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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: Investec Loyal Superyacht Crowned Line Honours Winners

December 29, 2011

After a three hour hearing at the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania before the International Jury, the Race Committee’s protest against sailing yacht Investec Loyal was dismissed and Anthony Bell and the crew of his 100ft supermaxi finally became the line honours winners in the 2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race.

Line Honours Winner INVESTEC LOYAL crossing the finish line Photo K. Arrigo

Line Honours Winner sailing yacht INVESTEC LOYAL crossing the finish line Photo: ROLEX/ K. Arrigo

This afternoon at the Rolex Sydney Hobart 2011 prizegiving, held in front of a crowd lining Constitution Dock, CYCA Commodore Garry Linacre, Lord Mayor of Hobart, Damon Thomas, and Patrick Boutellier of Rolex Australia presented Anthony Bell with the JH Illingworth Trophy and a Rolex Yacht-Master timepiece for the line honours victory.

“It is the long way around in some ways,” said a delighted Anthony Bell. “It is very relieving to get to this point. There are rules in every sport and, while it wasn’t ideal to go through this, I think that ultimately it gets beyond any question and whatever those questions that were asked have been properly answered.”

Line Honours Winner INVESTEC LOYALs crew Photo D. Forster

Line Honours Winner Super Yacht INVESTEC LOYAL´s crew Photo: ROLEX/ D. Forster

As to their victory, when yesterday Investec Loyal beat Bob Oatley’s five time Rolex Sydney Hobart line honours winning supermaxi super yacht Wild Oats XI to the Hobart finish line by a margin of just 3 minutes 8 seconds, Bell said: “We have come second to Wild Oats quite a lot. We came second last year to them and we kept coming second to them at Hamilton Island. It is an against-the-odds victory for us….I am still waiting for one of my crew members to wake me up and say you’re on watch!

INVESTEC LOYAL, Anthony Bell Photo K. Arrigo

INVESTEC LOYAL Superyacht, Anthony Bell Photo: ROLEX/ K. Arrigo

“The buzz is made best by the fact that Wild Oats XI is such a fantastic, professionally-run campaign by the Oatley family and, to have them compete so fiercely, it accelerated and heightened the value to us to go down the wire against a raceboat team like that.  They are the benchmark of supermaxi racing, not just in Australia, but in the world.”

Bell explained that the query to the ABC helicopter pilot about Wild Oats XI’s sails had been made by their tactician Michael Coxon. Coxon is also Managing Director of North Sails Australia and, after the strong winds of the first night at sea, he had been concerned about Wild Oats XI’s mainsail, made of their new product 3Di and believed to be the most expensive sail of its type in the world.

INVESTEC LOYAL Photo K. Arrigo

Supermaxi sailing yacht INVESTEC LOYAL Photo: ROLEX/ K. Arrigo

“One of the things that they did take was that Michael Coxon’s question was not to gain any advantage for our boat at all, but more to test how his business client’s product, that they bought off him, was going,” said Bell of the international jury’s decision.

10 yachts home
To date ten yachts of the 77 still racing (out of 88 starters) have arrived in Hobart, the latest being Syd Fischer’s modified TP52 Ragamuffin. Of the yachts now docked, Stephen Ainsworth’s Reichel Pugh 63 yacht Loki is currently favourite for the overall IRC handicap prize in this year’s Rolex Sydney Hobart. However still ahead of her on handicap is Roger Hickman’s 26 year-old Farr 43 Wild Rose. Still racing, she must finish before 08:12 local time tomorrow (30 December) if she is to beat Loki’s time under handicap.

Line Honours Prizegiving Ceremony Anthony Bell, owner of INVESTEC LOYAL and Patrick Boutellier, Rolex Australia  Photo D. Foster

Line Honours Prizegiving Ceremony Anthony Bell, owner of INVESTEC LOYAL superyacht and Patrick Boutellier, Rolex Australia Photo: ROLEX/ D. Foster

Currently lying fourth under handicap is Michael Hiatt’s Farr 55 Living Doll, which was the sixth boat to reach Hobart, arriving at 08:46 local time this morning. Hiatt believes they lost a vital 15 minutes to Loki coming up the Derwent River on the approach to the finish. “It got back up to 30 knots and then we had a nice run up here, but it faded at the end of the Derwent,” he said.

The battle INVESTEC LOYAL and WILD OATS XI on the Derwent River Photo K. Arrigo

The battle: sailing yacht INVESTEC LOYAL and super yacht WILD OATS XI on the Derwent River Photo: ROLEX/ K. Arrigo

Unlike the maxi yacht leaders, which, from time to time, parked up over the latter half of their race, Hiatt said that on Living Doll they never stopped.

On the breezy first night at sea, they had seen 40 knots in the gusts. “It was really tricky. Some spooky breezes came in and they were pretty fierce. It would drop off to nothing and all of a sudden we’d get a lot more, so we had to handle that, but all of the transitions were really good. We just needed a tweak more speed.”

Hiatt sailed the race with a formidable crew including round the world race winners Steve Cotton and Noel Drennan and even had their own meteorologist on board in the form of Canadian Eric Holden.

The Maxis INVESTEC LOYAL and WILD OATS XI on the Derwent River Photo K. Arrigo

The Maxis INVESTEC LOYAL superyacht and sailing yacht bWILD OATS XI on the Derwent River Photo: ROLEX/ K. Arrigo

Seventh home this morning, 12 minutes after Living Doll was Matt Allen, former Commodore of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, the Rolex Sydney Hobart organisers, aboard his first generation Volvo Open 70, Ichi Ban.

Ichi Ban had suffered a few issues during the race. On the first night the lock jammed, holding their main halyard, and in the strong conditions they were forced to spend the rest of the night sailing with three reefs. It was only on the following morning they were able to send a crewman aloft enabling them to hoist the sail fully once again.

LOKI, Stephen Ainsworth Photo D. Forster

Supermaxi sailing yacht LOKI, Stephen Ainsworth Photo: ROLEX/ D. Forster

“That meant we had a really poor first night and it was really hard to recover from there,” said Allen. “We also broke one of the D4s [rigging on the mast], but luckily we picked it up before, otherwise we would have lost the mast.”

RAGAMUFFIN, Syd Fischer Photo K. Arrigo

Super Yacht RAGAMUFFIN, Syd Fischer Photo: ROLEX/ K. Arrigo

Allen said that in 22 Rolex Sydney Hobarts, he had never previously seen such big wind shifts, especially coming down the coast of Tasmania. During the race they ended up using all the sails on board, with the exception of the heavy running spinnaker. “It was hard work for the navigators, but we had nice sailing for the last 24 hours, good reaching spinnaker work – it’s been really enjoyable. The run we had from Tasman Island to the finish was probably the best run I’ve ever had in my entire life.”

2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: Closest Finish in 29 Years

December 28, 2011

The closest finish in the last 29 years of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race was reported this evening when Anthony Bell’s supermaxi sailing yacht Investec Loyal managed to beat off repeated challenges from Bob Oatley’s perennial line honours victor Wild Oats XI superyacht to win by just 3 minutes and 8 seconds, after 2 days 6 hours 14 minutes and 8 seconds of racing on this classic 628 mile course.

Sailing yacht Investec Loyal on approach to the finish line Photo D. Foster

Sailing yacht Investec Loyal on approach to the finish line Photo: ROLEX/D. Foster

The competition for line honours in this race was one of the closest in its 67 year history with the two Australian maxis gunning for each other from the moment the canon was fired on Sydney Harbour on Monday afternoon. Wild Oats XI led until 20:00 local time (09:00 UTC) on Tuesday when they were becalmed.

“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,” described Wild Oats XI’s co-navigator, Ian Burns.

Fortunately the wind filled in soon after for Wild Oats XI yacht and they were able to resume the fight and, from this point on, the event became truly a gloves-off match race between the two 100 footers.

Super yacht Investec Loyal takes the finish cannon Photo D. Foster

Super yacht Investec Loyal takes the finish cannon Photo: ROLEX/ D. Foster

Finally this morning at 07:30 local time, Wild Oats XI regained the lead. With rarely more than two miles separating the two yachts, it was not until Wild Oats XI was becalmed again just short of Tasman Island and the entrance to Storm Bay, that Investec Loyal managed once more to skirt around the wind hole. This time they took up residence directly ahead of their opponent and from that point, despite the best efforts of the luxury yacht Wild Oats XI crew led by Mark Richards, Investec Loyal was not going to be passed.

Much to the delight of spectators thickly lining Hobart’s Constitution Dock, the two ocean racing giants came into sight up the Derwent River, but it was Investec Loyal and her crew, including sports stars, such as Australian rugby union internationals Phil Kearns and Phil Waugh, which was first home. They arrived at 19:14:18 local time, their elapsed time for the course being 2 days 6 hours 14 minutes and 18 seconds.

“It was one of the great experiences in my life,” said Anthony Bell, Investec Loyal’s owner and skipper with a beaming smile. “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.”

Anthony Bell, owner/skipper of Investec Loyal superyacht

Anthony Bell, owner/skipper of Investec Loyal superyacht

Michael Coxon, tactician on Investec Loyal shared his thoughts on their win: “It has a very competent professional crew and a great owner who does it all for the right reasons. It is like a fairy tale – a boat that supports charity. This boat raised Aus$ 1 million this year for charity. That is the way it should happen. I am very happy for Anthony Bell. We sail with people who have never gone sailing before and they did a really good job.”

In what was principally a tactical victory for the older Investec Loyal, Coxon paid tribute to their American navigator. “The difference is a gentleman called Stan Honey,” he said. “He is an absolute legend – just amazing. His knowledge of weather and weather routing and the information he provides to me…at the end of the day he is just so good.”

Investec Loyal – provision winner at this stage
However at present Investec Loyal’s line honours victory in the 2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart is provisional. The event’s Race Committee, led by Tim Cox, is protesting Anthony Bell’s boat over a believed infringement of Racing Rule of Sailing 41 entitled ‘Outside Help’. This involved the audio recording of a conversation that took place at 06:30 local time on 27th December between the pilot of an ABC TV station helicopter and an Investec Loyal crewman seeking information on the sail plan in use on Wild Oats XI – in particular whether she was flying a trisail.

“This is assessed to breach Rule 41 by soliciting help from an outside source,” explained Garry Linacre, Commodore of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, organiser of the Rolex Sydney Hobart. The case is to be heard by the race’s international jury at 10:00 local time tomorrow, 29th December.

Gracious in defeat
On board second placed super yacht Wild Oats XI, skipper Mark Richards was categorical about the outcome. “Those guys won on the water and we came second. That’s all there is to it. They did a great job those guys and they deserve the win.”

Richards added that he thought it had been a fantastic race. “We had to work our butts off until the end and we came in second. That’s the way it is. They sailed very well. We were very unlucky in a few situations, but those guys did a great job and when it came to the crunch. Their boat was little bit quicker than us downwind in the lighter air and they just managed to keep their nose in front and got to the line first.”

Next up
The next two yachts expected to arrive in Hobart at around 01:00 tomorrow morning are Peter Millard and John Honan’s supermaxi yacht Lahana and Stephen Ainsworth’s Reichel Pugh 63 sailing yacht Loki.

The race for the Tattersall’s Cup, for handicap honours under IRC, remains wide open with Michael Hiatt’s Farr 55 Living Doll yacht ahead earlier this evening, but with Australian sailing legend, 84 year-old Syd Fischer and his modified TP52 Ragamuffin having taken the lead under IRC at the time of writing. Line Honours

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: Maxi-boat Match Race

December 28, 2011

Sailing yacht Wild Oats XI’s position as the fastest boat in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race was being severely tested last night when at the 20:00 sched (local time, 09:00 UTC), Anthony Bell’s maxi yacht Investec Loyal overhauled the five time line honours winner.

Sailing yacht INVESTEC LOYAL, Anthony  Bell - Photo By Rolex  Kurt Arrigo

Sailing yacht INVESTEC LOYAL, Anthony Bell - Photo By Rolex Kurt Arrigo

Overnight the wind the leaders have seen has clocked through 360 degrees.

Crossing the Bass Strait yesterday Investec Loyal’s track south was some 20-30 miles east of Wild Oats XI’s. But early evening, when the wind backed from the southwest into the southeast, both boats tacked southwest, Loyal getting the better of the shift, aggressively bearing away towards her opponent. Making 14 knots compared to Wild Oats XI’s 9 knots, within an hour Investec Loyal had pulled ahead by 6 miles.

WILD OATS XI, Bob Oatley  Photo By Rolex  Daniel Forster

WILD OATS XI, Bob Oatley Photo By Rolex Daniel Forster

Overnight the lead duo in the Rolex Sydney Hobart have continued to round the northwest quadrant of an area of high pressure that, since yesterday, has been shifting east out into the Tasman Sea. With the wind continuing to back into the northeast so the duo at around 01:00 local time this morning on this occasion gybed southwest, allowing them to close on the east coast of Tasmania.

“We’ve got a yacht race on our hands out here!” came back the succinct report from the Wild Oats XI nav team in the early hours. “We are high speed running – more wind shifts ahead.”

However at around 07:30 local time this morning, sailing yacht Wild Oats XI nosed her way back into the lead.

Sailing yacht WILD OATS XI, Bob Oatley Photo By Rolex  Daniel Forster

Sailing yacht WILD OATS XI, Bob Oatley Photo By Rolex Daniel Forster

With another light patch off the southeast coast of Tasmania, so the boats remain still quite offshore, now with the wind back in the southwest, where it was yesterday afternoon. With 72 miles to go to the finish off Hobart for Wild Oats XI at the latest sched, leading Investec Loyal by just 1.5 miles, ETAs into Hobart remain vague. The forecast is now showing the wind dying in Storm Bay and up the Derwent River leading up to Hobart – conditions which have destroyed many a winning yacht’s chances in previous years.

Sailing yacht LOKI, Stephen Ainsworth Photo By Rolex  Daniel Forster

Sailing yacht LOKI, Stephen Ainsworth Photo By Rolex Daniel Forster

Yacht LAHANA, Millard Honan Photo By Rolex  Kurt Arrigo

Yacht LAHANA, Millard Honan Photo By Rolex Kurt Arrigo

ELLA BACHE, Jessica Watson Photo By Rolex  Daniel Forster

ELLA BACHE, Jessica Watson Photo By Rolex Daniel Forster

SY CADIBARRA, Paul Roberts - Photo By Rolex  Daniel Forster

SY CADIBARRA, Paul Roberts - Photo By Rolex Daniel Forster

Under IRC handicap, the battle for the Tattersall’s Cup continues to rage, with the best hopes now back to the maxis. In particular Peter Millard’s maxi Lahana (the former Zana/Konica Minolta), holding third place on the water 62 miles astern of Wild Oats XI, is looking very strong. For at present across the race course conditions are generally light, with the exception of where Lahana, Stephen Ainsworth’s Loki and Alex Thomson’s IMOCA 60 Hugo Boss, are located off the east coast of Tasmania, where in 15-20 knot northerlies, Hugo Boss is recording the highest speed in the fleet of 17 knots.

2011 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: Into Bass Strait

December 27, 2011

At 11:00 local time (midnight UTC ), the leading vessels in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race were the sailing yacht Wild Oats XI and Anthony Bell’s Investec Loyal superyacht 11 miles astern, just crossing Bass Strait. These two have now broken away from the fleet with Peter Millard’s super yacht Lahana third, 39 miles off the lead.

Sailing yacht Wild Oats IX entering  Bass Strait Photo D. Foster

Sailing yacht Wild Oats IX entering Bass Strait Photo D. Foster

Further back still, Alex Thomson’s IMOCA 60 Hugo Boss yacht is fourth on the water, doing well to fend off the advances of Stephen Ainsworth’s all conquering Reichel Pugh 63 yacht Loki.

Yesterday evening local time, the fleet saw the wind clock around through 180 degrees as the front passed overhead, the wind kicking in with some violence from the south, putting the boats hard on the wind.

Stephen Ainsworth's Loki exiting Sydney Harbour after the start of the 67th Rolex Sydney Hobart Photo K. Arrigo

Stephen Ainsworth's Loki exiting Sydney Harbour after the start of the 67th Rolex Sydney Hobart Photo K. Arrigo

As Mike Broughton, navigator on Chris Bull’s Cookson 50 Jazz yacht recounted: “The front passed last night with quite a punch, with pelting rain that lasted for about 40 minutes, but kept things busy for Andy Hudson and the bow team, as we quickly had to change sails.” The rapid change in wind direction, and with the wind now counter to the south-going current, has kicked up an evil sea. Broughton described this as being 3-4m high, short and confused.

In the all-important IRC handicap battle for the Tattersall’s Cup, nothing clear is transpiring yet. At the time of writing Wild Oats XI, the biggest fastest boat in the fleet, had eased ahead, but previously leading had been the 1985-built Farr 43 Wild Rose, winner of the Rolex Sydney Hobart in 1993 and skippered by race veteran Roger Hickman.  The smaller Beneteaus were also performing well – in particular Darryl Hodgkinson’s much tipped Beneteau First 45 Victoire, Paul Clitheroe’s 45 Balance and Andrew Saies on his 2009 Rolex Sydney Hobart winning First 40, Two True.

At present the bulk of the fleet are still hugging the New South Wales coast where the wind is in the south and they are hard on the wind. However conditions have momentarily improved for the maxis out in Bass Strait where the wind, currently blowing 25-30 knots, has veered into the southwest allowing the boats to head south on starboard tack. But the forecast is indicating stop-start progress for the 100 footers.

The wind is due to fizzle out this afternoon (local time) as a small bubble of high pressure eases east off the coast of Tasmania. But once the high gets offshore, some northerly pressure could build close in to the Tasman coast, allowing the big boats to forge south once more.

Despite a first testing night at sea, to date there have only been three retirements from 88 starters. Just before midnight local time Sam Haynes’ Rogers 46 Celestial withdrew having suffered a broken gooseneck, while Marc and Louis Ryckmans GP42 Accenture (Yeah Baby) pulled out with unspecified gear failure.

Hot off the press is that 2003 line honours winner, Grant Warrington ‘s Wild Thing yacht is the latest retirement, having suffered sail damage. At the time of her pulling out she was holding third place on the water.

The first day of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

December 27, 2011

On Monday, December 26, Sydney Harbour was full of spectators expecting the 1300 local time departure of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race with 88 fleet ready at the start line.

Start of the 67th Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Photo D. Forster

Start of the 67th Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Photo: D. Forster

Earlier in the morning, four Melbourne-based crews had been affected by last night’s severe storm as they attempted to fly up to Sydney for today’s start. Some didn’t make it while others did, but without their foul weather gear.

“There were huge thunder storms, 120km/h winds, trees down, 25mm diameter hailstones,” recounted Robert Date, skipper of one of the affected boats, the Reichel Pugh 52 Scarlet Runner yacht. “We hope we don’t get that tonight, although I think we might.”

Leading the charge out of Sydney Harbour was the mighty 100 footer sailing yacht Wild Oats XI, with Anthony Bell’s Investec Loyal superyacht hanging on to her coat tails. In fact the start had not gone as smoothly as planned for Bob Oatley’s serial line honours winner. During pre-start manoeuvres the drive unit for the main sheet winch had frozen up and for the start they had to transfer the main sheet to the spare primary winch as crewmen Jon Hildebrand and Ian Smith scrabbled down below to effect a repair.

Sailing yacht Wild Oats IX at the RSHYR 2011 Photo D. Foster

Sailing yacht Wild Oats IX at the RSHYR 2011 Photo: D. Foster

After a short upwind to the Heads, after exit Sydney Harbour, so the yachts rounded the final turning mark and hoisted their spinnakers in a 18 knot northerly wind. The seaway immediately offshore was particularly substantial, with boats disappearing up to their first spreaders in the troughs, the sea kicked up due to the remnants of tropical cyclone Fina.

While this afternoon the fleet is enjoying a fast run south down the coast, Wild Oats XI yacht making a solid 18 knots under A2 gennaker, a typical Rolex Sydney Hobart southerly is due to kick in tonight further down the New South Wales coast as a trough moves east across the Tasman Sea.

Sailing yacht Investec Loyal chasing after the Wild Oats XI superyacht

Sailing yacht Investec Loyal chasing after the Wild Oats XI superyacht Photo: K. Arrigo

This morning Rob Webb, Regional Director of the Australian Government Bureau of Meteorology, admitted to competitors that tonight’s southerlies would have much more punch than forecast previously. “At this stage we are saying 20-25 knots, but on the front edge it will be pretty gusty with a 30 knots average and gusts up to 40 knots.”

Or as Mike Broughton, navigator on Chris Bull’s Jazz warned, “there were some huge hailstones, the size of tennis balls that rained down on Melbourne last night – that is coming our way. We might not get tennis balls, but we might get peas. And it is going to be bumpy, because of the East Australia Current, which is going to be taking us south at 2 knots and we also have a wave train from the tropical cyclone off Brisbane. So quite windy and with the confused seas, it is going to be a busy first night.”

However on a scale of one to ten in terms of severity, Broughton predicts the weather in this year’s Rolex Sydney Hobart will only score a four. “The first night will be quite busy, but after that it gets quite benign and it is going to be a real fight in the light winds to the east of Tasmania and I think that will be when the race will be won or lost.”

Super yacht Wild Oats XI skipper Mark Richards said that tonight’s conditions would “sort a bit of the fleet out”, but afterwards it would turn into a tactically very challenging race. “It is probably more of a traditional forecast than anything. It is still going to be very light down the south coast of Tasmania but even in 4-5 knots of breeze, big boats like ours are still doing 13-15 knots. It all depends on the wind angle, but it is looking a bit faster today which is good. With a forecast like this it would be easy to park up and Loyal and those guys could put a few miles on you, so it [line honours] is by no means a given.”

Skipper of Loki superyacht, Stephen Ainsworth, agreed that this year’s Rolex Sydney Hobart was going to be a difficult race. “It is all fairly clear until you get to the south side of Bass Strait and then anything could happen. It is an easy place to get into trouble and suffer bad luck by being becalmed down the coast of Tasmania and even in the Derwent River and Storm Bay. Many a race winner has gone from being a rooster to a feather duster in a very short space of time there. So the handicap contest looks like it will be very tricky indeed.”

Loki has a new larger mainsail for this race and in addition they have a new weather specialist on board in the form of British navigator Will Best. “I think he’ll pay for himself in this race in particular,” said Ainsworth.

With Loki yacht having won the Australian IRC Championship, the Audi Sydney Gold Coast Race and Audi Hamilton Island Race Week they are certainly on a roll at present. “It has been a fabulous 12-18 months and I just hope that our luck hasn’t all run out now. This is the only race that I would dearly love to win, which I haven’t yet won,” concluded Ainsworth.

A pummelling is exactly the conditions that would suit British solo round the world sailor Alex Thomson and his six-strong crew on board the two tone IMOCA 60 Hugo Boss. Thomson is fresh from having finished second in the doublehanded Transat Jacques Vabre across the North Atlantic from France to Costa Rica in Central America and this is his third Rolex Sydney Hobart.

His Juan Kouyoumdjian-designed 60 is a handful singlehanded, but fully crewed Thomson is relishing the prospect of coaxing the boat up to its maximum potential. “We are really looking forward to be able to sail it properly in this race. I think it is a good boat for this race.”

While the prospect for a park-up off the east coast of Tasmania is weighing on the minds of big boat crews, it is possible that this year’s race could favour the small boats if the weather turns favourable towards the end of the week. Certainly Andrew Saies, who won the Tattersall’s Cup for the Rolex Sydney Hobart handicap win in 2009 was liking the forecast for his Beneteau First 40, Two True, particularly tonight’s southerly. “My boat is quite competitive upwind in 15-20 knots – it really hits the straps in those conditions. Then they fade out after 24 hours and we are back into a very mixed light air pattern, potentially in different directions and that really mixes the race up and brings us back into touch with the big boats, so we really like that.”

Saies and his crew from Adelaide race Two True extensively around the east coast of Australia, however since 2009 when their yacht was the only First 40 in the race, this time there are three others to contend with, plus one Archambault 40. “I guess we have the advantage that we’ve shaken the bugs out of the boat in an ocean race.”

“Sensational” southerly to test SOLAS Big Boat Challenge crews in Sydney Harbour

December 13, 2011

The serious countdown to the start of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race has officially begun, with the SOLAS Big Boat Challenge taking place on Sydney Harbour in Australia today.

Sailing yacht Wild Oats XI is going for her fifth line honours victory in the SOLAS Big Boat Challenge. Credit Andrea Francolini

Sailing yacht Wild Oats XI is going for her fifth line honours victory in the SOLAS Big Boat Challenge. Credit Andrea Francolini

The SOLAS Big Boat Challenge is traditionally one of the busier days on the Sydney Harbour for spectator vessels. This year the 15 or so entrants, ranging in size from 100 foot super maxis to 50 foot grand prix racers can expect less traffic around them, but a ton of on board action.

“It’ll be an exciting race,” said sailing yacht Wild Oats XI skipper Mark Richards yesterday as he and Wild Oats XI’s race crew were preparing to don wet weather gear and complete a practice run around the 14 nautical mile SOLAS Big Boat Challenge track, which today takes them two and a half times around Sydney Harbour to the finish off the Opera House.

For the sailing novices on Anthony Bell’s 100 foot yacht INVESTEC LOYAL, today’s challenge will provide some insight into what might be around the corner come Boxing Day. Olympic wheelchair racer Kurt Fearnley, Roosters five-eighth Anthony Minichiello and Channel 9’s Karl Stefanovic will taste plenty of salt water and better understand the rigours of ocean racing when they join rugby legends and past participants, Phil Waugh and Phil Kearns, and the rest of the professional race crew for today’s SOLAS Big Boat Challenge. Former racing great and record breaking winner Neville Crichton will also join Anthony Bell’s loyal for SOLAS big boat race.

Peter Millard, co-owner of the 98 foot Lahana yacht arrived back on a flight from the US yesterday and when told of today’s forecast, said, “Then we definitely need to go out training today.”

Two of Lahana’s 21-strong crew have flown in from Europe and a handful more have arrived from interstate to take part in the annual Harbour spectacle, with the largest yachts in town preparing for the 12.30pm start off Steele Point, Vaucluse.

“It’ll be good to have testing conditions today, but we won’t be taking any risks that might put a speed bump in our Rolex Sydney Hobart preparations,” said Millard. “We want to see a lot of pressure today and for the great race. We’re hoping for a southerly all the way to Hobart.”

Making her Australian debut in the race will be Victorian Rob Hanna’s recent acquisition, theTP52 S/Y Shogun. Hanna purchased the near-new former Audi Azzurra from Europe, where it has been successfully competing on the MedCup circuit. Hanna’s main intention is to beat the other Australian ownedTP52’s at major events, including Marcus Blackmore’s Hooligan, which is also contesting the SOLAS Big Boat Challenge.

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: Fleet Trickle in to Hobart

December 29, 2010

Sean Langman and Anthony Bell’s 100-foot super maxi Investec Loyal was the second yacht across the finish line of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, arriving last night just after midnight, three and a half hours behind the provisional line honours winner and race favourite Wild Oats XI.

INVESTEC LOYAL catches the sunset off Tasman Island - Photo credit Rolex  Daniel Forster

INVESTEC LOYAL catches the sunset off Tasman Island - Photo credit Rolex Daniel Forster

Investec Loyal’s sailing time to Hobart was two days, eleven hours and eleven minutes.

The yacht was on track to finish sooner; however as is often the case when arriving at the mouth of the Derwent River after dark, the breeze typically drops right off.

This was Langman’s 20th Rolex Sydney Hobart race. Once across the line he congratulated the Wild Oats XI crew on being first to Hobart, only a few hours before. Asked whether he can challenge Bob Oatley’s super maxi Wild Oats XI again and win, he responded, “definitely, there is more in this boat, more in the team.”

“The first afternoon we were the faster boat, they were a slicker team. We’ll change [that] though,” Langman warned. “We sailed a seamanship race.”

Later Wednesday morning, four more contenders crossed the finish line in Hobart: Lahana, Ichi Ban, Wild Thing and Rán.

The 30-meter fixed keel water ballasted Lahana, skippered by Peter Millard, completed the gruelling race in two days, fourteen hours, and nine minutes. Lahana arrived at the finish line at 3:09am 29 December. Like Investec Loyal crossing the finish line was frustrating as the winds on the Derwent River were all but gone.

The story was similar for Matt Allen’s Jones 70 Ichi Ban. Allen and his crew sailed an inspiring race. The whole way they had been in the breakaway pack of four leading yachts, snapping at the sterns of their much bigger rivals and ahead of the remaining super maxi Wild Thing and the 72-foot mini-maxi Rán.

“Up to 2300 last night we had great running conditions. Our approach to Tasman Island was in a good northerly breeze,” Allen said when he finally stepped onto Hobart’s Constitution Dock after finishing at 0552 Wednesday morning.

“The breeze was still reasonable to Tasman Light, but then it got light at Cape Raoul. It picked up a bit later, but when we got to the Iron Pot it fell apart. There was no wind anywhere on the Derwent River. It didn’t matter where you were on the River, there was nothing.” Ichi Ban, veteran of five previous Rolex Sydney Hobarts, completed the race in a respectable two days, 16 hours and 52 minutes.

Grant Wharington’s Wild Thing finished 23 minutes behind Ichi Ban at 0615 Wednesday morning while Zennstrom’s Rán arrived seven minutes later at 0622.

Like Wild Oats XI, Rán also faces the same protest about the use of its radio from the event Race Committee. The International Jury will hear the protest at 1300 today at the Royal Yacht Club Tasmania.

This was Zennstrom’s second Rolex Sydney Hobart Race. Commenting on the race conditions they encountered this year Zennstrom said, “I think I have now definitely seen what the race is all about. It was tough crossing Bass Strait; 35 knots of wind and big seas. The whole experience has been fantastic.”

At 1030 Wednesday, saw the arrival of Alan Brierty’s Reichel/Pugh Limit and less than three minutes later, Stephen Ainsworth’s Loki. Both boats were locked in a dead heat for most of the race. According to Limit’s owner Alan Brierty, “First Loki got in front, then we got in front. It was back and forth. We finally got in front and stayed in front at Tasman Light. Speaking of the neck-and-neck battle with Loki, Brierty said, “It was a race within the race. For us, it was the race.”

LIMIT and LOKI meet near the Organ Pipes Photo credit Rolex  Daniel Forster

LIMIT and LOKI meet near the Organ Pipes Photo credit Rolex Daniel Forster

Stephen Ainsworth reflected about coming in behind Limit, “We had done everything right. Limit just got away and we couldn’t catch them. He then jokingly said, “After a while we thought, we hate this race.”

Asked how this Rolex Sydney Hobart race compared with others, tactician and former America’s Cup competitor Chris Dickson, tactician onboard Limit reflected, “This race wasn’t any better or worst than any other Hobart. We still saw 45 knots of breeze, big breaking waves—it’s just the Bass Strait.”

Most of the race fleet is across the Bass Strait and is spread out along the eastern Tasmanian coast. Their race is far from over as tacticians will be working hard to navigate through a very large area of light and variable breeze along the coast, in the shadow of the island.

Race organisers announced the 17th retirement, Matthew Prentice’s Archambault 40 Nautical Circle, which dropped out with engine problems and was headed to Eden.

Nine yachts have finished, with 61 yachts still racing. Still up for grabs is the Tattersall’s Cup for the overall handicap win. Currently leading is Darryl Hodgkinson’s Beneteau 45, Victoire, which would need to finish by 0736 tomorrow (Dec 30).

The entries for this the 66th edition of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race included six international entries from the USA, UK, Italy, France, as well as two partly crewed Russian boats, and entries from seven of the eight Australian states and territories.

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: Sailing yacht Wild Oats XI first yacht home

December 28, 2010

What has been touted as one of the toughest Rolex Sydney Hobart Races in recent years saw the first finisher arrive in Hobart early in the evening on the 28th of December. The 100-foot super maxi Wild Oats XI blazed up the Derwent River and crossed the finish line off Constitution Wharf at 2037 AEDT with an elapsed time of two days, seven hours, 37 minutes, 20 seconds — since leaving Sydney Harbour at 1300 on 26 December, Boxing Day.

Provisional Line Honours Winner WILD OATS XI at the Organ Pipes, off Cape Raoul Photo credit Rolex  Daniel Forster

Provisional Line Honours Winner WILD OATS XI at the Organ Pipes, off Cape Raoul Photo credit Rolex Daniel Forster

This year’s 66th edition was one of Wild Oats Xl physically most difficult but also one of her more hard fought finishes, with sustained periods of headwinds along the way and crushing gale-force conditions through the notorious Bass Strait. In an interview as he stepped off the winning vessel, skipper Mark Richards said,” “It was a tough race, no doubt about that. The boat Wild Oats, the boys, and the team did a fantastic job.”

The Reichel-Pugh design was the provisional line honours winner pending the decision of the International Jury over a protest by the Race Committee regarding the use of her HF radio. The jury will convene Tuesday afternoon at the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania to arrive at a decision.

After sailing a near perfect tactical race in extremely difficult conditions, with extremes ranging from a hair-removing 25-40 knot southerly and a mountainous seaway during the first night, race favourite Wild Oats XI didn’t disappoint followers. This was Wild Oats XI fifth win after participating in six Rolex Sydney Hobart Races.

Sailing Yacht WILD OATS XI approaching Tasman Island - Photo credit Rolex  Carlo Borlenghi

Sailing Yacht WILD OATS XI approaching Tasman Island - Photo credit Rolex Carlo Borlenghi

Wild Oats XI skipper Mark Richards was happy with the race and said, “We couldn’t have asked for a better result. To arrive here, first, in Hobart, is the most amazing feeling.” Referring to Oats’ second place finish of last year, Richards said, “First is hell of a lot better than second. We’re back and we’re just very happy to be here.”

Dockside after the race finish, Adrienne Cahalan co-navigator aboard Wild Oats XI and a veteran of now her 19th Rolex Sydney Hobart Race, commented on the extreme sea and wind, “I do think it’s one of the toughest races I’ve ever done. We did our best to make sure we didn’t break anything.”

A seasoned offshore sailor, Cahalan told of encountering 20 – 30 knot headwinds across the Bass Strait. As to how the boat managed, she said, “The boat held together really well…it was a technically sound race for us.” She continued, “To get there in one piece and in first place — it’s one of the greatest victories we’ve had.”

Provisional Line Honours Winner WILD OATS XI crossing Storm Bay - Photo credit Rolex  Daniel Forster

Provisional Line Honours Winner WILD OATS XI crossing Storm Bay - Photo credit Rolex Daniel Forster

The remaining 70 boats in the Rolex Sydney Hobart fleet are spread across from the southeast corner of the NSW coast, across the Bass Strait down towards the finish in Hobart — pushed along by a 20-knot north-northeasterly. The fleet includes six international entries from the USA, UK, Italy, France, as well as two partly crewed Russian boats, and entries from seven of the eight Australian states and territories.

Next boat expected across the finish line is Sean Langman’s 100-foot Investec Loyal at approximately 2230 tonight. However, breeze looks to be shutting down in the Derwent River, so their exact arrival is now anyone’s guess.

In a phone interview earlier today, Investec Loyal’s Sean Langman explained about his boats’ troubles during the last two days, “The damage we sustained was to the reef lines earlier and some tack lines on the headsail which, running without a headsail, put us an hour back. Also, a fuel tank broke lose. These tanks carry so much fuel that you’ve got a quarter of a ton to manhandle which is difficult.”

On the final race day, Langman and crew discovered flooding in a forward hold, “We didn’t realize that we had a substantial leak in the bow and carried on with a ton and a half of water, which we only detected this morning. We have a watertight bulkhead up there and when we opened it, water came pouring out.” Langman believed that the leak was not a puncture in the hull but due to loose deck fittings.

The 2010 Rolex Sydney Hobart race may well go down as one of the roughest in recent years and has certainly lived up to its reputation as one of the world’s toughest ocean going races.

To date, 16 yachts have been forced to retire due to issues including a broken mast, damaged booms, rigging and engine problems. Almost all racers have their share of minor injuries due to the high seas and associated gale force winds.

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: Big Seas and Breeze Continue to take a toll

December 28, 2010
The attrition continues in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race – throughout the night and into this morning, an additional six yachts retired with a grocery list of problems: damaged steering, torn mainsails, broken booms and engine issues. This time, the retirements were among the small to mid-sized boats, bringing to 16 the total number to have retired with 71 boats still battling hard in the race.

 

LIMIT - Alan Brierty Photo credit Rolex  Carlo Borlenghi

LIMIT - Alan Brierty Photo credit Rolex Carlo Borlenghi

Last night the gale force southerly winds off the New South Wales south coast continued to pound those yet to pass Green Cape. After the Cape is the most notorious stretch of the 628 nautical mile course, the renowned Bass Strait, where rough and confused seas are the norm. 

Sailing Yacht LIMIT - Alan Brierty - Photo credit Rolex  Carlo Borlenghi

Sailing Yacht LIMIT - Alan Brierty - Photo credit Rolex Carlo Borlenghi

At 2030 AEDT, Richard Buston’s R/P 52 Scarlet Runner bowed out of the race after sustaining sail damage. Shortly after, the TP52 Calm also retired, for reasons unknown.

Sam Haynes’ Rogers 46, Pirelli Celestial, racing in his first Rolex Sydney Hobart, was forced to seek safe harbour due to mainsail damage. Shortly after midnight, steering problems forced Phillip King’s 13.5 metre Salona II out of the race.

One of two U.S. entries in this year’s 66th race edition, the C&C 41 Nemesis was also reported to have withdrawn from the race, again for unknown reasons. Nemesis’ crew sailed throughout Mexico and across the Pacific to bring the yacht here for this years’ race.

Finally, this morning’s most recent withdrawal was one of note, Andrew Saies’ Two True, overall winner of last year’s Rolex Sydney Hobart Race. The Beneteau First 40 was forced out due to engine issues, which prevented the crew from charging the batteries.

With any luck, and with a forecasted improvement in the weather conditions by the end of today, the remaining yachts will receive some well-deserved relief and an easier path to the finish line.

As many participants, including famed circumnavigator Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, aboard the Swan 68, Titania of Cowes pointed out before leaving Sydney, “Just getting to Hobart in one piece is an achievement.”

The race is now set to enter its next phase, downwind flying and the contest for the coveted Tattersall’s Cup, which is given to the overall handicap winner of the Rolex Sydney Hobart and not the first yacht across the finish line.

Locked in a battle for line honors, four-time Rolex Sydney Hobart winner and record holder, Wild Oats VI is in the lead with Investec Loyal hard on her stern. Peter Millard’s Lahana is in third position. Geoff Cropley, crew member on Lahana, commented on yesterday’s weather on a call this morning, “I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t tough. It was pretty miserable and cold. The seas were somewhere between 4 and 6 meters. We were bouncing off waves, which made things pretty uncomfortable and we had a little bit of damage to some equipment. But right now there are pretty good conditions, skies are clear. We’re deliberately sailing out wide. Tactically we’re where we want to be. We’re all pretty pumped and everyone’s on the rail and we’re going hard.”

The maxi yachts are slugging it out in what appears to be a close race for the first to cross the finish line up the Derwent River in Hobart.

Currently leading the race, on corrected time is Geoff Boettcher’s Reichel/Pugh 51, Secret Men’s Business 3.5. Boettcher is a Sydney Hobart race veteran, sailing in his 22nd race.

LOKI - Stephen Ainsworth - Photo credit Rolex  Carlo Borlenghi

LOKI - Stephen Ainsworth - Photo credit Rolex Carlo Borlenghi

SY LOKI - Stephen Ainsworth Photo credit Rolex  Carlo Borlenghi

SY LOKI - Stephen Ainsworth Photo credit Rolex Carlo Borlenghi

As of this update, the Rolex Sydney Hobart fleet is still experiencing southwesterly weather. However, the forecast for today is for winds to swing clockwise and turn to a northeasterly direction this afternoon, building to 20 knots during the day and up to 30 knots later this evening. These will be ideal conditions to bring the remainder of the fleet quickly down the Tasmanian coast. The wind change means that computer-predicted time for the first boat to arrive, which at press time was 0520 tomorrow, may actually be earlier.

With winds forecast to swing to the nor’east later today, Investec Loyal’s navigator David Dixon reported the crew was bracing for the last of the southerly and looking forward to finally popping a spinnaker. “We’ll just be pushing harder and harder,’’ he said.

The remaining intrepid Rolex Sydney Hobart fleet continues battling its way to Hobart. The remaining 71 boats include six international entries from the USA, UK, Italy, France, as well as two partly crewed Russian boats, and entries from seven of the eight Australian states and territories.