Please select your home edition
Edition
North Sails Loft 57 Podcast

Champagne start before a battle of minds in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

by Rupert Guinness, RSHYR Media 25 Dec 2018 16:12 PST 26 December 2018
2017 Rolex Sydney Hobart start © Carlo Borlenghi

A fast start is expected for the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race this afternoon. However, soon after day turns to night the fight for line and handicap honours is expected become one of strategy and tactics as winds weaken, according to Matt Allen, the owner and skipper of defending Tattersall Cup winner, the 52-footer Ichi Ban.

The 85-strong fleet was told by the Bureau of Meteorology at the final race briefing at the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia this morning that 10-15 knot north- easterly winds were forecast for the 1pm start on Sydney Harbour. Out the Heads, north to north easterly winds of 15-25 knots are forecast to catapult them southwards at a nice speed.

However, despite a strong wind warning expected early Thursday morning, the race should become a battle of the mind and on water cunning for all crews in a race that could especially see the fight for handicap honours and the Tattersall Cup wide open to the end.

"The conditions have really been slowing down for the entire fleet," Allen said today at the docks of the CYCA.

"So we're really concerned that the transition we are going to get tomorrow and the 28th is really going to slow the whole fleet down.

"We might be the favourite with the odds, but I think it's really wide open for the overall winner of this year's race.

"It is going to be really hard work. Tonight will be really fast. It will slow down eventually, but through the course of tomorrow, it's going to be about people avoiding the areas of no wind.

"There's going to be lots of areas of no wind on this race track right across the whole fleet.

"It's going to be (about) trying to keep the boats moving through the early hours of the morning right across the 27th and 28th.

"I think the leader board is going to change a lot through the course of this race.

"The conditions are changing a lot, so any plans we've got now are going to change through the course of the race.

"It's a real tactician's strategy race, apart from this afternoon where it will be champagne sailing for a few hours there.

"We will be trying to get down the coast really fast and try to get the best of that transition period that is available tomorrow."

Dave Witt, the skipper of Hong Kong entrant Scallywag, one of five super maxis in the race, concurred, saying the forecast was "not challenging at all, but technically challenging.

"(There are) no real hazards. The transition on the night of the 27th will probably decide the race. You 'gotta' make sure you are good shape by the night of the 27th," Witt said.

"We've modified the boat so much we actually are not 100 percent sure how we are going to go. We could be a lemon. We could be a strawberry. I don't know."

Stacey Jackson, skipper of the all- professional female crew of Wild Oats X, believes the race will be a "tricky" one.

Former Foreign Affairs Minister Julia Bishop will also be on board Wild Oats X for the start as an ambassador for the crew's campaign for ocean sustainability. She will disembark by jumping off the boat when it is in clear, safe water, most probably off Bondi Beach.

"The forecast has changed a little bit over the last couple of days," Jackson said.

"It is kind of soft conditions, which isn't bad for Wild Oats X. A skinny boat is going to enjoy those sort of conditions.

"The tricky bit will be arriving into Hobart and up the Derwent (River) where it will be particularly light.

"If the forecast goes our way, we are going to have a good attempt at the handicap result."

Bishop said she was prepared for her exit from Wild Oats X.

"I have been through this time and time again, particularly the bit where I have to jump off as we turn right and head down to Hobart. About Bondi Beach I think is where I disembark," she said.

Pressed on what an all female crew brings to the Sydney Hobart, she said: "We are actually promoting two causes, not only the participation of women in sport, showing that women can compete with the best. We are also focusing on ocean sustainability and we are really concerned about plastic pollution in the oceans.

"So this is an opportunity not only to focus on a female crew, but for the cause that we are advocating, and that is to clean up out oceans.

Iain Murray, strategist on Wild Oats XI, another one of the five super maxis and a record eight times winner on line honours, said the atmosphere of the crew was relaxed heading into the start.

"I think it looks such a benign race I think the crew are relaxed," said Murray for whom this will be his 25th Sydney Hobart.

"When you get a forecast of a lot of wind and huge waves in Bass Strait and all of that it is a bit twitchy but it looks like a fairly calm passage across Bass Strait.

"So it I think (it is about) trying keep it calm, get some rest and there are going to be long nights, avoiding the pot holes and trying to stay in the wind is the target for us."

Asked what are the hazards of the forecast, Murray said: "The real issue is linking all the bits of wind up, and there will be light spots and sports where there is not much wind.

"I think the boats that keep continuously moving fast (will benefit)... the difference between going fast is going five knots, or 10 knots or 12 knots and if you do that for a couple of hours it is a big difference."

Asked which boat he believe will be the biggest threat for Wild Oats XI, Murray tipped Comanche that won line honours last year, but on protest after Wild Oats XI was penalised an hour after crossing the line in Hobart first for an incident with Comanche at the start.

"I would expect Comanche to charge off after the start like we often see, particularly in the stronger nor-easter going on to the north," Murray said.

"I think the race is going to come alive probably from 8 or 9 o'clock tonight."

The Boxing Day start of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race will be broadcast live on the Seven Network via 7Mate throughout Australia.

For more information visit www.rolexsydneyhobart.com

LIVE from the CYCA for your Rolex Sydney Hobart pre-race show!

Here we go for 2018! 25+ interviews right through the fleet to bring you up to speed on just some of the boats in this year's fleet of 85 for the Rolex Sydney Hobart! Here are the interviewees:

Posted by Adventures of a Sailor Girl - Nic Douglass on Tuesday, 25 December 2018

Related Articles

Bulwarks and Bulldust – new Vodcast Show launches
Join us as we pan for the gold dust, whilst sifting out the bulldust. Bulwarks and Bulldust looks at the serious subjects from inside the world of boating, but we don't take ourselves too seriously. The show covers off everything from Off The Beach to Superyachts, Powerboats to Ocean Racing, and the marine industry itself Posted on 6 May
Mack Boring & Parts Co. purchases New Jersey HQ
The new campus includes a 55,000 sq. ft. building on over 8 acres Mack Boring & Parts Co. announced it has purchased a new headquarters facility in Somerset, New Jersey. Posted on 6 May
Sportfishing industry calls for tariff relief
ASA stands ready to work with the Administration toward solutions ASA President Glenn Hughes sent a letter to top Trump Administration officials expressing support for its efforts to address global trade imbalances and strengthen U.S. competitiveness, while urging swift action to provide greater certainty and relief. Posted on 5 May
Sail America Industry Conference concludes
Attendees hailed from around the country and enjoyed all that Annapolis has to offer The annual Sail America Industry Conference (SAIC) landed in Annapolis, MD, in mid-April, bringing the industry together for an engaging two days of camaraderie and learning. Posted on 5 May
Industry leaders to kick off ABC 2025
With focus on unity, advocacy and what's ahead The 2025 American Boating Congress (ABC) will officially open Tuesday, May 13 at 8:00 a.m. with a dynamic general session featuring NMMA President and CEO Frank Hugelmeyer, alongside two of the industry's most influential executives. Posted on 3 May
TowBoatUS adds port in the Big Apple
Miller's launch opens its second TowBoatUS on-water towing port on Staten Island Miller's Launch, a commercial marine service provider on Staten Island's northeastern Stapleton waterfront has opened it's second on-water towing and assistance port for recreational boaters, TowBoatUS Staten Island. Posted on 3 May
Bold expansion for Metstrade 2025
A significant new chapter as it prepares for its 37th edition Metstrade, the world's largest trade exhibition for the leisure marine industry, is set to mark a significant new chapter as it prepares for its 37th edition in 2025. Posted on 2 May
Suntex expands Phoenix-area holdings
With the acquisition of Saguaro Lake Marina Suntex Marina Investors LLC (Suntex), a recognized leader setting the standard of excellence for marina operations, announced today that Saguaro Lake Marina in Mesa, Arizona has been acquired through its joint venture. Posted on 1 May
Three TowBoatUS Ports under new ownership
Assisting boaters from Sandusky River to Fairport, Ohio On Lake Erie's West/Central Basin, TowBoatUS Sandusky owners Capts. Jimmer Kennedy, D.J. Huntley and Jason Majoy are new owners of TowBoatUS locations in Vermillion, Lorain, and Cleveland. Posted on 1 May
Correct Craft CEO announces plans to step down
Bill Yeargin has been in the role since September of 2006 Correct Craft's long-time President and CEO, Bill Yeargin, announced his plans to step down next Spring. Posted on 1 May
Allen Dynamic 40 FooterCyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERNorth Sails Loft 57 Podcast