Mercury (Hobart)

Wild Oats on track for Sydney-Hobart

- JAMES BRESNEHAN

A GRUELLING 24-hour test has Wild Oats skipper Mark Richards “100 per cent” confident his repaired supermaxi can win a record 10th line honours crown in the 75th Rolex Sydney to Hobart yacht race next week.

The champion 100-footer was damaged in a race early last month and a global effort was launched to get parts and repairs done in time for this year’s race, starting at 1pm on Boxing Day.

Richards and his crew took Wild Oats on a sea trial on Monday and Tuesday this week to test drive the repairs and also qualify the yacht for the race.

The nine-time line honours champion is one of five supermaxis in the milestone event, and starts third-favourite with the bookies ($3.35) behind race record holder Comanche ($2.75) and Black Jack ($3).

“We’ve finished our qualifier yesterday and we spend 24 hours at sea in a lot of breeze and the boat performed very all so we are 100 per cent back on track,” Richards said.

The 24-hour run was necessary to qualify for entry into the 628-nautical mile blue water classic.

“You have to do a long race or 24-hour qualifier for the Hobart during the year and we hadn’t done anything with the boat this year — because of the modificati­ons we’ve been doing it has been in the shed,” Richards said.

“We did our qualifier, which is great, and we are really happy with the repairs.

“The boat had a weakness, which we found, so we’ve been able to make it a lot stronger and we are going to be able to benefit from that.”

Richards praised his team for the swift repairs after

Wild Oats’ mast and rigging were damaged in a race.

“It was a really impressive effort,” he said. “McConaghy Boats, who built the boat did an amazing job getting it back together Southern Spars came over from New Zealand and fixed the damaged section and we had rigging come from Spain.

“It was a very detailed repair but it was amazing how we all pulled it together in three-and-a-half weeks.”

The latest withdrawal­s of Conquest, Hummingbir­d, Sailing Poland and Samurai Jack reduced the original entry list of 170 yachts to 157.

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