The Borneo Post

Protest mars Wild Oats XI record Sydney-Hobart race win

- — AFP

SYDNEY: Supermaxi Wi ld Oats XI won a record ninth line honours in the Sydney to Hobart ocean race Friday, but a protest against its victory for the secondyear running has marred the celebratio­ns.

In a thrilling finish to the 628nautica­l mile (1,163- kilometre) blu ewat e r c l a s s i c d own Australia’s east coast that saw an unpreceden­ted battle between four supermaxis, the 100- footer crossed the finish line first in Hobart.

The victory meant Wild Oats Xi was the most successful yacht in the history of the gruelling competitio­n.

But late Friday, the race committee said it was lodging a protest against Wild Oats XI after second place Black Jack claimed the yacht’s location system was switched off during the race, making them invisible to their rivals.

A hearing would be held in Hobart on Saturday afternoon.

Thevictory­hadbeenpar­ticularly special for Wild Oats XI skipper Mark Richards and the crew, after being stripped of their win last year when they were handed a one-hour penalty over a nearcollis­ion.

“Redemption for us, that is for sure. Last year, it was so disappoint­ing,” Richards told reporters after reaching Hobart.

“Whether people like it or not, it is Wild Oats XI’s 10th time over that line first, no matter what anyone else says... After an event like last year and to come through and redeem yourself is a wonderful feeling, money can’t buy it.”

Richards marked the win at Constituti­on Dock with a trademark Australian “shoey” celebratio­n, which involves drinking champagne out of a shoe, before he was thrown into the Derwent River by the crew.

The 74th edition of the annual contest was characteri­sed by a neck- and- neck battle between four supermaxis – the biggest and fastest yachts – Wild Oats XI, Comanche, Black Jack, and Infotrack.

Wild Oats XI and last year’s defending champion Comanche had been taking turns to be in the lead since the fleet of yachts departed a sunny Sydney Harbour on Boxing Day.

But after leading the race overnight, Wild Oats XI surged ahead of Comanche e a rly Thursday, choosing to swing east in pursuit of faster winds in what Richards described as a “gamewinnin­g manoeuvre”.

BlackJackf­inishedsec­ond,ahead of Comanche and Infotrack.

Richards said he was particular­ly proud of how 14-year-old Wild Oats XI fared against the quality of the other supermaxis, calling it “the Phar Lap of yachting” in a nod to Australia’s greatest racehorse.

The result is a relief for the Oatley family, which owns Wild Oats XI, after the boat had to retire from the 2015 and 2016 races. The vessel’s previous win was in 2014.

“This is absolutely fantastic. Words fail me,” owner Sandy Oatley told commercial broadcaste­r Channel Seven. “I could not be happier. The whole family is really happy.”

Lighter winds meant the fleet could not match last year’s record pace of one day, nine hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds set by Comanche.

Wild Oats XI finished with a time of one day, 19 hours, seven minutes and 21 seconds.

Attention now turns to the handicap honours – the race to be the vessel that performs best according to size – with 2017 winner TP52 Ichi Ban in the lead.

The f leet in the often brutal contest dropped from 85 to 80 during the dash south from Sydney, with Hong Kong supermaxi Scallywag the most prominent retirement with a broken bowsprit.

Challengin­g conditions and storms are not unknown to the race, with six people dying on one night in 1998 when a deep depression exploded over the fleet in the treacherou­s Bass Strait between the Australian mainland and Tasmania.

The f leet marked the 20th anniversar­y of the tragedy on Thursday with a moment of silence and a reading of a message of commemorat­ion.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Australia’s Wild Oats XI skipper Mark Richards (front row, second right) with his crew and the winning trophy following the Sydney to Hobart yacht race, in Hobart.
— AFP photo Australia’s Wild Oats XI skipper Mark Richards (front row, second right) with his crew and the winning trophy following the Sydney to Hobart yacht race, in Hobart.

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