Neville
Crichton's Alfa Romeo remained in control of her nearest
maxi opponents through a changing wind pattern overnight
and into the second day (27 December 2009) of the 2009
Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race. Alfa's afterguard,
including tactician Michael Coxon and navigator Tom
Addis, kept the yacht perfectly positioned at the head
of the fleet to be first into the anticipated shift in
wind direction from south-southwest experienced from the
start to southeast off the south coast of New South
Wales.
Alfa Romeo tacked on the shift at about 2145 last night
to converge back towards the coast on port after the
long gaining starboard tack the fleet followed after
clearing Sydney Harbour from the 1300 start.
At 0800, 19 hours into the race, the Reichel/Pugh 100
was 24 nautical miles northeast of Green Cape, 2 miles
ahead of Mike Slade's Farr 100 ICAP Leopard, which was
three or four miles to seaward, with another 2nm to Bob
Oatley's Wild Oats XI, a near sister design R/P 100 to
Alfa Romeo. Alfa had covered 193nm of the 628nm course
and was doing 10.8 knots. All three were close to the
shortest-distance rhumb line between Sydney and Tasman
Island and on course for the island, but were starting
to slow as the wind dropped from its 25 knot peak of
last evening to 10-12 knots and less this morning.
Critical for all boats will be traversing the light airs
and calms expected today in the Bass Strait, between the
Australian mainland and Tasmania, before a forecast
20-30 knot westerly change tonight. Wild Oats XI
navigator Ian Burns said this morning: “The wind is
pretty light now, between 6-10 knots and quite variable.
The seas are flatter - it was a little rough at times
last night. We've had quite a few wind shifts and some
big lulls. At one stage the guys behind us [Ran and
Lahana] ran almost up to us. We exchanged some tacks as
the southeast-southwester fought it out but it has been
hanging in the southeast for some time now. Some
forecasts are calling for no wind at all across half of
Bass Strait. The fact that we will head butt into the
light stuff gives us a bit of a chance. Leopard is doing
a great job for a big boat in the lighter wind, but the
race hasn't really started yet; that will be today.”
The overall handicap leader on IRC corrected time is
Michael Hiatt's Farr 55 Living Doll over the UK-based
Judel/Vrolijk 72 Ran (Niklas Zennstrom), followed by the
Jones-modified Volvo 70 Ichi Ban (Matt Allen). One of
the handicap favourites, Alan Brierty’s Reichel/Pugh 62
Limit, was among the retirements overnight due to
problems with the halyard locks. That brings the number
of retired yachts to four in the 100-boat fleet that
started yesterday from Sydney. The Rolex Sydney Hobart
Yacht Race fleet has crews representing the USA, UK, New
Zealand, Spain, the Netherlands, and New Caledonia as
well as every Australian state.
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