Act 1 builds to a climax in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race
by Jim Gale, RSHYR Media 27 Dec 2016 07:54 GMT
27 December 2016
Less than a day and a half after the fleet left the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia in Sydney to begin the 2016 Rolex Sydney Hobart, excitement is building as Act 1, the race for line honours, hurtles towards resolution.
The crack crew on Anthony Bell's super maxi Perpetual LOYAL is storming down the Tasmanian east coast, and at this stage looks every chance of smashing her long-time rival, Wild Oats XI's 2012 race record of one day 18hrs 23mins 12secs.
With 130 miles to go, Perpetual LOYAL is 50 miles ahead of Wild Oats XI's position in 2012.
At her current 16 knots, Anthony Bell's big black super maxi is set to arrive in Hobart between midnight and 2am. She needs to be in Hobart before 7:23am tomorrow morning to claim the record.
The NSW 100 footer still has to round Tasman Island, cross Storm Bay and negotiate the notoriously fickle Derwent River in the dark, but the forecast is pointing towards a fresh north-easterly breeze throughout the night, even on the Derwent River, which usually shuts down at night.
All the omens seem to be pointing towards a triumph that would wash away the bitter disappointment of Perpetual LOYAL's failure to finish the 628 nautical mile race in the last two years.
Second placed V70 Giacomo is trailing by 16 miles, and will be hard pressed to take much time out of that in the hours remaining. It would seem that all Bell has to do now is to keep his boat in one piece, and pray that the wind gods don't suddenly take a fancy to surprise endings. But he does have six or seven hours to play with for that record.
For the second year running, Perpetual LOYAL lead the fleet out of Sydney Heads, though she trailed Wild Oats XI down the NSW coast in conditions that better suited Bell's sleek, silver grey rival.
However, the accountant and his crew never lifted their foot off the pedal, applying as much pressure on the leader as they could, and this morning Wild Oats XI cracked, forced out with a hydraulic ram problem with their canting keel.
New Zealander Jim Delegat's V70 Giacomo is expected to dock an hour or so after Perpetual LOYAL, also well inside the 2012 record.
Giacomo will become the boat to beat for overall honours as Act 2, the battle for Australian yachting's supreme title of Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race winner begins in earnest.
At present, Giacomo holds a big lead in the overall standings, but Delegat and his crew will have to endure a long wait at the dock, as the mid-size and smaller boats continue to race in Bass Strait and off Tasmania, before they will know if their triumph was more than fleeting.
But all that is for tomorrow - tonight it is all line honours.
Giacomo holds a handy 12 nautical mile lead over third place, the super maxi, Scallywag, which is followed by the Volvo Open 70 Maserati, 80 foot Beau Geste, V70 Black Jack, the Ker 56 Varuna VI and CQS.
Incredibly, it is conceivable that all of these could finish inside the old record. That is how fast this race has been. We will know all in a few hours, but right now we know one thing for certain. Act 1 is Perpetual LOYAL's to win or lose.
Track the fleet on the official race website here.
Wild Oats XI retires with keel damage (by Bruce Montgomery, RSHYR media)
Wild Oats XI, the supermaxi that has dominated the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race for the last 11 years, is out of this year's race after succumbing to the record pace she was setting at the head of the fleet.
This morning, approaching the north-east coast of Flinders Island in eastern Bass Strait, she suffered damage to the hydraulic ram that adjusts the angle of the canting, or swinging, keel beneath the hull.
The keel counteracts the weight of the wind on the sails, enabling the boat to remain more upright. It also reduces leeway, the distance the boats veers from its compass course.
The crew were able to manually centre and stabilise the keel, but retired from the race and is heading for Eden.
Wild Oats XI had been chased throughout the night by Anthony Bell's supermaxi Perpetual LOYAL, which now leads the 72nd Rolex Sydney Hobart, and is also on race record pace. If she maintains this morning's speed in good easterly winds, she may finish hours inside the record early tomorrow morning in Hobart.
Eighteen nautical miles astern the New Zealand Giacomo is running second but also leading the race on corrected time.
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