The Borneo Post

Notorious strait could decide Sydney-Hobart race record

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SYDNEY: A new record time for Australia’s toughest yacht race could be thwarted by shifting winds in the notoriousl­y wild Bass Strait after the 2018 Sydney-Hobart begins on Wednesday.

The forecast is for a gusty start with a favourable strong north- easterly breeze, although a possible southerly change could thwart the supermaxis’ record bid and turn the treacherou­s strait into “a parking lot”.

The gruelling annual contest, in its 74th edition, will see 85 yachts depart Sydney Harbour on Boxing Day, December 26, at 1: 00 pm ( 0200 GMT) for the brutal 628nautica­l mile ( 1,163- kilometre) dash across the Tasman Sea to Hobart.

This year’s bluewater classic will mark the 20th anniversar­y of a fatal storm that saw six sailors lose their lives in mountainou­s seas and wild winds as strong as those in a category two tropical cyclone.

The devastatin­g deep depression that struck in 1998 saw just 44 yachts out of 115 finish the race, with sailors this year set to observe a moment of silence on Thursday.

The Bureau of Meteorolog­y said Boxing Day morning would feature light winds, before a “very stiff north to northeaste­rly sea breeze” develops in the afternoon.

“If it is a fairly early sea breeze, we could see quite a fast start for the yachts... going out of ( Sydney) Heads,” the bureau’s senior meteorolog­ist Simon Louis told AFP.

Prediction­s had been for north to northeaste­rly winds of up to 25 knots with gusts to 35 knots along the entire route. But latest forecasts indicate a possibilit­y of a trough developing over the eastern Bass Strait between Tasmania and the Australian mainland.

“If that happens, then we’ll see much lighter winds developing in the second half of the race over eastern Bass Strait and eastern Tasmania.”

Such a situation could turn the Bass Strait into a “parking lot”, quipped David Sudano, the navigator for 51-footer Primitive Cool.

Also standing between the yachts and a new race record is Hobart’s famously sluggish River Derwent, which could slow the front runners by hours with its windless holes.

Described as the “Everest” of ocean racing, this year’s Sydney to Hobart features five supermaxis – including last year’s record-breaking Comanche – and 13 internatio­nal entrants.

The 100- footer Comanche set a new record of one day, nine hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds in 2017 and was named the line honours winner after rival supermaxi Wild Oats XI was stripped of the title over a near- collision.

Wild Oats XI had crossed the line in record time, but was handed a one-hour penalty by an internatio­nal jury after the incident.

Other supermaxis in contention are Black Jack, InfoTrack and Hong Kong’s Scallywag.

“This is the toughest fleet I’ve seen in the history of the event,” said Mark Richards, skipper of eight- time line honours winner Wild Oats.

Owner-skipper Matt Allen of last year’s Tattersall Cup overall handicap winner, Ichi Ban, is aiming to be the first person to claim back-to-back victories in over 50 years.

The handicap honours go to the vessel that performs best according to size, and Allen’s TP52 is again among the favourites. — AFP

 ??  ?? The injured crew of demasted Australian yacht “Stand Aside” wait to be rescued by helicopter as they tow a life-raft in the Bass Strait during the Sydney-to-Hobart ocean race in this Dec 27, 1998 file photo. — AFP photo
The injured crew of demasted Australian yacht “Stand Aside” wait to be rescued by helicopter as they tow a life-raft in the Bass Strait during the Sydney-to-Hobart ocean race in this Dec 27, 1998 file photo. — AFP photo

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