mark Richards’ tactical team to get though it with minimum disruption, will determine the eventual outcome. Wild Oats XI must finish before 07:40 AEDT tomorrow to break the record of one day, 18 hours, 40 minutes and 10 seconds.

RAGAMUFFIN LOYAL, Syd Fischer - Photo credit Rolex - Carlo Borlenghi

RAGAMUFFIN LOYAL, Syd Fischer - Photo credit Rolex - Carlo Borlenghi

For the smaller yachts yet to enter Bass Strait, the northeasterly looks likely to hang in until around midnight on 27 December. From then on the expected series of fronts moving through the Strait and across Tasmania will dramatically affect progress; buffeting the fleet north and south of island’s land mass, and at other times beguiling it with lighter, more fickle breeze, particularly in its lee.

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race starts with great conditions

December 26, 2012

The 68th Rolex Hobart begun with excellent conditions. The predicted southerly breeze offered the perfect angle for a spinnaker start and run down the harbour. The angle was less kind as the sailing yachts left the Sydney Heads and made their turn towards Hobart in 20-25 knots. Mark Richards and sailing yacht Wild Oats XI did not want to be interrupted in her bid to claim a sixth line honours, blasting off the line and showing Syd Fischer’s Ragamuffin Loyal yacht a clean pair of heels before arriving at the Heads comfortably in the lead.

Fleet leaving Sydney Harbour after start of 68th Rolex Sydney Hobart - Photo by Rolex - Carlo Borlenghi

Fleet leaving Sydney Harbour after start of 68th Rolex Sydney Hobart - Photo by Rolex - Carlo Borlenghi

An interesting night lies ahead. The decision how far to head out to sea was the first conundrum facing the crews. So far the bulk of yachts appear firm in the belief that staying inshore, and inside the rhumb line will pay better. Only, one or two boats have shown a determination to head offshore for any length of time. Mike Broughton, navigator on Chris Bull’s sailing yacht Jazz, felt ahead of the start that the fleet would do well to stay inshore for the initial section of the race, certainly until the major swing in wind direction expected during the night. This transition should see the wind back to the northeast and will have the yachts running under spinnaker for an extended period.

Bird's eye view of start of the 2012 Rolex Sydney Hobart, with cityscape in background - Photo by Rolex  Carlo Borlenghi

Bird's eye view of start of the 2012 Rolex Sydney Hobart, with cityscape in background - Photo by Rolex Carlo Borlenghi

Earlier this morning, Gordon Maguire, tactician on Stephen Ainsworth’s Loki yacht, indicated some of their pre-race routing suggested the bigger yachts could profit enormously from the predicted northeasterly. If it arrives on cue, they could bite a huge chunk out of the course during the hours of darkness and be lying off Green Cape by mid-morning on the second day, 27 December. The small boats, meanwhile, such as race veteran Roger Hickman’s sailing yacht Wild Rose, might only find themselves parallel with Jervis Bay as dawn breaks. The difference in power between segments of the fleet will be all too apparent at this juncture.

BLACK JACK yacht charges down Sydney Harbour - Photo by Rolex-Daniel Forster

BLACK JACK yacht charges down Sydney Harbour - Photo by Rolex-Daniel Forster

At 17:30 AEDT Wild Oats XI was 8 nautical miles north east of Kiama travelling at 12 knots, with some 50 nm under her belt after 4.5 hours of sailing. Any thought of setting a new record seemed to be on hold as navigator Adrienne Cahalan called in to report the wind speed dropping as evening arrives. Ragamuffin Loyal yacht lies within striking distance just astern. Sailing yachts Lahana, Ichi Ban and Black Jack round out the top five on the water. Conditions have been wet and hard on crews during these first few hours and the measure of performance differential between front-runners and back markers is clearly demonstrated by yacht Charlie’s Dream. Averaging just 3.4 knots, Peter Lewis and crew were parallel with Botany Bay having knocked a mere 13 nm off the 628nm course distance.

Sailing Yacht RAGAMUFFIN LOYAL plunging through steep chop on first afternoon - Photo by Rolex-Carlo Borlenghi

Sailing Yacht RAGAMUFFIN LOYAL plunging through steep chop on first afternoon - Photo by Rolex-Carlo Borlenghi

The start of the Rolex Sydney Hobart is like few other yacht races. The natural amphitheatre formed by the deep-water harbour offers great viewing potential from the water, at water level from the beaches and coves, and grandstand opportunities from higher ground. Every Sydney-sider has a favourite location, and South Head must be one of the most popular and dramatic. A huge crowd always assembles to watch the fleet barrel down the harbour and make the sharp out into open water. This year’s spectacle was worth the effort involved. After a dreadful Christmas Day, when rain and wind battered Sydney, Boxing Day has been a joy. Blue sky and reasonably warm temperatures brought the locals out in their thousands to cheer the determined and enthusiastic crews off on their compelling adventure.

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2012 to host a fleet of 79 yachts

December 11, 2012

Participation of 79 yachts has been confirmed for the 68th Rolex Sydney Hobart. The eclectic mix of yachts varies in size from 10.3 metres (33.8 feet) to 30.48 metres (100-feet), and comprises three international entries, 9 previous race winners, the defending overall champion, yachts representing each and every Australian state and the Australian Capital Territory, as well as four yachts to have declared line honours.

Start of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race - Photo credit RolexDaniel Forster

Start of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race - Photo credit: Rolex/Daniel Forster

Fastest in the fleet
Four 100-foot Maxi yachts – luxury yacht Ragamuffin-Loyal, Wild Oats XI superyacht, sailing yacht Wild Thing and Lahana yacht – look likely to form a breakaway group at the head of the competition, with old adversaries preparing to lock horns. Bob Oatley’s Wild Oats XI has won line honours five times and is the current race record-holder, having set the standard of 1 day, 18 hours, 40 minutes and 10 seconds in 2005. Conditions in the intervening years have proved frustrating, denying a serious tilt at this benchmark time.

Start of the race in Sydney harbour - Photo by Rolex/Daniel Forster

Start of the race in Sydney harbour - Photo by Rolex/Daniel Forster

Last year, superyacht Investec Loyal beat Wild Oats XI to the finish line by a mere three minutes, eight seconds; racing this year as Ragamuffin-Loyal, under the leadership of the legendary Syd Fischer, she once again poses the biggest threat to Wild Oats. Fischer is set to compete in the race for a staggering 44th time and his crew will benefit from the shrewdness and expertise of one of Australia’s great yachtsmen, twice a line honours winner (in 1988 and 1990), and an overall race winner in 1992.

Maxi yacht Wild Oats Xi after the start - Photo credit Rolex Daniel Forster

Maxi yacht Wild Oats Xi after the start - Photo credit: Rolex/Daniel Forster

Anyone’s race
The Tattersall’s Cup, awarded to the overall race winner, remains the coveted prize, and all 80 boats start with a theoretical chance of victory. The conditions, teamwork, skill and an element of luck will all help determine the eventual result. Since Rolex began its sponsorship of the event in 2002, all but one overall race winner have come from the 40-65ft range, where the majority of the fleet lies. Defending champion sailing yacht Loki, on the back of another successful season, is seeking to become the first boat to defend the overall title since 1965.

Superyacht Lahana - Photo by Rolex Kurt Arrigo

Superyacht Lahana - Photo by Rolex/Kurt Arrigo

The race start, as is tradition, will take place on 26 December at 13:00 local time. As Australia relaxes during the summer festive season, hundreds of thousands of spectators will witness the race start from the shore and on the waters of Sydney Harbour or on television and the internet. Anticipation of the first finishers in Hobart will build around the world as the latest edition of this iconic race unfolds.

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race to start on 26 December, 2012

October 11, 2012

Kicking off for the 68th uninterrupted year on 26 December, the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is one of the world’s most amazing offshore competitions, representing the annual nautical challenge across 628 nautical miles from Sydney Harbour to Hobart, Tasmania. The competition is now well known all over the world, thanks mostly to the often turbulent as well as difficult conditions posed by the infamous passage across Bass Strait.

2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Start - Photo by Rolex Daniel Forster

2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Start - Photo by Rolex/Daniel Forster

Last year’s Rolex Sydney Hobart provided several moments of high drama including an enthralling cat-and-mouse battle for line honours between five-time winner and race record-holder, superyacht Wild Oats XI, and her fellow 30.48-metre/100-foot opponent, luxury yacht Investec Loyal. Heading into the last stretch in the Derwent River, in Tasmania, the two boats were tantalizingly close together, with Investec Loyal eventually winning by a mere 3 minutes and 8 seconds, the fourth-closest finish in the event’s rich history.

Chasing records
Wild Oats XI superyacht is determined to reclaim the line honours title she first won in 2005. That first triumph saw owner Bob Oatley and his crew, skippered by Mark Richards, claim a historic treble – line honours, race record and the Tattersall’s Cup which is awarded to the event’s overall winner. While Wild Oats XI has repeated her line honours success a further four times, bettering the race record of 1 day, 18 hours, 40 minutes and 10 seconds and claiming another handicap win has proved more elusive.

Last year the proud recipient of the Tattersall’s Cup was Stephen Ainsworth’s 19.3m/63-ft sailing yacht Loki. Ainsworth is eager to defend his title, but history is against him. No yacht has reclaimed its title the following year since 1965 when Freya triumphed for an extraordinary third year in succession.

Macht racing to Hobart - Photo by Rolex/Daniel Forster

Macht racing to Hobart - Photo by Rolex/Daniel Forster

Internationally revered
The 2011 race attracted a fleet of 88 crews and there is every chance that the number will be surpassed in 2012. The event enjoys a huge international reputation and the entry list currently welcomes four non-Australian entries – the Volvo 60 Ambersail (LTU), comprising the first-ever Lithuanian crew, the 16.5m/54-ft Bengal 7 (JPN), the 12.80m/42-ft Reichel/Pugh-designed Rikki (NZL) and Geoff Hill’s 27.41m/90-ft superyacht Genuine Risk (HKG), line honours winner at this year’s Rolex China Sea Race. A healthy local presence is guaranteed with yachts representing all Australian states.

The Rolex Sydney Hobart is organized by the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia (CYCA) in conjunction with the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania (RYCT). The event is a sporting institution drawing keen interest around the world. With the warning signal for the start of the race sounding at 13:00 (local time) on 26 December, in the middle of the Australian summer and end-of-year festivities, the race start is the single most viewed sailing event on the globe as hundreds of thousands of people watch from the festive shores in Sydney, live on television and over the internet.

The Rolex Sydney Hobart handicap victory for Stephen Ainsworth´s 63´ LOKI yacht

January 09, 2012

After fourteen attempts, Stephen Ainsworth is happy to have won the historic Tattersall’s Cup with his McConaghy built Reichel/Pugh 63′ Loki yacht, adding the Rolex-Sydney-Hobart handicap victory to a brimming trophy cabinet.

LOKI yacht - Photo By Rolex Daniel Forster

LOKI yacht - Photo By Rolex Daniel Forster

“We are elated, it is a fantastic feeling, a huge thrill to win this race,” said a jubilant Ainsworth. “I know how hard it is to win this race. I have been trying for a long time!”

Critical to Loki’s victory in the Rolex Sydney-Hobart yacht race was the crew’s ability to push the yacht through the first night’s thirty-knot Southerly front – and then work through the light patches closer to the finish: Ainsworth’s crew taking sixty miles out of the leading Maxis in one morning.

Launched in Sydney in 2008, Loki yacht has been the standout IRC yacht in Australia – in 2010 taking both line honours and IRC Division 1 overall victory in the Audi Sydney Harbour regatta, plus the overall win in the Audi Sydney Gold Coast Yacht Race.

Crowned the 2010-2011 Bluewater Pointscore Champion – winning four of the seven-race series and taking line honours and the IRC 0/1 divisional win in this year’s Audi Sydney Offshore Newcastle Yacht Race, in September Loki added the Bird Island Race to its list of successes, breaking the 15 year-old record held by the 80ft super yacht Brindabella.

Congratulations to Loki’s owner and crew on beating an international fleet of eighty seven yachts and winning such a challenging and complex Rolex Sydney-Hobart race. Ainsworth describing the victory as “Pure joy!”

2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: Victory On The 14th Attempt

January 02, 2012

The 2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race was notable thanks to its unexpected winner of the coveted line honours trophy, a worthy overall winner and a slow passage home for the smaller yachts.

Start of the race Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

Start of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

The Boxing Day start of the 628 mile race south to Hobart was spectacular, with the 88-strong international fleet setting off from the heart of Sydney Harbour, with its iconic bridge and Opera House as a backdrop. The Heads and shoreline were teeming with spectators as news helicopters flew overhead. Leading the charge on the beat out of the Harbour was Bob Oatley’s maxi sailing yacht Wild Oats XI, the line honours winner in five out of the last six Rolex Sydney Hobarts.

Weather-wise the start of the race was fairly conventional with some fast running conditions for the afternoon, but with a dramatic 180 degree wind shift into the south forecast for the first evening. A swell from the north generated by the ex-tropical cyclone Fina, combined with this wind shift, created a horrific confused sea on the opening night, as the 30 knots southerly wind kicked in with a punch, gusting up to 40 knots. But it is these brutal, testing conditions competitors expect when they set out on the Rolex Sydney Hobart and give the event its reputation as one of the world’s toughest offshore yacht races.

Super Yacht WILD OATS XI passing Tasman Island Photo: ROLEX/K. Arrigo

Super Yacht WILD OATS XI passing Tasman Island Photo: ROLEX/K. Arrigo

For the crews it was a case of battening down hatches and muscling through and by the first morning there was an impressively low attrition rate with just two retirements. They were joined later by a third, the 2003 line honours winner Grant Wharington’s Wild Thing, suffering sail damage.

24 hours in and race favourite for line honours, the Mark Richards-skippered Wild Oats XI superyacht, was 11 miles ahead of Anthony Bell’s super maxi sailing yacht Investec Loyal, these two having broken away from Peter Millard’s Lahana with singlehanded round the world sailor Alex Thomson on Hugo Boss holding fourth on the water. On IRC handicap Roger Hickman, an old hand in the Rolex Sydney Hobart, competing in his 35th race, had pulled into the lead aboard his 1993 race winner, Wild Rose yacht.

INVESTEC LOYAL Superyacht escorted by spectator craft before crossing the finish line Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

INVESTEC LOYAL Superyacht escorted by spectator craft before crossing the finish line Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

For this Rolex Sydney Hobart Wild Oats XI had been ‘turboed’ with the addition of new twin daggerboards and a larger square-topped mainsail, but her dominance as the fastest boat in the race was called into question when at 20:00 on the second evening of the race she was overtaken by the similarly-sized, but older, Investec Loyal.

With the wind lightening and backing from the southwest into the southeast, so Wild Oats XI was caught in a wind hole. Her co-navigator, Ian Burns explained what happened: “They [Investec Loyal’s crew] were keeping track of how we were doing and the moment we stopped under a cloud with no wind under it, they basically sailed right around the outside of this large hole we were stuck in and came back above us. It was good work on their part.”

Super maxi sailing yachts INVESTEC LOYAL and WILD OATS XI close to the finish line on the Derwent River Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

Super maxi sailing yachts INVESTEC LOYAL and WILD OATS XI close to the finish line on the Derwent River Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

The theoretically faster super yacht Wild Oats XI managed to catch up and overtook Investec Loyal at 07:30 on the second morning of the race as the two boats were sailing down the east coast of Tasmania. For the rest of the morning followers of the race were on the edge of their seats as the two boats match raced around the remainder of the course.

As they rounded the south side of Tasman Island, so Wild Oats XI was becalmed again and, taking their chance, Investec Loyal once again pounced, sailed around the outside of them to regain the lead. Crossing Storm Bay and sailing up the Derwent River to the finish, the Wild Oats XI crew, sailing with many of Australian yachting’s elder statesmen and women on board, threw all they could at Investec Loyal, but it was not enough. Investec Loyal crossed the finish line at 19:14:18 local time, after 2 days 6 hours 14 minutes and 8 seconds at sea, just 3 minutes and 8 seconds ahead of Wild Oats XI. This was the fourth closest finish in the 67 year history of the Rolex Sydney Hobart.

Unfortunately celebrations were dampened when the line honours winner was protested by the race committee. This was over a conversation between Investec Loyal tactician Michael Coxon and a helicopter pilot on the first morning of the race in which Coxon enquired about whether the mainsail or the trysail was being used on board Wild Oats XI. Investec Loyal’s line honour victory was finally confirmed when, after a three hour long protest hearing, the International Jury concluded that Coxon, in his capacity as Managing Director of North Sails Australia, had made the enquiry about Wild Oats XI’s new 3Di mainsail for professional reasons and this in no way had benefitted Investec Loyal’s performance during the race.

Tattersalls Cup and Yacht-Master timepiece for Overall Handicap winner and Line Honours winner Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

Tattersalls Cup and Yacht-Master timepiece for Overall Handicap winner and Line Honours winner Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

“It was one of the great experiences in my life,” said Anthony Bell, yacht Investec Loyal’s owner and skipper of his win. “The whole thing from the very start, right through to the finish line, was exhilarating. It was a really tough fought out race, but the crew believed in the boat and the cause right from the start and we are so happy to have got past the finish line first.”

Bell’s campaign doubled as a vehicle to raise money for charity (it raised Aus$ 1 million in 2011) on this occasion for the Humpty Dumpty Foundation, which purchases vital medical equipment for 178 children’s hospitals around Australia and East Timor. For this reason among their crew were a number of celebrities including sports stars, such as Australian rugby union internationals Phil Kearns and Phil Waugh.

As the slower yachts were becalmed in Storm Bay and up the Derwent River, so it became evident that this year’s Rolex Sydney Hobart would be one for the smaller large boats, including the competitive 50ft fleet. However the stand-out boat in this size range was Stephen Ainsworth’s Reichel Pugh 63, Loki. Over the last 18 months this has proved to be one of the most successful campaigns in on the Australian circuit. Under IRC, Loki’s corrected time was 50 minutes faster than that of Michael Hyatt’s Farr 55 Living Doll, with 84 year old Syd Fischer’s modified TP52 Ragamuffin third and the Cookson 50 Jazz of Britain’s Chris Bull, fourth.

“We are elated. It is a fantastic feeling, a huge thrill to win this race,” said a jubilant Ainsworth, after being presented with a Rolex Yacht-Master timepiece by Patrick Boutellier of Rolex Australia and the coveted Tattersall’s Cup, for winning IRC handicap honours. “Having done 14 races, I know how hard it is to win this race. So many things have to go right for you and the wind gods were with us. Our race went extremely well. The aim for the navigators was to avoid stopping and we successfully did that, although we came close a couple of times. Look at what happened to Wild Oats XI – that could easily have happened to us.”

Ainsworth’s crew, led by Irish round the world sailor Gordon Maguire, was 18 strong, but of these only one third were professionals. “The handicap win came when the big boats parked up,” said Maguire. At one point the maxis had extended to almost 120 miles in front of them, but as they had slowed, so Loki had managed to reel back 60 miles.

Earlier in the race the competitive 40 and 45ft Beneteaus had been among the most promising on handicap along with Roger Hickman’s Wild Rose. However the progress of the smaller boats was hampered as the wind shut down for them as they manoeuvred around the east coast of Tasmania into Storm Bay and up the Derwent River leading up to Hobart.

Darryl Hodgkinson, skipper of the First 45 Victoire summed it up best: “I thought it was going to be a carbon copy of last year’s race where we sat in the Derwent. This year we actually camped in Derwent! The last miles from the Tasman Light to the finish typically take six to seven hours. On this occasion it took 15.”

A pre-race favourite among the smaller boats was the new Ker 40 AFR Midnight Rambler, but co-owner Ed Psaltis, winner of the race in 1998, said they had made some wrong tactical choices and, entering Bass Strait, ended up in a giant wind hole, entrapping them for six hours.

While there had been a strong turn-out in Hobart’s Constitution Dock to witness the end of the match race marathon between Investec Loyal and Wild Oats XI, this was rivalled when Australian youth solo round the world sailing phenomenon Jessica Watson arrived aboard Ella Baché another Challenge. Watson’s crew have now entered the history books as the youngest to take part in the Rolex Sydney Hobart, but having spent two and a half months training as a team prior to the start Watson was delighted with taking second place in the Sydney 38 class.

“It was really, really good, everything you would expect,” said Watson on her arrival. “We had three quite bouncy nights on the nose. We didn’t see any severe conditions, but there was some pretty uncomfortable stuff for quite a while there.”

Having previously sailed solo, Watson was full of praise for her crew. “The crew were awesome. It was the best sailing we’ve ever seen them do. It’s what we have been training for and they did exactly that. Everyone did an amazing job. All credit to them – I just held on for the ride.”

The last boat to arrive, crossing the line late in the afternoon on New Year’s Eve, was that of Sydney boatyard owner Sean Langman. Langman is best known for his attempts to win line honours in previous races, but on this occasion was sailing the wooden 1932 coastal cruiser/fishing boat, Maluka of Kermandie yacht as crew for his 18 year old son Peter.

This year’s race once again proved that to earn victory in the Rolex Sydney Hobart is something that takes persistence. As Gordon Maguire concluded: “I won this race in 1991 on an IOR 2 tonner Atara with Harold Cudmore. It was my second Hobart race and I thought ‘easy’. It has been 20 years since I won it again. I have won an awful lot of regattas in between and I do this race almost every year, so it is not an easy race to win. You can’t just come down here with the best boat in the world and win it. You have to come down here with the best boat in the world and have all the luck in the world – all that has to happen in the same race. It is a very unusual beast.”

2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: Done And Dusted As Maluka Yacht Brings Up The Rear

January 02, 2012

At a ceremony on Hobart’s Constitution Dock on December 31, the divisional winners of the 2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart were awarded. Having finished ninth, Chris Bull’s British Cookson 50 Jazz yacht picked up honours in IRC Division 0, was second in ORCi Division 1 and finished fourth overall under IRC.

Sean Langman´s Maluka of Kermandie yacht Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

Sean Langman´s Maluka of Kermandie yacht Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

“I’d say this was an average one for conditions,” said Bull of this year’s Rolex Sydney Hobart. “It had quite a lot of tough upwind, which is what you’d expect of this race and we like that. It enabled us in the first two thirds of the race to pull away from the main rivals of our size and that was better than expected. We had 25-35 knots and we didn’t think that would continue as long.”

The difficult patch for Jazz was subsequently off the east coast of Tasmania where it was all too possible to get caught in a wind hole and crews had to rely on the progress of the boats ahead of them to negotiate a way through. One third of the way down the Tasman coast, Bull admitted they did stop for just over an hour.

Chris Bull´s sailing yacht JAZZ Photo: ROLEX/K. Arrigo

Chris Bull´s sailing yacht JAZZ Photo: ROLEX/K. Arrigo

In the light conditions, the TP52s got away from Jazz and it was only rounding Tasman Light and entering Storm Bay that the British boat was able to not only reel them in, but to put distance on them. Unfortunately, just when it seemed that they had it in the bag, it went very light coming up the Derwent River.

This allowed Syd Fischer’s TP52 Ragamuffin yacht to close in from astern and ultimately to beat them. “So it happened again,” said Bull with a sigh, having on two previous occasions finished second in the southern hemisphere’s most prestigious yacht race.

Syd Fischer´s sailing yacht Ragamuffin Photo: ROLEX/K. Arrigo

Syd Fischer´s sailing yacht Ragamuffin Photo: ROLEX/K. Arrigo

Hickman’s hopes scuppered
Up until Thursday (day three), when conditions turned light for the smaller/slower boats, Roger Hickman and his crew on the Farr 43 yacht Wild Rose had been looking favourite to claim the overall IRC handicap prize. However, as progress slowed towards the end of their race, so Stephen Ainsworth’s 63ft Loki yacht moved into the lead, claiming the prize ultimately. “You have to be philosophical,” said Hickman. “I have been privileged to have won two of these races previously.” Wild Rose won in 1993, while Hickman was sailing master on SAP Ausmaid for her handicap victory in 2000.

During the race Hickman said he contemplated super yacht Wild Oats XI taking line honours and Wild Rose (originally Bob Oatley’s first Wild Oats) winning on handicap. Unfortunately it was not to be, in either case.

Sailing yacht JAZZ Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

Sailing yacht JAZZ Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

“It was exciting, a great event,” said Hickman, who this year participated in his 35th Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race. “This one was special as we got to celebrate the loss of our dear friend Sally Gordon, who sailed with us for 15 Rolex Sydney Hobarts.” Gordon, Hickman’s partner, was lost along with Andrew Short, skipper of the boat she was sailing, during the Sydney to Flinders Islet Race in 2009.

This year Hickman mounted a campaign aboard Wild Rose and had success winning the Lord Howe Island and the Audi Sydney Offshore Newcastle Yacht races. For the Rolex Sydney Hobart Wild Rose was sailed with a crew comprising six men and six women, the youngest 25, the oldest 75. Despite having three first timers on board, there were still 98 Hobart races between the crew.

Rives Potts´ sailing yacht CARINA Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

Rives Potts´ sailing yacht CARINA Photo: ROLEX/D. Forster

British newbie
Sailing his first Rolex Sydney Hobart was British youth singlehanded round the world sailor, Mike Perham, who arrived yesterday aboard Jessica Watson’s Sydney 38 Ella Bacheyacht another Challenge.

“It was fantastic,” said Perham. “It was more than I could have hoped for. And our second place is just amazing for a team that has never done a Hobart race together on a new boat.  When you look at the other 38s, that have done five Hobarts before, there was stiff competition. Plus the yachts are all the same, so it comes down to the crew at the end of the day.”

Perham was navigator on board and sent them the right way through the breezy first night and down the New South Wales coast and took the favourable easterly track across the mouth of Bass Strait. Into the final miles, they, like most, parked up, but Perham says that they just kept pushing. Eventually this paid off and they reached the finish in second.

Perham says he is enjoying the transition into a racing sailor. In the build up to the Rolex Sydney Hobart he and the rest of Jessica Watson’s Ella Bache Another Challenge crew spent two and a half months training, including a dry run, sailing their Sydney 38 to Hobart and back. In years to come Perham hopes to compete in the French Figaro circuit.

Long way to come
Following last year’s victory in the Bermuda Race, and a class win this August in the Rolex Fastnet Race, American Rives Potts and the crew of the 1969 classic McCurdy & Rhodes design, Carina yacht didn’t find the cards falling in their favour on this occasion.

“It was probably one of the most challenging races I’ve ever done,” admitted Potts, a veteran America’s Cup and maxi boat sailor. “It was very exciting – we had light airs, heavy airs, windward work, leeward work, challenging currents, beautiful scenery when we got down to Tasmania and a very fine start also. It was a very exciting race.”

Jessica Watson´s Ella Bache yacht Photo: ROLEX/K. Arrigo

Jessica Watson´s Ella Bache yacht Photo: ROLEX/K. Arrigo

However their delivery from the UK didn’t leave them with enough race preparation time prior to the start. In addition, this was the first time Potts had competed in the Rolex Sydney Hobart. “It is most challenging from a weather point of view, navigation, changing gears and I think the weather changed more rapidly than any race I’ve ever seen. From zero wind to 30 knots and back and we had fronts converging on each other, currents coming from different directions – I am still giddy from it. It is a lot of fun.”

Carina is now to be delivered back to the east coast of the USA via Darwin, Bali, Christmas Island and Cape Town, hopefully in time to defend her title in the Newport-Bermuda Race.

Last home
With Hobart preparing itself for tonight’s New Year’s Eve celebrations, so Maluka of Kermandie was the last yacht to arrive, finishing at 16:48 local time, after five days, three hours and 48 minutes at sea.

Built in 1932 as a coastal cruiser/fishing boat, the  yacht was being sailed by the Langman family, father Sean being a well known Rolex Sydney Hobart competitor. But in stark contrast to Maluka, Langman’s previous yachts have always gunned to be first across the line. Langman was a previous co-owner of this year’s line honours winner, Investec Loyal.

This year Langman senior handed over skippering of the yacht to his 18 year-old son Peter. “I thought I’d show him a race with proper turned down bed and proper meals, although having said that, the upwind stuff was pretty bumpy and rough. In fact I won the seasickness award. I was pretty crook that first night.”

This was Maluka’s third participation in the race and, according to Langman, this year’s event provided several firsts for him – aside from finishing last, on New Year’s Eve, at the start Maluka was called over early and had to return to restart.

Ironically having sailed the slowest yacht in the Rolex Sydney Hobart, Langman is shortly to step on to the fastest yacht in Australia, his 60ft trimaran yacht newly acquired from France, to make an attempt on the course record from Sydney to Hobart.

2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: Honours For Ainsworth´s Sailing Yacht LOKI On 14th Attempt

December 30, 2011

This morning (local time) Stephen Ainsworth’s sailing yacht Loki became the handicap winner of the 2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race.

Overall Handicap Winner, LOKI, Stephen Ainsworth Photo K. Arrigo

Overall Handicap Winner, Stephen Ainsworth´s sailing yacht LOKI Photo: ROLEX/ K. Arrigo

At a presentation on board their white four year old Reichel Pugh 63 footer, Ainsworth and his crew were presented with a Rolex Yacht-Master timepiece by Patrick Boutellier of Rolex Australia and the much coveted Tattersall’s Cup, for winning IRC handicap honours, by Garry Linacre, Commodore of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, and Graham Taplin, Commodore of the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania.

“We are elated, it is a fantastic feeling, a huge thrill to win this race,” said a jubilant Ainsworth. “Having done 14 races, I know how hard it is to win this race. I have been trying for a long time. So many things have to go right for you and the wind gods were with us. Our race went extremely well. The aim for the navigators was to avoid stopping and we successfully did that, although we came close a couple of times. Look at what happened to super yacht Wild Oats XI – that could easily have happened to us.”

LOKI, Stephen Ainsworth Photo D. Forster

Stephen Ainsworth´s Yacht LOKI Photo: ROLEX/ D. Forster

The present Loki yacht was launched three years ago after Ainsworth’s previous boat was lost after she was abandoned in severe conditions when her rudder broke during the 2007 Rolex Middle Sea. The new yacht was built for offshore racing and specifically to win the Rolex Sydney Hobart. This was Ainsworth and his crew’s fourth attempt in the latest Loki.

Ainsworth and Loki are one of the most successful teams racing in Australia at present. Last year they won the Australian IRC Championship, the Audi Sydney Gold Coast Yacht Race and this year Audi Hamilton Island Race Week. Personally, this month Ainsworth was voted the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia’s joint Ocean Racer of the Year.

Stephen Ainsworth, owner of LOKI, Overall Handicap winner, with Patrick Boutellier, Rolex Australia Photo D. Forster

Stephen Ainsworth, owner of LOKI yacht, Overall Handicap winner, with Patrick Boutellier, Rolex Australia Photo: ROLEX/ D. Forster

Typically they sail offshore with 18 crew and of these only one third are professional, led by Irish Volvo Ocean Race veteran, Gordon Maguire. On board typically Maguire helms while Ainsworth trims the main sheet. The other pros on board for the Rolex Sydney Hobart included other much capped round the world race sailors Anthony Merrington, Jeff Scott and sailmaker Alby Pratt, while a regular with Ainsworth is his long term navigator Michael Bellingham.

However, Maguire points out that many of their ‘amateur’ crew are among the most talented sailors in Australia. “We have really good sailors from all walks of life. It is more rewarding when you line up against fully pro crews.”

Overall Handicap Winner, LOKI crew with Patrick Boutellier, Rolex Australia Photo D. Forster

Overall Handicap Winner, LOKI yacht´s crew with Patrick Boutellier, Rolex Australia Photo: ROLEX/ D. Forster

For the Rolex Sydney Hobart this year, sailing yacht Loki was fitted with a new, bigger mainsail and for the first time they had an on board weather expert to assist Bellingham in the form of British navigator Will Best.

According to Maguire, during the race they were always in contention, but down the east coast of Tasmania the 100ft supermaxi yachts had stretched away. “They were getting out to 120 miles in front of us and at that distance it was hard to stay in touch on handicap. But they parked up at Tasman Island and that brought us right back into them. We took 60 miles out of them that morning. So the handicap win came when the big boats parked up. We were always very confident that we had time on the boats behind us, particularly with how the weather patterns were going to shape up from halfway down the east coast to the finish.” Ainsworth said Loki would return to the Rolex Sydney Hobart next year to defend her title.

ELLA BACHE arriving in Hobart with Jessica Watson and the youngest ever crew to contest the race Photo K. Arrigo

ELLA BACHE arriving in Hobart with Jessica Watson and the youngest ever crew to contest the race Photo: ROLEX/ K. Arrigo

Slow boats up the Derwent
Meanwhile for today’s finishers the pace had distinctly slowed. Over 11 and a half hours, last night and into this morning, just one boat arrived as the water turned to glass on Storm Bay and the Derwent River leading up to Hobart.
Darryl Hodgkinson, skipper of the Beneteau First 45 Victoire summed it up best: “I thought it was going to be carbon copy of last year’s where we sat in the Derwent. This year we actually camped in Derwent! The last miles from the Tasman Light to the finish typically takes six to seven hours, on this occasion it took 15.

Ed Psaltis, co-owner of AFR Midnight Rambler arrived in Hobart suffering from an infected arm and unhappy with their performance. “It was very disappointing, our race. We made a few wrong choices. Entering Bass Strait we were in good shape against all the opposition and doing well overall, but we found a hole [in the wind] bigger that anyone else did and we sat there for six hours going nowhere. We also had northerly, adverse current in Bass Strait so we did very well going the wrong way.”

MERIT and OPTIMUS PRIME meet off Tasman Island Photo D. Forster

Sailing yachts MERIT and OPTIMUS PRIME meet off Tasman Island Photo: ROLEX/ D. Forster

Between two scheds AFR Midnight Rambler lost 25 miles, but once the wind turned favourable and they could set the kite on their new Ker 40, they managed to make up the deficit. Then they too had a slow finish. “It was probably the slowest passage I’ve had from Tasman Light to the finish – and this is a pretty quick boat. But that’s how it is,” said Psaltis. “Next year it will be a lot better than it was this year.”

Australia’s solo sailing star arrives
This afternoon the marina of Constitution Dock was packed five deep with spectators waiting patiently for the arrival of 18 year-old Australian solo sailor Jessica Watson. Since 2010 when she became the youngest person ever to have completed a singlehanded voyage non-stop around the world, Watson has become a media sensation in Australia.

In this year’s Rolex Sydney Hobart Watson achieved her ambition to lead the youngest crew ever to compete in the race. She and her seven crew – among them fellow youth solo round the world sailor, Britain’s Mike Perham – raced in the Sydney 38 class aboard the pink hulled Ella Baché Another Challenge.

KNEE DEEP and albatross catch the sunset off Tasman Island Photo D. Forster

KNEE DEEP yacht and albatross catch the sunset off Tasman Island Photo: ROLEX/ D. Forster

“It was really, really good, everything you would expect,” said Watson upon her arrival. “We had three quite bouncy nights on the nose. We didn’t see any severe conditions, but there was some pretty uncomfortable stuff for quite a while there.”

Having previously sailed on her own, Watson was full of praise for her crew. “The crew were awesome. It was the best sailing we’ve ever seen them do. It’s what we have been training for and they did exactly that. Everyone did an amazing job. All credit to them – I just held on for the ride.”

Her round the world voyage also didn’t involve competition, something which she seems to have relished in this Rolex Sydney Hobart. “The last leg in was amazing, some really close racing with the Sydney 38 fleet, changing positions all the time. Then to come in second was just awesome. It was as good as anyone could hope for. We had a really close battle with The Goat.” She added: “The race wouldn’t have been the same if we didn’t have that close boat-on-boat racing.” Watson was especially pleased to have beaten their coaches, sailing on Deloitte As One yacht.

Since lunch time, yachts have been flooding into Hobart, with 26 arriving between 13:23 (local time) and the latest arrival at 17:24 of Tony Warren’s Kiss Goodbye to MS, the 49th finisher. 28 yachts remain still racing with John Bankart’s Eressea, bringing up the rear, some 137 miles from the finish.