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  • Rolex Sydney Hobart – Wild Oats XI Speeding towards Victory

Rolex Sydney Hobart – Wild Oats XI Speeding towards Victory

Rolex Sydney Hobart – Wild Oats XI Speeding towards Victory
Wild Oats XI ealier in the race Credit ROLEX Daniel Forster

Rolex Sydney Hobart – Wild Oats XI Speeding towards Victory

Bob Oatley’s 10 year-old super maxi Wild Oats XI is racing towards an historic eighth line honours victory in the Rolex Sydney Hobart this morning.

With a just under 100 nautical miles to go to the finish line she holds a 25 nautical mile lead over the brand new American super maxi, Jim Clark and Kristy Hinze Clark’s Comanche.

The two yachts are rushing down the Tasmanian coast in good breeze, though the further south they get the lighter the wind will be.

Already Wild Oats XI, the southernmost boat, has slowed to 17 knots while Comanche is still sailing at speeds in the mid-twenties, and Oats’ skipper Mark Richards expects that the gap between the yachts will continue to close as they approach Tasman Island around midday.

It does appear though that Comanche will not have enough time to rein in the Australian unless…  For there is one big “if” still in left this epic line honours struggle.

Later this morning the winds around Tasman Island and in Storm Bay are forecast to be very patchy. It is still possible that Wild Oats XI could sail into a windless patch of water, leaving Comanche to sail around her. It is the curse of the leading boat. In the box seat, there is no-one in front of them to show where the minefields lie. 

That, or last minute gear failure on Oats, is Comanche’s last roll of the dice.

Whatever happens, the big gap between the boats will compress this morning. The leaders will have to tack up the Derwent River in a very modest westerly to reach Hobart. A gripping two-boat duel is not impossible.

It has been a wonderful match race between two such disparate styles of boat since the fleet left the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia on Boxing Day.

A staggering 100 miles separates the two leaders from third placed Ragamuffin 100, which is only now beginning to escape from the mid-Bass Strait ridge that proved Comanche’s undoing yesterday.

Indeed the whole fleet has compressed as the boats have sailed into the very light winds overnight. You could almost throw a blanket over the fleet in the top half of the Strait.

The race for the overall win is wide open. At present, Tasmanian  Anthony Williams is leading aboard Martela, with Roger Hickman’s Wild Rose in second place and David Redfern’s Not a Diamond third – the positions have continually changed throughout the last 24 hours and will continue to do so in tandem with conditions.

All are in the 40 foot range. With such a compressed fleet, this 70th edition of the race could well belong to the smaller boats.

Two yachts, A Cunning Plan and Chancellor are still racing to Hobart, but failed to radio in before passing Green Cape and entering Bass Strait, in accordance with the rules of the race. Their fate will be decided by the Race Committee.

Perpetual Loyal, the last casualty yesterday morning, is approaching Sydney and will be in her Rose Bay berth later this morning.

By Jim Gale, RSHYR media