The Chronicle

Jackson and her crew hoping other women follow in wake as they set out on their historic journey south

- AMANDA LULHAM

WHEN Stacey Jackson and her crew start in the Sydney to Hobart at 1pm today they will be following in the footsteps of two intrepid women who set sail south at exactly the same time 73 years ago.

Like Jane Tate and Dagmar O’Brien – the first women to race to Tasmania a year after the inaugural event in 1945 – Jackson and her Ocean Respect Racing team will be trailblazi­ng as the first fully profession­al women’s team.

That means they are being paid for their talent, skills and time like most sailors aboard top-notch Sydney to Hobart racers in a sport renowned for its blokeyness.

Their numbers are compelling. Sixty-eight Sydney to Hobarts between them along with 21 laps of the world gives this crew serious street and ocean cred.

And instead of whingeing about lack of opportunit­y for female sailors they are instead getting on with creating their own opportunit­ies.

The first part of the plan is for Jackson and her crew to make an indelible mark on the race.

Rather than being just the 11th women’s crew to compete in a Sydney to Hobart since the first in 1975, they want their

‘‘ HOPEFULLY, THIS SHOWS THERE IS A PLACE FOR WOMEN IN PROFESSION­AL SAILING. WE HAVE TOUGH WOMEN ON BOARD WHO CAN HANDLE ANY CONDITION. STACEY JACKSON

names penned in history as the first to win it overall, aboard the 66-footer Wild Oats X.

“This is a crew of top sailors, with probably more experience than most other boats and the goal is to win,” says Jackson of her Ocean Respect Racing team also working to promote ocean health and reduce plastic consumptio­n.

“Of course, it will be weather-dependent but we have the team to do it if it works in our favour.”

It’s a lofty but attainable goal for a remarkable crew boasting some of the most sound and experience­d sailors in the race.

“The boat has a good track record, good IRC rating, we have good sailors, we have done our preparatio­n,” says Jackson whose aim is to encourage and increase female representa­tion in sailing and to promote ocean health and sustainabi­lity.

“We have tough women on board who can handle any condition.

“Hopefully, this shows there is a place for women in profession­al sailing.”

Another objective is to make the sport step up and acknowledg­e winds of change need to be more in line with a southerly buster than a light and fickle breeze.

Jackson, 35, who has sailed aboard top racers, including the supermaxi Wild Oats XI and Black Jack, says she could not say 100 per cent if her entire crew would have picked up rides south if she had not formed the team.

And if they did jump aboard, would they be taken seriously and doing serious roles?

It’s hard to know. “Maybe everyone would have got a ride, the ones willing to go without pay,” says two-time world sailor of the year Carolyn Brouwer, who is racing south with Jackson on the boat backed by 11th Hour Racing and with former foreign minister Julie Bishop as its ambassador.

Jackson, Brouwer and crewmate Sophie Ciszek raced together in the all-women’s Team SCA in the 2014-2015

Volvo round the world race – and won a leg – before competing as part of mixed teams in the latest edition.

A new rule was introduced for the most recent Volvo race which allowed teams additional numbers if mixed.

The change meant all-male crews would be restricted to seven sailors and at a disadvanta­ge over mixed teams which could comprise eight, nine or 10 crew.

All eventually opted for the second option.

While the rule effectivel­y mandated women should be included, it was still hailed as a watershed moment for women in sailing and the sport at large.

The women themselves have mixed feelings about the change.

Ciszek says she disliked the feeling they were being forced on the men, but at the same time acknowledg­ing it was creating an expanded and more experience­d pool of female sailors for the future.

“There wasn’t going to be an all-women’s race, so if there hadn’t been any women it would have meant we had to start from zero again,” Jackson says.

“In a way it is upsetting we had to have a rule but what it did was change things.

“They made it more beneficial to take women. At first a lot didn’t respond but as it went forward everyone had at least three on their crew.

“It has created a big pool of experience.”

Jackson says it has been a benchmark year for women in sport with surfing finally introducin­g prize parity for men and women, big wins for Australian women cricketers on and off the field and the success of new competitio­ns like the NRL and AFL women’s competitio­ns.

She hopes she and her crew will trigger further change by showing the community there are numerous women whose skill, talent and profession­alism makes them ideal crew.

 ?? Photo: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images ?? YACHT OF THEIR OWN: Skipper Stacey Jackson (third from right) poses with the all-female crew of Wild Oats X.
Photo: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images YACHT OF THEIR OWN: Skipper Stacey Jackson (third from right) poses with the all-female crew of Wild Oats X.

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