Wild Oats XI takes honours
Wild Oats XI has smashed the Sydney Hobart race record to claim line honours for the ninth time after a dramatic late comeback.
But the Australian supermaxi could face a time penalty, with second-placed LDV Comanche launching a protest over a nearcollision just after the race’s start.
Wild Oats XI crossed the finish line in Hobart at 9.48pm (11.48pm NZ Time) on Wednesday, slashing almost five hours off the time set by Perpetual LOYAL last year.
Skippered by Mark Richards, it crossed the line in 1 day, 8 hours, 48 minutes and 50 seconds.
Fuelled by a strong northeasterly, the yacht chipped away at LDV Comanche’s overnight 20 nautical mile advantage and caught up to the point where the pair were neck-and-neck down Tasmania’s east coast.
They were within a few hundred metres of each other heading into the River Derwent.
There, the lighter Wild Oats XI picked up a breeze to crawl into first place as her bigger and wider rival slowed to a near halt.
‘‘I couldn’t bloody believe it,’’ Wild Oats XI skipper Mark Richards said when asked about his reaction as the boat hit the front.
‘‘The dream came true - the Derwent with no wind in it - and for the first time in the 13 years of us doing the Hobart race it became a very thankful sight.
‘‘To get the opportunity at the end there to have another crack at it and to finish it off with a race record was unbelievably special.’’
It’s the first win for Wild Oats XI since the passing of former owner and businessman Bob Oatley last year.
LDV Comanche, the 2015 line honours winner, finished 26 minutes and 34 seconds behind the leader.
Wild Oats XI, however, faces a potential penalty with LDV Comanche owner and skipper Jim Cooney confirming after the race he planned to lodge a formal protest.
The two supermaxis came perilously close to colliding about 15 minutes into the race on Boxing Day. But Richards dismissed the near-miss, describing it as ‘‘totally innocent’’.
Wild Oats XI has now set the race record for the third time, smashing the previous mark of one day, 13 hours, 31 minutes and 20 seconds.