The Borneo Post

Fast, open race ahead for Sydney-Hobart

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SYDNEY: Leading super-maxi skippers are predicting a fast, open race when Australia’s gruelling Sydney to Hobart classic sets sail on Monday with favourable winds forecast.

The fleet for the 72nd edition of the often brutal 628 nautical mile (1,163km) blue water run down the east coast stands at 91 and includes the local favourite Wild Oats XI which has taken line honours eight times.

While a quick pace is expected, organisers said the latest weather report has reduced the chances of a new record time to beat the one day 18hrs 23mins 12sec race record set by Wild Oats in 2012.

“I don’t think about the record,” skipper Mark Richards said Saturday. “All these boats here can rack up serious miles in the right conditions.”

The four 100-foot (30-metre) super-maxis entered this year are expected to fly out of Sydney Harbour in the spectacula­r Boxing Day launch to the event.

“All these boats are going to have their moments,” Richards told reporters.

“It’s really exciting this year considerin­g we’ve got four very good boats. It’s going to be a great race to watch. Hard to put money on anyone.”

Perpetual LOYAL skipper Anthony Bell, the main challenger to Wild Oats, likes the forecast too. “It’s going to be a fast race,” he said.

In a bid to be more competitiv­e, Perpetual has dropped fundraisin­g celebrity sailors and brought in half the world-class crew of last year’s winner, the US super boat Comanche, which is not entered for 2016.

“We have not fulfilled the potential,” Bell admitted after pulling out of the last two SydneyHoba­rt races.

“We needed to bring a better crew,” he said, adding, “We need a bit of luck. We are determined to get there this year.”

Savage southerly winds forced dozens of boats to pull out last year, including Wild Oats.

Finn Ludde Ingvall took line honours in 2000 and 2004 and he is back for 2016 with Nicorette completely redesigned and renamed CQS.

“I think the forecast gives everybody the chance to have a bit of fun,” he said.

Australia’s Bureau of Meteorolog­y expects the fleet to sail south with north-easterly winds strengthen­ing to 30 knots (55km per hour) and possibly more.

On Monday evening a southerly front will move up the coast, but it will not be as powerful as previously expected, before easing to north-easterly winds again within 24 hours.

Another change on December 29 or 30 will see a low pressure system over Tasmania produce waves of up to three metres (10 feet).

Storms are part and parcel of the race with six men dying, five boats sinking and 55 sailors rescued on a fatal night in 1998 when a deep depression exploded over the fleet in the treacherou­s Bass Strait.

Ingvall underlined that his vessel was very new and he was not too ambitious for this year.

“It’s a matter of learning how to fly this thing,” he said. “We have the lowest rating of the top four boats. Anything better than that (fourth) will be awesome.”

The other super-maxi is the rebadged Scallywag, now owned by Hong Kong businessma­n Seng Huang Lee, which came second in line honours last year as Ragamuffin. — AFP

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