60th
Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race - Aera's Bold Strategy
Spoils Nicorette's Dream Double
Handicap
honours remain in the lap of the wind gods
British
55-footer Aera has stolen the handicap lead from
Nicorette in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race
after crossing the finish line at 15:43:43 hours.
Their corrected time under IRC handicap means
Nick Lykiardopulo and his team have prevented
Ludde Ingvall and the brand new super maxi Nicorette
from winning a rare double. Ingvall, however,
will be well satisfied to have won line honours
in one of the toughest races of the event's 60-year
history.
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AAPT
at the finish line. Photo: Carlo Borlenghi
/ ROLEX
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As
a Volvo Ocean Race veteran, Aera's skipper Jez
Fanstone is well used to racing far from land.
In stark contrast to Nicorette's strategy of hugging
the Tasmanian coast to escape the worst of the
southerly swell, Fanstone took Aera on the most
seaward course of the whole 116-boat fleet. At
one point the British crew was 150 miles from
land. "We were the furthest offshore boat,
which we felt was taking us where we wanted to
go," explained Fanstone. "We didn't
go for shelter under the Tasmanian shore because
with the wind direction we didn't think there
would be any.'
Aera
crashed and bashed her way through some harsh
weather. "Forty-four knots and big,"
was Fanstone's succinct description. "The
waves were manageable but the problem was they
built up very quickly, they broke on top which
wouldn't have been very pleasant in one of the
smaller boats. We had to back off occasionally.
We went to the trysail but we were still doing
9 knots even with the trysail."
Then
the brains trust on Aera spotted something on
a weather file that tempted them even further
out into the Tasman Sea. "We got this grib
file yesterday morning which showed a bit of a
left-hand shift going through. At that point we
were heading towards Tasmania but we tacked back
and went south again, and it came in. Beauty!"
With
all the talk of survival sailing, there hasn't
been much talk of windshifts and the other niceties
of tactical racing. But Aera's bold move may prove
to be one that earns them The Tattersalls Cup,
the trophy for handicap victory in the Rolex Sydney
Hobart. Fanstone is not allowing himself the luxury
of believing he has won yet. "We can only
tell with the boats that are here, some of the
small boats could have a blinder. It's a bit early
to say. You have to wait until everyone finishes,
don't you?"
Fanstone
said he was happy just to have fulfilled Aera's
pre-race plan of beating all her similar-sized
rivals such as Ichi Ban and Yendys. "All
the way through the Rolex Trophy series we were
checking in with them, seeing where we were strong
and where we were weak. All we could do was win
our part of the fleet, we can't influence what
happens in front or behind us."
Other
finishers during the day were the 66-foot AAPT,
Sean Langman's lightweight downwind flyer, and
George Snow's Jutson 79 Brindabella. Langman finished
runner-up on line honours to Nicorette despite
being heavily optimised for downwind sailing.
This race had been a hard upwind slog for Langman
and his small crew of eight, which included Australia's
Olympic 49er skiff representatives in Athens earlier
this year, Chris Nicholson and Gary Boyd.
AAPT
surged down the New South Wales coast on the first
day of the race, but managed to find a patch of
no wind in an otherwise wind-ravaged Bass Strait.
Langman could do nothing as the bigger boats stomped
away from him. Frustration and the desire to make
up the lost ground caused Langman and his skiff
sailors to put the hammer down. In the process
he made an error that could have cost him the
boat. "We were trying to get further west
and using too much of the waterballast and it
knocked us down."
The
boat was on its side, the mast parallel with the
water, pinned down by the water in the ballast
tank. Water was dangerously close to leaking through
the main hatch. "I didn,t quite see my life
pass before my eyes," said Langman, "but
it was pretty serious. We dropped the jib, moved
more water into the other tank and just tried
to get the mast pointing towards the sky."
Once
he'd recovered from that, Langman went into survival
mode, and as with Nicorette, he profited from
the conservative, shore-hugging approach.
The
Bureau of Meteorology forecast predicts another
day of southerlies, but with a number of smaller
yachts still in the hunt tomorrow will determine
whether Aera's bold move out to sea is the one
that wins the coveted Tattersalls Cup.
Five
yachts have finished, 57 are still racing and
54 yachts have retired
Provisional
Line honours standings, recorded at 1800 (AEDT)
local time, 29 December 2004
1.
Nicorette finished at 05:10:44 hours
2. AAPT - finished at 11:40:42 hours
3. Brindabella - finished at 13:56:50 hours
4. Aera - finished at 15:43:43
5. Seriously Ten - finished at 16:16:38 hours
Provisional
IRC standings, recorded at 1800 (AEDT), 29 December
2004
1. Aera
2. Nicorette
3. AAPT
4. Brindabella
POSITION
REPORTING
Website: www.rolexsydneyhobart.com
featuring Yacht Tracker which charts 10 minute
position updates from each competing yacht.