With winds
swinging to the north-east in the vicinity of South Cape
just after midday, the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is
really on, as Alfa Romeo extends her lead over ICAP Leopard
and Wild Oats XI in the race of the 100 footers to be first
yacht to the finish line in Hobart.
Alfa Romeo,
Neville Crichton’s Reichel Pugh design from New Zealand, has
extended her lead to 11 miles over Mike Slade’s ICAP
Leopard, a Farr design from Great Britain, with a further 4
nautical mile gap to Wild Oats XI (NSW), Bob Oatley’s
Reichel/Pugh skippered by Mark Richards. According to
Alfa Romeo’s strategist, Tom Addis, the nor-east breeze is
very light and the top three are sailing with cracked
sheets, travelling at just over eight knots.
However, the
Bureau of Meteorology says the front half of the fleet can
expect an east/north-easterly at 10-15 knots on a slight
swell for the rest of the day, which should allow those in
the right place to set spinnakers and put some speed on.
It is still
early in the race, but if Crichton can continue the trend of
putting some distance between his yacht and the rest of the
fleet, Alfa Romeo will break the stranglehold that Bob
Oatley’s Wild Oats XI has had on the 628 nautical mile race
for the last four years. Crichton and his crew of luminaries such as Addis, Michael Coxon, Noel Drennan,
Peter Merrington and Stu Bannatyne, are 18 nautical miles east of South Cape,
almost ready to enter Bass Strait. They still have 396nm to make the finish line
though, and anything could happen between now and then.
In other news,
it was a understandably devastated Limit crew that arrived
back at the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia (CYCA) this
morning. A halyard was the cause of Alan Brierty and his
crew’s retirement from the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race
late last evening approximately 35nm east of Jervis Bay. Arriving back at
the CYCA, which organises the race, this morning at 10.15am,
Brierty was so upset he left the Reichel/Pugh 62 designed
yacht and the talking to his project manager and strategist
Rodney Keenan, a well-respected international yachtsman from
New Zealand.
"When we broke
the first one (halyard), it damaged the second one and we
thought we'd get away with it for a while, but we didn't,”
explained Keenan of the halyards that connect the headsail
to the top of the forestay. The yacht only has two, and
without them, the yacht is effectively out of action. The ropes go
through a lock system inside the mast and it's pretty hard
to repair at sea. We tried to push on, but we decided when
the second one failed, and we were in a seaway where it
wasn't safe to send someone up the rig, to pull the pin,” he
said. After a big
year is pretty unfortunate,” said Keenan of Limit’s
exceptional performance during the year, including winning
the Rolex Trophy Rating Series from near-sistership and main
rival for this race, Loki, Stephen Ainsworth’s Reichel/Pugh
63, which is still in the race.
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