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Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race

The Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is an annual event hosted by the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, starting in Sydney, New South Wales, on Boxing Day and finishing in Hobart, Tasmania. The race distance is approximately 630 nautical miles (1,170 km).[1] The race is run in conjunction with the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania, and is widely considered to be one of the most difficult yacht races in the world.[2]

Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race
Map of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race route
First held1945
StartSydney, New South Wales, Australia
FinishHobart, Tasmania, Australia
Competitors109 (2022)
ChampionCelestial (on handicap)
Andoo Comanche (Line Honours)
Most titlesFreya; Love & War; "Ichi Ban" (3) (on handicap)
Wild Oats XI (9) (line honours)
TV partner(s)Seven Network
Websiterolexsydneyhobart.com
InfoTrack leads the fleet through Sydney Heads and south to Hobart in ideal, if smoky conditions at the start of the 75th Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race in 2019

The race was initially planned to be a cruise by Peter Luke and some friends who had formed a club for those who enjoyed cruising as opposed to racing; however, when a visiting British Royal Navy Officer, Captain John Illingworth, suggested it be made a race, the event was born. Since the inaugural race in 1945, the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race has grown over the decades to become one of the top three offshore yacht races in the world[citation needed], and it now attracts maxi yachts from all around the globe. The 2019 race was the 75th edition.

Australia's foremost offshore sailing prize is The George Adams Tattersall Cup, awarded to the ultimate winner of the handicap competition based on the length, shape, weight and sail dimensions of the yacht. Much public attention however, focuses on the race for "line honours" – the first boat across the finishing line, typically the newest and largest Maxi yacht in the fleet.

Along with the Newport-Bermuda Race and the Fastnet Race, it is considered one of the classic big offshore races with each distance approximately 625 nautical miles (719 mi; 1,158 km).

In 2017, LDV Comanche set a new race record finishing in 1 day, 9 hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds, beating Perpetual Loyal's record of 1 day, 13 hours, 31 minutes and 20 seconds, set the previous year.[3] Wild Oats XI, who crossed the line first, received a 1-hour penalty for her role in a near-miss collision at the beginning of the race and disregard of the starboard rule, handing LDV Comanche line honours.[4] Wild Oats XI completed the course in an unofficial record time of 1 day, 08 hours, 48 minutes and 50 seconds.

Wild Oats XI has won line honours on 9 separate occasions (2005–2008, 2010, 2012–2014, 2018) and is the first boat to have claimed the treble – race record, line honours and overall winner.[5]

History Edit

 
Investec Loyal about to win the 2011 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race

The Bass Strait, and the waters of the Pacific Ocean immediately to its east are renowned for their high winds and difficult seas. Although the race mostly takes place in the Tasman Sea, the shallowness of Bass Strait and the proximity to the race course means that the fleet is very much under the influence of the Strait as they transit from the mainland to Flinders Island. Even though the race is held in the Australian summer, southerly buster storms often make the Sydney–Hobart race cold, bumpy, and very challenging for the crew. It is typical for a considerable number of yachts to retire, often at Eden on the New South Wales south coast, the last sheltered harbour before Flinders Island.

The first Sydney to Hobart race was held in 1945. The race was initially planned to be a cruise by Peter Luke and some friends who had formed a club for those who enjoyed cruising as opposed to racing; however, when a visiting British Royal Navy Officer, Captain John Illingworth, suggested it be made a race, the event was born.[6] The inaugural race had nine starters, including the Kathleen Gillett, captained by renowned marine artist Jack Earl.[7] John Illingworth's Rani, built at Speers Point was the winner, taking six days, 14 hours and 22 minutes.[8] Race records for the fastest (elapsed) time dropped rapidly. However, it took 21 years for the 1975 record by Kialoa from the United States to be broken by the German yacht Morning Glory in 1996, and then only by a dramatic 29 minutes, as she tacked up the River Derwent against the clock. In 1999 Denmark's Nokia sailed the course in one day, 19 hours, 48 minutes and two seconds, a record which stood until 2005 when Wild Oats XI won line and handicap honours in 1 day 18 hr 40 min 10 sec.

 
Winning times from 1945

There have been some notable achievements by yachts over the years. Sydney yacht, Morna, won the second, third and fourth races (1946–1948) and then, under new owners Frank and John Livingston from Victoria, took a further four titles as Kurrewa IV in 1954, 1956, 1957 and 1960. Other yachts to win three or more titles are Astor (1961, 1963 and 1964) and Bumblebee IV firstly in 1979 and then again in 1988 and 1990 as Ragamuffin. When Wild Oats XI won back-to-back titles in 2006, it was the first yacht to do so since Astor in the 1960s.[9] Wild Oats XI claimed its third consecutive line honours title in the 2007 race, re-writing history by being only the second yacht after Rani in the inaugural 1945 race to win line and handicap honours and break the race record in the same year (2005) and then only the second yacht after Morna to win three line honours titles in a row. In 2008, Wild Oats XI broke Morna's long-standing record of three titles in a row, by completing a four-in-a-row, the first yacht to achieve that remarkable achievement.[10] For the handicap race the highly respected Halvorsen brothers' Freya won three titles back-to-back (the only yacht in history to do so) between 1963 and 1965. Although not consecutive, Love & War equalled Freya's three titles by winning its third in 2006 to add to its 1974 and 1978 titles.

In the 1994 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race, the making waves foundation's crew were the first fully disabled team to compete in an ocean race and Australian Paralympic sitting volleyball player Albert Lee was a part of this team.[11]

The 1998 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race was marred by tragedy when, during an exceptionally strong storm (which had similar strength winds to a lower-category hurricane), five boats sank and six people died. Of the 115 boats that started, only 44 made it to Hobart. As a result, the crew eligibility rules were tightened, requiring a higher minimum age and experience. G. Bruce Knecht wrote a book about this race, The Proving Ground.[12] A coronial enquiry into the race was critical of both the race management at the time and the Bureau of Meteorology.[13]

In 1999 the race record was broken by Nokia, a water-ballasted Volvo Ocean 60 (VO60) yacht. She sailed the course in 1 day, 19 hours, 48 minutes and 2 seconds. Brindabella reached Hobart just under one hour later (1 day, 20 hours, 46 minutes, 33 seconds) and Wild Thing was a close third (1 day, 21 hours, 13 minutes, 37 seconds). The previous Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race record had been set by Morning Glory (2 days, 14 hours, 7 minutes, 10 seconds) in 1996.[14]

 
Sydney to Hobart entrants moored up at Rushcutters Bay, 25 December 2004
 
Spectators in Sydney Harbour at the 2022 race

In 2004 only 59 yachts completed the course of the 116 who set out from Sydney. Storms hit the race. The super maxi Skandia capsized after losing her keel.[15] In 2005, Wild Oats XI became the first boat since Rani to win the "treble", taking Line Honours, winning the Corrected Handicap (IRC), and breaking the course record. (1d 18h 40 m 10s, over 1hr off of Nokia's record.)

In 1982 Condor of Burmuda won the Sydney to Hobart (1981) which was the closest ever finish, winning by just seven seconds against Apollo III during a gruelling match race up the River Derwent.

In 2006, 78 boats started the race, including entrants from the United Kingdom, Canada, the Netherlands, Italy, New Zealand, every Australian state and the Australian Capital Territory. The race started on schedule at 13:00 Australian Eastern Daylight Saving Time.[16] Wild Oats XI, owned by Bob Oatley and skippered by Mark Richards, crossed the finish line at 21:52 on 28 December 2006 to take line honours with an elapsed time of 2 days, 8 hours, 52 minutes and 33 seconds.[9] Wild Oats XI became the first yacht to win the race in consecutive years since 1964 and only the sixth yacht to achieve this since the race's inception. Love & War, owned by Peter Kurts and skippered by Lindsay May, won the race overall (IRC Handicap) in a corrected time of 3 days, 22 hours 2 minutes and 37 seconds. Love & War became only the second yacht to win the race three times (1974, 1978 and 2006). The yacht Freya won the race in three consecutive years between 1963 and 1965. Gillawa from the Australian Capital Territory, skippered by David Kent, was the sixty-ninth and last boat to complete the 2006 race, making it the third consecutive year that the yacht was last in the fleet.[9]

The longest surviving skipper from the inaugural race, Peter Luke, who contributed to the formation of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia and the establishment of the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race, died on 23 September 2007 aged 92. His yacht, Wayfarer, still holds the record for the slowest elapsed time. One of two surviving sailors from the original race – Geoffrey Ruggles from the Wayfarer crew, died in July 2019,[17] leaving John Gordon from the Horizon crew.[18][unreliable source?]

By the November 2007 race entry deadline, 90 yachts had nominated for entry including four 90-foot maxis, three of them wanting to prevent Wild Oats XI creating history and winning three line honours titles in a row. A little over a week prior to the race, New Zealand maxi Maximus withdrew after cracking its keel. Three-time and 2006 handicap winner, Love & War, was not one of the applications for entry and may have raced her last Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race in 2006. Wild Oats XI went on to create history by winning its third consecutive line honours title and becoming only the second yacht to do so.[10] Rosebud (USA) won the race on corrected time. John Walker became the oldest skipper in the history of the race at age 85 and Phillip's Foote Witchdoctor bettered its own record and set a mark of 27 races as the most by a yacht.[10]

 
Hobart's Constitution Dock is the arrival point for the fleet after they have completed the race, and usually witnesses scenes of celebration by many yachtsmen during the new year festivities.

On 3 November 2008 at the close of entries, 113 yachts had nominated for entry with only one other 90-foot maxi (Skandia) to challenge Wild Oats XI and stop it creating history by winning four consecutive line honours titles and becoming the only yacht to do so. Wild Oats XI achieved this and Bob Steel won his second Tattersall Cup with Quest, the second yacht with the same name to win the handicap title.[10][19]

The 2009 fleet comprised 99 starters. In the 2008 race, Wild Oats XI had equalled Morna/Kurrewa IV's record of three consecutive line honours victories, which Morna achieved in 1946, 1947 and 1948, and was attempting to pass the record in its own right in 2009.

In the event however, Neville Crichton's New Zealand entry Alpha Romeo II passed Wild Oats XI early on and never relinquished her lead, finishing in an elapsed time of 2 days, 9 hours, 2 minutes and 10 seconds. Wild Oats XI came in second and United Kingdom-based ICAP Leopard came in third.

Sailors who have achieved outstanding commitment to the race are represented most of all by John Bennetto (dec), Lou Abrahams and Tony Cable who, after the 2007 race, had each sailed 44 races. Skippers Frank and John Livingston won four line honours titles while Claude Plowman, Peter Warner, S.A "Huey" Long, Jim Kilroy and Bob Bell have each won three. Trygve and Magnus Halvorsen have won four handicap honours titles while a number of skippers have won two handicap titles.

Rolex has been the naming rights sponsor of the race since 2002, and since then the race has been known as the Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race. Traditionally, crews of yachts celebrate on New Year's Eve at Constitution Dock in Hobart, with the Customs House Hotel a favourite venue for Sydney–Hobart yachtsmen.

The 2020 race was cancelled due to an outbreak of COVID-19 in Sydney's north. The Cruising Yacht Club said it was "unrealistic" to proceed with the race after the Tasmanian government declared Greater Sydney a "medium risk" zone, requiring all participants to quarantine for 14 days on arrival in Tasmania. It was the first time the race was not conducted in its 76-year history.[20]

2020 saw the introduction of a two-handed division[21] (only two crew members permitted) with its own trophy, the Two-Handed IRC Trophy. Due to the race being cancelled in 2020, the first two-handed entrants competed in the 2021 race.

 
Panorama of the 2007 Sydney–Hobart Yacht Race.

"Holy Grail" Edit

With the smashing of the Sydney–Hobart Race record in 1999 by Nokia—and a host of other super-fast boats that completed the course in less than two days for the first time—the "Holy Grail" of the Sydney–Hobart race, a completion of the course in a time under the 40-hour mark, became a possibility. Many of the skippers competing in the Sydney–Hobart race in the 21st century have expressed a desire to be the first to record a time under the once thought of as impossible mark of 40 hours. In 2017, this goal was met when the race record was set by LDV Comanche to 33 hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds.[22]

Women's involvement Edit

Women first participated in the race in 1946. The first woman to take part was Jane Tate, whose boat Active was the only one to reach Hobart in 1946. Dagmar O'Brien, with boat Connella, also took part in that year but retired from the race before finishing. Thus, the Jane Tate Memorial Trophy is awarded each year to the first female skipper to complete the race.

In 1975, the first all-women crew sailed was the boat Barbarian, skippered by Vicky Willman.[citation needed]

In 1996, Kathy Collingridge crewed on One Time Sidewinder. She was the first Indigenous woman to take part in the race.[citation needed]

Since then up to 2021, there have been another 12. The following is the list of all female crews to compete:

No. Year Boat Other name Club Sail no. Skipper Navigator
1 1975 Barbarian Barbarian MHYC MH260 Vicky Willman Sheila Beach
2 1989 Belles Long Ranger Otaga CYCA 1170 Christine Evans (WoW) Beth Higgs (2)
3 1992 Ella Bache Beyond Thunderdome MHYC 5500 Adrienne Cahalan (2)
3 1992 Nadia IV Nadia IV RSYS 4040 Kerry Goudge (4) (WoW)
5 1993 Telecom MobileNet Nadia IV CYCA 4040 Kerry Goudge (5) (WoW)
6 1994 Telecom MobileNet Nadia IV CYCA 4040 Kerry Goudge (6) (WoW)
6 1994 Brightstone, NZL RNZYS NZL 83 Teresa Borrell
6 1994 Qantas NZ Outward Bound BBYC NZL 4525 Gayle Melrose (2)
9 1995 WOW Nortel Nadia IV CYCA 4040 Kerry Goudge (7) (WoW)
10 1995 Mortgage Choice Cape Fear CYCA 5406 Amanda Wilmot (7)
11 2001 Amer Sports Too Costa Smeralda Lisa McDonald (USA/GBR) Genevieve White (AUS)
12 2017 Climate Action Now CYCA N11 Lisa Blair Libby Greenhalgh
13 2018 Wild Oats X HIYC 7001 Stacey Jackson (11) Elizabeth Greenhalgh (1)

In 2005, 24 women took part, including Adrienne Cahalan, who is famed for her around-the-world sailing, has been nominated several times for World Yachtswoman of the Year[23] and was Australian Yachtswoman of the Year for 2004–05. In 2005 she was part of the crew for the winning Wild Oats.

In 2011, Jessica Watson, known for her solo unassisted sail around the world at age 16, skippered the Sydney Hobart yacht race with a crew of six other young Australians and three Britons all aged 21 or under, making them some of the youngest ever to compete in the blue water classic.

In 2018, skippered by Stacey Jackson, Ocean Respect Racing (on Wild Oats X) became the first fully professional all women's crew to compete in the Sydney Hobart.[24]

In total, over a thousand women have taken part in the race.[25]

Rules Edit

 
The crew of 2005 winner Wild Oats XI.

The exact rules for the Tattersall Cup have changed over the years. In general, each boat's time is adjusted on the expected speed of the boat based on its size and other characteristics. The International Offshore Rules were superseded by the International Measurement System (IMS), and the IRC. For 1991, 1992 & 1993 races, the winners of the IOR and IMS categories were both declared Overall winners during the transition from IOR to IMS. However, the Tattersall Cup was awarded only to the Overall IOR winner during this period. Since 1994 there has been only one Overall winner, from 1994 to 2003 being decided using IMS, but from the 2004 onwards the Overall winner of the Tattersall Cup has been decided using IRC, with IMS dropped altogether as a handicap system.[26] In theory, this should make for an even competition between yachts of all sizes, however in practice often only the newest and most advanced boats (regardless of size) can sail fast relative to their rating. In addition, in a race of the length of the Sydney–Hobart weather conditions after the maxi yachts have finished can often determine whether they will win on handicap – if the winds become more favourable after they finish, they will lose on handicap, if they become less favourable they will win.

The race is conducted under the Racing Rules of Sailing determined and published by the International Sailing Federation. For the 2005 race, the event organisers removed certain restrictions on the boats. As successful sailing is based on a good power-to-weight ratio, larger sails are expected to help break race records.

Two-handed division Edit

2020 saw the introduction of a two-handed division[27] (only two crew members permitted) with its own trophy, the Two-Handed IRC Trophy.

Due to the race being cancelled in 2020, the first two-handed entrants competed in the 2021 race, which attracted 18 entrants.[28] Two-handed yachts were not included in the Tattersall Cup because organisers could not establish an equitable handicap due to two-handed yachts’ use of autopilots.[29]

In 2021 rough conditions meant that just seven two handers made it through the first night, with the others retiring at port.[30] The first two-handed category was won by Disko Trooper-Contender Sailcloth, a J/99.[31]

In 2022, two-handed yachts were allowed to contend for the Tattersalls Cup.[32] There were 22 entries making it the fastest growing section of the race.[28] The 2022 2-handed IRC was won by 'Mistral', a Lombard 34. 'Mistral' finished 29th in the Tattersalls Cup.[33]

Yachts Edit

The fleet comprises mostly sloops; that is, yachts with a single mast on which is hoisted a fore-and-aft rigged mainsail and a single jib or Genoa, plus extras such as a spinnaker.

The race has encouraged innovation in yacht design. Between 1945 and 2005, the most successful yacht designer has been the New Zealand designer Bruce Farr, who has designed 15 overall winners.

 
77th (2022) Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race at 16 minutes after the start

Winners and fleet sizes Edit

[34]

Year Line honours Elapsed time
d/hh:mm:ss
Handicap winner Corrected time
d/hh:mm:ss
fleet size
at start

at finish
1945   Rani 6/14:22   Rani 4/09:38 9 8
1946   Morna 5/02:53:33   Christina 4/11:53:27 19 11
1947   Morna 5/03:03:54   Westward 4/00:24:56 28 21
1948   Morna 4/05:01:21   Westward 3/07:45:48 18 13
1949   Waltzing Matilda 5/10:33:10   Trade Winds 3/23:39:43 15 13
1950   Margaret Rintoul 5/05:28:35   Nerida 3/20:17:13 16 14
1951   Margaret Rintoul 4/02:29:01   Struen Marie 2/19:48:26 14 12
1952   Nocturne 6/02:34:47   Ingrid 4/09:56:18 17 17
1953   Solveig IV 5/07:12:50   Ripple 3/16:12:12 24 20
1954   Kurrewa IV (formerly Morna) 5:06:09:47   Solveig IV 3/17:58:01 17 15
1955   Even 4/18:13:14   Moonbi 3/09:21:05 17 16
1956   Kurrewa IV (formerly Morna) 4:04:31:44   Solo 3/08:33:52 28 26
1957   Kurrewa IV (formerly Morna) 3:18:30:39   Anitra V 3/00:55:37 20 18
1958   Solo 5/02:32:52   Siandra 3/13:46:35 22 19
1959   Solo 4/13:33:12   Cherana 3/08:33:02 30 24
1960   Kurrewa IV (formerly Morna) 4:08:11:15   Siandra 3/07:48:04 32 30
1961   Astor 4/04:42:11   Rival 3/03:57:31 35 33
1962   Ondine 3/03:49:16   Solo 2/12:45:14 42 40
1963   Astor 4/10:53:00   Freya 3/06:03:17 44 34
1964   Astor 3/20:05:05   Freya 3/05:58:14 38 31
1965   Stormvogel 3/20:30:09   Freya 3/10:03:26 53 49
1966   Fidelis 4/08:39:43   Cadence 4/02:46:24 46 44
1967   Pen Duick III 4/04:10:31   Rainbow II 3/16:39:15 66 59
1968   Ondine II 4/03:20:02   Koomooloo 3/13:38:52 67 54
1969   Crusade 3/15:07:40   Morning Cloud 3/04:25:57 79 75
1970   Buccaneer 3/14:06:12   Pacha 3/10:07:39 61 47
1971   Kialoa II 3/12:46:21   PathFinder 3/03:14:34 79 76
1972   American Eagle 3/04:42:39   American Eagle 3/02:15:59 79 75
1973   Helsal 3/01:32:09   Ceil III 2/17:28:28 92 92
1974   Ondine III 3/13:51:56   Love & War 3/13:25:02 63 58
1975   Kialoa III 2/14:36:56   Rampage 2/13:16:56 102 99
1976   Ballyhoo 3/07:59:26   Piccolo 3/07:45:07 85 70
1977   Kialoa III 3/10:14:09   Kialoa III 3/13:58:10 131 72
1978   Apollo 4/02:23:24   Love & War 3/12:13:00 97 87
1979   Bumblebee IV 3/01:45:52   Screw Loose 3/03:31:06 147 142
1980   New Zealand 2/18:45:41   New Zealand 2/21:13:29 102 93
1981   Vengeance 3/22:30:00   Zeus II 3/19:25:59 159 144
1982   Condor of Bermuda 3/00:59:17   Scallywag 2/19:19:16 118 108
1983   Condor 3/00:50:29   Challenge II 2/23:07:42 173 158
1984   New Zealand 3/11:31:21   Indian Pacific 3/07:45:03 151 46
1985   Apollo 3/04:32:28   Sagacious 3/04:34:37 179 146
1986   Condor 2/23:26:25   Ex Tension 3/01:14:30 123 106
1987   Sovereign 2/21:58:08   Sovereign 3/01:58:41 154 146
1988   Ragamuffin (formerly Bumblebee IV) 3/15:29:27   Illusion 3/18:20:35 119 81
1989   Drumbeat 3/06:21:34   Challenge II 3/02:18:45 126 101
1990   Ragamuffin (formerly Bumblebee IV) 2/21:05:33   Sagacious V (IOR)
  Doctor Who (IMS)
2/19:44:32
2:10:06:28
105 86
1991   Brindabella 3/11:14:09   She's Apples (IMS)
  Atara (IOR)
3/15:19:20
2:20:05:11
99 91
1992   New Zealand Endeavour 2/19:19:18   Assassin (IMS)
  Ragamuffin (IOR)
3/10:50:11
2:21:21:04
110 102
1993   Ninety Seven 4/00:54:11   Micropay Cuckoos Nest (IMS)
  Solbourne Wild Oats (IOR)
3/18:45:10
3:20:36:30
104 38
1994   Tasmania (formerly New Zealand Endeavour) 2/16:48:04   Raptor (IMS) 2/11:41:00 371 309
1995   Sayonara 3/00:53:35   Terra Firma 3/10:22:36 98 92
1996   Morning Glory 2/14:07:10   Ausmaid 2/12:35:59 95 77
1997   Brindabella 2/23:37:12   Beau Geste 2/17:21:27 114 99
1998   Sayonara 2/19:03:32   AFR Midnight Rambler 2/12:36:23 115 44
1999   Nokia 1/19:48:02   Yendys 1/20:32:53 79 49
2000   Nicorette II 2/14:02:09   SAP Ausmaid (formerly Ausmaid) 2/19:13:38 82 58
2001   Assa Abloy 2/20:46:43   Bumblebee V 2/19:13:38 75 57
2002   Alfa Romeo I 2/04:58:52   Quest 2/19:13:38 57 55
2003   Skandia 2/15:14:06   First National Real Estate 3/14:14:17 56 52
2004   Nicorette III 2/16:00:44   Aera (IRC) 4/02:52:09 116 59
2005   Wild Oats XI 1/18:40:10   Wild Oats XI 3/03:54:32 85 80
2006   Wild Oats XI 2/08:52:33   Love & War 3/22:02:37 78 69
2007   Wild Oats XI 1/21:24:32   Rosebud 3/09:32:14 82 79
2008   Wild Oats XI 1/20:34:14   Quest II 2/17:43:32 100 92
2009   Alfa Romeo II 2/09:02:10   Two True 4/07:57:43 100 94
2010   Wild Oats XI 2/07:37:20   Secret Men's Business 3.5 4/01:29:40 87 69
2011   Investec Loyal 2/06:14:18   Loki 3/22:34:32 88 76
2012   Wild Oats XI 1/18:23:12   Wild Oats XI 3/10:26:31 76 71
2013   Wild Oats XI 2/06:07:27   Victoire 3/18:27:43 94 84
2014   Wild Oats XI 2/02:30:00   Wild Rose (formerly Solbourne Wild Oats) 3/07:04:43 117 103
2015   Comanche 2/08:58:30   Balance V (formerly Quest II) 4/07:27:13 108 77
2016   Perpetual LOYAL 1/13:31:20   Giacomo 2/16:13:37 88 83
2017   Comanche 1/09:15:24   Ichi Ban 2/12:13:31 102 96
2018[35]   Wild Oats XI 1/19:07:21   Alive 3/06:41:16 85 79
2019[36]   Comanche 1/18:30:24   Ichi Ban 3/04:11:05 157 154[37]
2020 Race cancelled due to the COVID-19 Pandemic.[20]
2021[38]   Black Jack 2/12:37:17   Ichi Ban 4/10:17:39 88 50[37]
2022   Andoo Comanche[39] 1/11:56:48   Celestial[40] 2/16:35:26 109 100

Notes:

  • Time in bold denotes new race record time.
  • No first place in 1985. Drake's Prayer was disqualified after winning on handicap, but 1985 NOR did not allow for lower placed finishers to move up following a disqualification.
  • In the years 1990–1993 the winner of each of the IMS and IOR classes were declared the joint handicap winners. From 1994 to 2003 the IMS handicap rule was used to determine the overall winner, and from 2004 the IRC rule has been used.
  • The 1975 Kialoa III was a ketch rig which was modified in 1976 and returned as a sloop to win line honors and overall in 1977.
  • Apollo in 1978 and 1985 were different yachts.
  • New Zealand in 1980 and 1984 were different yachts.
  • Brindabella in 1991 & 1997 were different yachts.

Records and statistics Edit

 
Wild Oats XI, the 2005–2008, 2010, 2012–2014, 2018 line honours winner, and 2005 and 2012 handicap honours winner about to finish the 2011 Sydney to Hobart
 
A graph of Sydney Hobart starters and finishers from 1945 to 2018
  • Inaugural race winner, 1945: Rani (line and handicap honours as well as the inaugural race record)
  • Fastest race: 1 day 9h 15m 24s (LDV Comanche, NSW), 2017[41]
  • Total fleet: 5,509 yachts (81.01 yachts per race)
  • Fleet finishing statistics: Of 5,509 yachts who have started the race since 1945, a total of 4,548 (82.56%) have completed and 961 (17.44%) yachts have retired.
  • Highest retirement %: 70% of the fleet in 1984. On average after 62 races, 81.7% of the fleet finishes annually.
  • Largest fleet: 371 starters, 1994
  • Smallest fleet: 9 starters, 1945 (first race)
  • Smallest yacht: 27 ft (8.23m) Klinger (NSW) 1978
  • Smallest yacht Line Honours winner: 35 ft (10.67m) – Nocturne (NSW) 1952 and Rani (UK) 1945.
  • Largest yachts entered: 100 ft (30.48m) – Wild Oats XI (NSW, 2009–2019, 2022), Black Jack (formerly Alfa Romeo) (MON, 2009, 2017–2019, 2021–2022), Scallywag (formerly Investec LOYAL/Ragamuffin 100) (HK, 2009–2016, 2018–2019, 2021), ICAP Leopard (UK, 2009), Rapture (USA, 2009), Wild Thing (VIC, 2013), LawConnect (formerly Perpetual LOYAL/Infotrack) (NSW, 2013–2019, 2021–2022), Rio 100 (USA, 2014), Comanche (NSW, 2014–2015, 2017–2019, 2022) and CQS (NSW, 2016).
  • Largest yacht Line Honours winner: 100 ft (30.48m) – Alfa Romeo (NZ) 2009, Wild Oats XI (NSW) 2010, 2012–14, 2018 Investec LOYAL (NSW) 2011, Comanche (USA/NSW) 2015, 2017, 2019, 2022, Perpetual LOYAL (NSW) 2016, Black Jack (MON) 2021.
  • Most Line Honours victories: Wild Oats XI, 9 victories
  • Most Line Honours victories by skipper: Mark Richards (New South Wales) Australia, 9 victories.
  • Most Handicap Honours victories: Freya (NSW), Love & War (NSW) and Ichi Ban (NSW) 3 victories each
  • Most Handicap Honours victories by skipper: Magnus and Trygve Halvorsen (NSW) Australia, 4 victories
  • Oldest competitor: Maluka was built in 1932 and raced in 2008 aged 76. The 9.1-metre yacht was restored by Sean Langman
  • Most races by skipper: 49 Tony Cable (New South Wales), 44 John Bennetto (Tas – dec), Lou Abrahams (Vic – dec 2014).
  • Race treble: Race record, Line & Handicap Honours in the same year:
  • Double: Line & Handicap Honours in the same year:
    • 1945, Rani (UK);
    • 1972, American Eagle (USA);
    • 1977, Kialoa III (USA);
    • 1980, New Zealand (NZ);
    • 1987, Sovereign (NSW);
    • 2005, 2012 Wild Oats XI (NSW);
  • Back-to-back Line Honours titles:
    • Morna (NSW) 1946, 1947 and 1948;
    • Margaret Rintoul (NSW) 1950 and 1951;
    • Kurrewa IV (Formerly Morna) Vic 1956 and 1957;
    • Solo (NSW) 1958 and 1959;
    • Astor (NSW) 1963 and 1964; and
    • Wild Oats XI (NSW) 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008.
  • Back-to-back Handicap Honours titles:
    • Freya (NSW) 1963, 1964 and 1965;
    • Westward (Tas) 1947 and 1948.
  • Closest Line Honours race finish: 7 seconds, 1982; Condor of Bermuda (Bermuda) defeated Apollo (NSW)
  • Closest finish for Handicap Honours: 1 minute and 43 seconds also in 1982 when Scallyway (NSW, Australia) defeated Audacity (NSW, Australia)
  • Yachts winning Line Honours to be later disqualified: Wild Wave (1953), Nirvana (1983) and Rothmans (1990)
  • Yachts to win Handicap Honours to be later disqualified: Drake's Prayer (1985)
  • Most successful yacht designer: Bruce Farr (NZ), 15 overall winners
  • First known female sailors: Jane Tate and Dagmar O’Brien (both in 1946). O'Brien's yacht (Connella) retired, thus Tate has the honour of being the first female to complete the event and a trophy is now named in her honour.
  • First all-female-crewed yacht: Barbarian, 1975 (skipper: Vicki Wilman)
  • Most races for one woman: 15 by Adrienne Cahalan (AUS); (navigator for 2000 winner Nicorette)
  • First indigenous woman to take part: Kathy Collingridge, former NSW award-winning police officer, age 37, crewed on One Time Sidewinder 1996
  • In 1994 at the 50th Sydney to Hobart, Albert Lee was a part of the making waves foundation's team which was the first time a fully disabled crew had sailed in an ocean race.[42]
  • Worst disaster: 1998, 6 sailors died and 5 yachts sunk; 115 yachts started but only 43 finished.
  • Sunken yachts: Clywd (1993), Adjuster (1993), Winston Churchill (1998), VC Offshore Stand Aside (1998), Sword of Orion (1998), Miintinta (1998), Midnight Special (1998), Ray White Koomooloo (2006) and Georgia (2008).
  • Yachtsmen to have lost their lives: Mike Bannister (Winston Churchill, 1998), Glyn Charles (Sword of Orion, 1998), Ray Crawford (Billabong, 1988), John Dean (Winston Churchill, 1998), Bruce Guy (Business Post Naiad, 1998), Jim Lawler (Winston Churchill, 1998), Wally Russell (Yahoo II, 1984), John Sarney (Inca, 1973), Phillip Skeggs (Business Post Naiad, 1998), Peter Taylor (BP Flying Colours, 1989) and Hugh (Barry) Vallance (Zilvergeest III, 1975)

Sponsors, supporters and prizes Edit

Rolex has been the naming rights sponsor of the race since 2002.[43] Other sponsors of the race include Appliances Online, Nortel Networks[44] and TasPorts.[45]

It generally costs each of the major contenders for line honors millions of dollars to equip themselves for the race, however there is no prize money. The only award is a Rolex watch from the race sponsor for the fastest and handicap winning yacht captains. Entrants compete for the honor of the title.

The overall (handicap) winner on corrected time is awarded The George Adams Tattersall Cup, first awarded to the winner of the 1946 race (and retrospectively to the 1945 winner).[46]

Among the other trophies awarded during the race are the J H Illingworth Challenge Cup for the line honours boat and the Jane Tate Memorial Trophy for the first female skipper.[47]

In popular culture Edit

The race features in the 2007 novel The Storm Prophet by Hector Macdonald.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ . About. Archived from the original on 12 July 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
  2. ^ "Tough legacy of a Sydney classic". BBC News. 29 December 2001. Retrieved 24 May 2010.
  3. ^ "Standings – Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2017". rolexsydneyhobart.com. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  4. ^ Vindin, Nick (28 December 2017). "Sydney to Hobart: Comanche wins line honours as protest against Wild Oats XI upheld". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  5. ^ "Wild Oats XI wins Sydney to Hobart and sets new race record". The Daily Telegraph. 28 December 2012.
  6. ^ "A founding father of the Sydney to Hobart". The Sydney Morning Herald. 18 October 2007. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
  7. ^ scheme=AGLSTERMS. AglsAgent; corporateName=State Library of New South Wales; address=Macquarie Street, Sydney (23 March 2021). "Great love story of the seas revealed". State Library of NSW. Retrieved 24 January 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ "Sydney Hobart Race: Everything you need to know". Yachting World. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
  9. ^ a b c . rolexsydneyhobart.com. Archived from the original on 19 August 2006. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  10. ^ a b c d "The requested URL was not found on this server". www.google.com. Retrieved 1 June 2021.[dead link]
  11. ^ "Sailors with disABILITES Yacht Racing History - Making Waves Foundation". makingwavesfoundation.com.au. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  12. ^ Knecht, G. Bruce (2001). The Proving Ground: The Inside Story of the 1998 Sydney to Hobart Race. Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown, and Company. ISBN 978-0-316-49955-2.
  13. ^ . about.com. Archived from the original on 28 December 2007. Retrieved 17 December 2005.
  14. ^ Riviera, Larry. . goaustralia.about.com. Archived from the original on 20 September 2005. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  15. ^ . about.com. Archived from the original on 21 December 2005. Retrieved 17 December 2005.
  16. ^ . goaustralia.about.com. Archived from the original on 20 September 2005. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  17. ^ "Vale Geoff Ruggles - one of two surviving men from first Sydney Hobart Yacht Race". mysailing.com.au. Mysailing. 1 August 2019. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
  18. ^ From conversation with Geoffrey Ruggles, 9/1/2013
  19. ^ . rolexsydneyhobart.com. 28 December 2006. Archived from the original on 11 October 2007. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  20. ^ a b "Sydney to Hobart yacht race cancelled due to NSW coronavirus outbreak". ABC News. 19 December 2020. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
  21. ^ Warren, Adrian (25 December 2021). "Two-Handed division makes SydHob debut". 7news.com.au. 7 News Network. Retrieved 27 December 2021.
  22. ^ "Sydney-Hobart 2016: Perpetual Loyal smashes Wild Oats' race record". CNN. 27 December 2016.
  23. ^ "Cahalan gets top yachtswoman nod". The Sydney Morning Herald. 6 October 2004.
  24. ^ Clarey, Christopher (25 December 2018). "Libby Greenhalgh Keeps Her Eye on the Weather for Wild Oats X". The New York Times.
  25. ^ Heinrich, Karen (January 2006). "Taking to the sea". The Australian Women's Weekly. p. 230.
  26. ^ "ROLEX SYDNEY HOBART YACHT RACE 2005" (PDF). cyca.com.au. (PDF) from the original on 27 December 2005. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  27. ^ "Two-Handed division makes SydHob debut". 7NEWS. 25 December 2021. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  28. ^ a b Segaert, Anthony (21 December 2022). "Two-person crews 'excited' to finally get a shot at overall prize". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  29. ^ Keoghan, Sarah (25 December 2021). "Sydney to Hobart's biggest names slam 'ridiculous' call to make autopilot boats ineligible for overall prize". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  30. ^ "The 2021 Rolex Yacht Race Sydney to Hobart | NAVIS April / May 2022 | NAVIS Luxury Yacht Issues". www.navisyachts.com. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  31. ^ Pearson, Di (1 January 2022). "Disko Trooper takes inaugural Rolex Sydney Hobart Two-Handed honours". Live Sail Die. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  32. ^ "Two-handed high hopes in Rolex Sydney Hobart". www.sail-world.com. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  33. ^ "Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2022". rolexsydneyhobart.com. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  34. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 January 2007. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  35. ^ Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2018, Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, retrieved 31 December 2018
  36. ^ Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 28 December 2019
  37. ^ a b Standings Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race
  38. ^ Honour roll - 2021 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 01 Jan 2022
  39. ^ "Andoo Comanche wins Line Honours in 2022 Rolex Sydney Hobart". Rolex Sydney Hobart. 28 December 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  40. ^ "Celestial wins 2022 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race". Rolex Sydney Hobart. 29 December 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  41. ^ "Standings – Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2017". rolexsydneyhobart.com. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  42. ^ "Sailors with disABILITES Yacht Racing History – Making Waves Foundation". makingwavesfoundation.com.au. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  43. ^ "Rolex extends naming rights sponsorship of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race to 2015".
  44. ^ "Offshore's NorTel Sydney to Hoboard Official Race Issue" (PDF). Offshore Magazine. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  45. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 August 2012.
  46. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 August 2019.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 April 2021.
  • Ludeke, M. (2002) The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race: 1945 – 2001. Hobart: Ludeke Publishing.
  • Ludeke, M. (2014) (fourth edition) The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race. Hobart: Ludeke Publishing.
  • MotorSM 8 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  • Wilmap
  • Analysing Sydney to Hobart yacht race winning times 30 December 2015 at the Wayback MachineUniversity of Melbourne

External links Edit

  • Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race – Official site
  • NSW Maritime site – Aquatic Events(PDF)
  • Distance from Sydney to Hobart
  • Photos from the start of the 2009 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race 16 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Sydney to Hobart yacht race". Dictionary of Sydney. Dictionary of Sydney Trust. 2008. Retrieved 5 October 2015. [CC-By-SA]

sydney, hobart, yacht, race, rolex, sydney, hobart, yacht, race, annual, event, hosted, cruising, yacht, club, australia, starting, sydney, south, wales, boxing, finishing, hobart, tasmania, race, distance, approximately, nautical, miles, race, conjunction, wi. The Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is an annual event hosted by the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia starting in Sydney New South Wales on Boxing Day and finishing in Hobart Tasmania The race distance is approximately 630 nautical miles 1 170 km 1 The race is run in conjunction with the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania and is widely considered to be one of the most difficult yacht races in the world 2 Sydney to Hobart Yacht RaceMap of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race routeFirst held1945StartSydney New South Wales AustraliaFinishHobart Tasmania AustraliaCompetitors109 2022 ChampionCelestial on handicap Andoo Comanche Line Honours Most titlesFreya Love amp War Ichi Ban 3 on handicap Wild Oats XI 9 line honours TV partner s Seven NetworkWebsiterolexsydneyhobart wbr comInfoTrack leads the fleet through Sydney Heads and south to Hobart in ideal if smoky conditions at the start of the 75th Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race in 2019The race was initially planned to be a cruise by Peter Luke and some friends who had formed a club for those who enjoyed cruising as opposed to racing however when a visiting British Royal Navy Officer Captain John Illingworth suggested it be made a race the event was born Since the inaugural race in 1945 the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race has grown over the decades to become one of the top three offshore yacht races in the world citation needed and it now attracts maxi yachts from all around the globe The 2019 race was the 75th edition Australia s foremost offshore sailing prize is The George Adams Tattersall Cup awarded to the ultimate winner of the handicap competition based on the length shape weight and sail dimensions of the yacht Much public attention however focuses on the race for line honours the first boat across the finishing line typically the newest and largest Maxi yacht in the fleet Along with the Newport Bermuda Race and the Fastnet Race it is considered one of the classic big offshore races with each distance approximately 625 nautical miles 719 mi 1 158 km In 2017 LDV Comanche set a new race record finishing in 1 day 9 hours 15 minutes and 24 seconds beating Perpetual Loyal s record of 1 day 13 hours 31 minutes and 20 seconds set the previous year 3 Wild Oats XI who crossed the line first received a 1 hour penalty for her role in a near miss collision at the beginning of the race and disregard of the starboard rule handing LDV Comanche line honours 4 Wild Oats XI completed the course in an unofficial record time of 1 day 08 hours 48 minutes and 50 seconds Wild Oats XI has won line honours on 9 separate occasions 2005 2008 2010 2012 2014 2018 and is the first boat to have claimed the treble race record line honours and overall winner 5 Contents 1 History 2 Holy Grail 3 Women s involvement 4 Rules 5 Two handed division 6 Yachts 7 Winners and fleet sizes 8 Records and statistics 9 Sponsors supporters and prizes 10 In popular culture 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Investec Loyal about to win the 2011 Sydney to Hobart Yacht RaceThe Bass Strait and the waters of the Pacific Ocean immediately to its east are renowned for their high winds and difficult seas Although the race mostly takes place in the Tasman Sea the shallowness of Bass Strait and the proximity to the race course means that the fleet is very much under the influence of the Strait as they transit from the mainland to Flinders Island Even though the race is held in the Australian summer southerly buster storms often make the Sydney Hobart race cold bumpy and very challenging for the crew It is typical for a considerable number of yachts to retire often at Eden on the New South Wales south coast the last sheltered harbour before Flinders Island The first Sydney to Hobart race was held in 1945 The race was initially planned to be a cruise by Peter Luke and some friends who had formed a club for those who enjoyed cruising as opposed to racing however when a visiting British Royal Navy Officer Captain John Illingworth suggested it be made a race the event was born 6 The inaugural race had nine starters including the Kathleen Gillett captained by renowned marine artist Jack Earl 7 John Illingworth s Rani built at Speers Point was the winner taking six days 14 hours and 22 minutes 8 Race records for the fastest elapsed time dropped rapidly However it took 21 years for the 1975 record by Kialoa from the United States to be broken by the German yacht Morning Glory in 1996 and then only by a dramatic 29 minutes as she tacked up the River Derwent against the clock In 1999 Denmark s Nokia sailed the course in one day 19 hours 48 minutes and two seconds a record which stood until 2005 when Wild Oats XI won line and handicap honours in 1 day 18 hr 40 min 10 sec nbsp Winning times from 1945There have been some notable achievements by yachts over the years Sydney yacht Morna won the second third and fourth races 1946 1948 and then under new owners Frank and John Livingston from Victoria took a further four titles as Kurrewa IV in 1954 1956 1957 and 1960 Other yachts to win three or more titles are Astor 1961 1963 and 1964 and Bumblebee IV firstly in 1979 and then again in 1988 and 1990 as Ragamuffin When Wild Oats XI won back to back titles in 2006 it was the first yacht to do so since Astor in the 1960s 9 Wild Oats XI claimed its third consecutive line honours title in the 2007 race re writing history by being only the second yacht after Rani in the inaugural 1945 race to win line and handicap honours and break the race record in the same year 2005 and then only the second yacht after Morna to win three line honours titles in a row In 2008 Wild Oats XI broke Morna s long standing record of three titles in a row by completing a four in a row the first yacht to achieve that remarkable achievement 10 For the handicap race the highly respected Halvorsen brothers Freya won three titles back to back the only yacht in history to do so between 1963 and 1965 Although not consecutive Love amp War equalled Freya s three titles by winning its third in 2006 to add to its 1974 and 1978 titles In the 1994 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race the making waves foundation s crew were the first fully disabled team to compete in an ocean race and Australian Paralympic sitting volleyball player Albert Lee was a part of this team 11 The 1998 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race was marred by tragedy when during an exceptionally strong storm which had similar strength winds to a lower category hurricane five boats sank and six people died Of the 115 boats that started only 44 made it to Hobart As a result the crew eligibility rules were tightened requiring a higher minimum age and experience G Bruce Knecht wrote a book about this race The Proving Ground 12 A coronial enquiry into the race was critical of both the race management at the time and the Bureau of Meteorology 13 In 1999 the race record was broken by Nokia a water ballasted Volvo Ocean 60 VO60 yacht She sailed the course in 1 day 19 hours 48 minutes and 2 seconds Brindabella reached Hobart just under one hour later 1 day 20 hours 46 minutes 33 seconds and Wild Thing was a close third 1 day 21 hours 13 minutes 37 seconds The previous Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race record had been set by Morning Glory 2 days 14 hours 7 minutes 10 seconds in 1996 14 nbsp Sydney to Hobart entrants moored up at Rushcutters Bay 25 December 2004 nbsp Spectators in Sydney Harbour at the 2022 raceIn 2004 only 59 yachts completed the course of the 116 who set out from Sydney Storms hit the race The super maxi Skandia capsized after losing her keel 15 In 2005 Wild Oats XI became the first boat since Rani to win the treble taking Line Honours winning the Corrected Handicap IRC and breaking the course record 1d 18h 40 m 10s over 1hr off of Nokia s record In 1982 Condor of Burmuda won the Sydney to Hobart 1981 which was the closest ever finish winning by just seven seconds against Apollo III during a gruelling match race up the River Derwent In 2006 78 boats started the race including entrants from the United Kingdom Canada the Netherlands Italy New Zealand every Australian state and the Australian Capital Territory The race started on schedule at 13 00 Australian Eastern Daylight Saving Time 16 Wild Oats XI owned by Bob Oatley and skippered by Mark Richards crossed the finish line at 21 52 on 28 December 2006 to take line honours with an elapsed time of 2 days 8 hours 52 minutes and 33 seconds 9 Wild Oats XI became the first yacht to win the race in consecutive years since 1964 and only the sixth yacht to achieve this since the race s inception Love amp War owned by Peter Kurts and skippered by Lindsay May won the race overall IRC Handicap in a corrected time of 3 days 22 hours 2 minutes and 37 seconds Love amp War became only the second yacht to win the race three times 1974 1978 and 2006 The yacht Freya won the race in three consecutive years between 1963 and 1965 Gillawa from the Australian Capital Territory skippered by David Kent was the sixty ninth and last boat to complete the 2006 race making it the third consecutive year that the yacht was last in the fleet 9 The longest surviving skipper from the inaugural race Peter Luke who contributed to the formation of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia and the establishment of the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race died on 23 September 2007 aged 92 His yacht Wayfarer still holds the record for the slowest elapsed time One of two surviving sailors from the original race Geoffrey Ruggles from the Wayfarer crew died in July 2019 17 leaving John Gordon from the Horizon crew 18 unreliable source By the November 2007 race entry deadline 90 yachts had nominated for entry including four 90 foot maxis three of them wanting to prevent Wild Oats XI creating history and winning three line honours titles in a row A little over a week prior to the race New Zealand maxi Maximus withdrew after cracking its keel Three time and 2006 handicap winner Love amp War was not one of the applications for entry and may have raced her last Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race in 2006 Wild Oats XI went on to create history by winning its third consecutive line honours title and becoming only the second yacht to do so 10 Rosebud USA won the race on corrected time John Walker became the oldest skipper in the history of the race at age 85 and Phillip s Foote Witchdoctor bettered its own record and set a mark of 27 races as the most by a yacht 10 nbsp Hobart s Constitution Dock is the arrival point for the fleet after they have completed the race and usually witnesses scenes of celebration by many yachtsmen during the new year festivities On 3 November 2008 at the close of entries 113 yachts had nominated for entry with only one other 90 foot maxi Skandia to challenge Wild Oats XI and stop it creating history by winning four consecutive line honours titles and becoming the only yacht to do so Wild Oats XI achieved this and Bob Steel won his second Tattersall Cup with Quest the second yacht with the same name to win the handicap title 10 19 The 2009 fleet comprised 99 starters In the 2008 race Wild Oats XI had equalled Morna Kurrewa IV s record of three consecutive line honours victories which Morna achieved in 1946 1947 and 1948 and was attempting to pass the record in its own right in 2009 In the event however Neville Crichton s New Zealand entry Alpha Romeo II passed Wild Oats XI early on and never relinquished her lead finishing in an elapsed time of 2 days 9 hours 2 minutes and 10 seconds Wild Oats XI came in second and United Kingdom based ICAP Leopard came in third Sailors who have achieved outstanding commitment to the race are represented most of all by John Bennetto dec Lou Abrahams and Tony Cable who after the 2007 race had each sailed 44 races Skippers Frank and John Livingston won four line honours titles while Claude Plowman Peter Warner S A Huey Long Jim Kilroy and Bob Bell have each won three Trygve and Magnus Halvorsen have won four handicap honours titles while a number of skippers have won two handicap titles Rolex has been the naming rights sponsor of the race since 2002 and since then the race has been known as the Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race Traditionally crews of yachts celebrate on New Year s Eve at Constitution Dock in Hobart with the Customs House Hotel a favourite venue for Sydney Hobart yachtsmen The 2020 race was cancelled due to an outbreak of COVID 19 in Sydney s north The Cruising Yacht Club said it was unrealistic to proceed with the race after the Tasmanian government declared Greater Sydney a medium risk zone requiring all participants to quarantine for 14 days on arrival in Tasmania It was the first time the race was not conducted in its 76 year history 20 2020 saw the introduction of a two handed division 21 only two crew members permitted with its own trophy the Two Handed IRC Trophy Due to the race being cancelled in 2020 the first two handed entrants competed in the 2021 race nbsp Panorama of the 2007 Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Holy Grail EditWith the smashing of the Sydney Hobart Race record in 1999 by Nokia and a host of other super fast boats that completed the course in less than two days for the first time the Holy Grail of the Sydney Hobart race a completion of the course in a time under the 40 hour mark became a possibility Many of the skippers competing in the Sydney Hobart race in the 21st century have expressed a desire to be the first to record a time under the once thought of as impossible mark of 40 hours In 2017 this goal was met when the race record was set by LDV Comanche to 33 hours 15 minutes and 24 seconds 22 Women s involvement EditWomen first participated in the race in 1946 The first woman to take part was Jane Tate whose boat Active was the only one to reach Hobart in 1946 Dagmar O Brien with boat Connella also took part in that year but retired from the race before finishing Thus the Jane Tate Memorial Trophy is awarded each year to the first female skipper to complete the race In 1975 the first all women crew sailed was the boat Barbarian skippered by Vicky Willman citation needed In 1996 Kathy Collingridge crewed on One Time Sidewinder She was the first Indigenous woman to take part in the race citation needed Since then up to 2021 there have been another 12 The following is the list of all female crews to compete No Year Boat Other name Club Sail no Skipper Navigator1 1975 Barbarian Barbarian MHYC MH260 Vicky Willman Sheila Beach2 1989 Belles Long Ranger Otaga CYCA 1170 Christine Evans WoW Beth Higgs 2 3 1992 Ella Bache Beyond Thunderdome MHYC 5500 Adrienne Cahalan 2 3 1992 Nadia IV Nadia IV RSYS 4040 Kerry Goudge 4 WoW 5 1993 Telecom MobileNet Nadia IV CYCA 4040 Kerry Goudge 5 WoW 6 1994 Telecom MobileNet Nadia IV CYCA 4040 Kerry Goudge 6 WoW 6 1994 Brightstone NZL RNZYS NZL 83 Teresa Borrell6 1994 Qantas NZ Outward Bound BBYC NZL 4525 Gayle Melrose 2 9 1995 WOW Nortel Nadia IV CYCA 4040 Kerry Goudge 7 WoW 10 1995 Mortgage Choice Cape Fear CYCA 5406 Amanda Wilmot 7 11 2001 Amer Sports Too Costa Smeralda Lisa McDonald USA GBR Genevieve White AUS 12 2017 Climate Action Now CYCA N11 Lisa Blair Libby Greenhalgh13 2018 Wild Oats X HIYC 7001 Stacey Jackson 11 Elizabeth Greenhalgh 1 In 2005 24 women took part including Adrienne Cahalan who is famed for her around the world sailing has been nominated several times for World Yachtswoman of the Year 23 and was Australian Yachtswoman of the Year for 2004 05 In 2005 she was part of the crew for the winning Wild Oats In 2011 Jessica Watson known for her solo unassisted sail around the world at age 16 skippered the Sydney Hobart yacht race with a crew of six other young Australians and three Britons all aged 21 or under making them some of the youngest ever to compete in the blue water classic In 2018 skippered by Stacey Jackson Ocean Respect Racing on Wild Oats X became the first fully professional all women s crew to compete in the Sydney Hobart 24 In total over a thousand women have taken part in the race 25 Rules Edit nbsp The crew of 2005 winner Wild Oats XI The exact rules for the Tattersall Cup have changed over the years In general each boat s time is adjusted on the expected speed of the boat based on its size and other characteristics The International Offshore Rules were superseded by the International Measurement System IMS and the IRC For 1991 1992 amp 1993 races the winners of the IOR and IMS categories were both declared Overall winners during the transition from IOR to IMS However the Tattersall Cup was awarded only to the Overall IOR winner during this period Since 1994 there has been only one Overall winner from 1994 to 2003 being decided using IMS but from the 2004 onwards the Overall winner of the Tattersall Cup has been decided using IRC with IMS dropped altogether as a handicap system 26 In theory this should make for an even competition between yachts of all sizes however in practice often only the newest and most advanced boats regardless of size can sail fast relative to their rating In addition in a race of the length of the Sydney Hobart weather conditions after the maxi yachts have finished can often determine whether they will win on handicap if the winds become more favourable after they finish they will lose on handicap if they become less favourable they will win The race is conducted under the Racing Rules of Sailing determined and published by the International Sailing Federation For the 2005 race the event organisers removed certain restrictions on the boats As successful sailing is based on a good power to weight ratio larger sails are expected to help break race records Two handed division Edit2020 saw the introduction of a two handed division 27 only two crew members permitted with its own trophy the Two Handed IRC Trophy Due to the race being cancelled in 2020 the first two handed entrants competed in the 2021 race which attracted 18 entrants 28 Two handed yachts were not included in the Tattersall Cup because organisers could not establish an equitable handicap due to two handed yachts use of autopilots 29 In 2021 rough conditions meant that just seven two handers made it through the first night with the others retiring at port 30 The first two handed category was won by Disko Trooper Contender Sailcloth a J 99 31 In 2022 two handed yachts were allowed to contend for the Tattersalls Cup 32 There were 22 entries making it the fastest growing section of the race 28 The 2022 2 handed IRC was won by Mistral a Lombard 34 Mistral finished 29th in the Tattersalls Cup 33 Yachts EditThe fleet comprises mostly sloops that is yachts with a single mast on which is hoisted a fore and aft rigged mainsail and a single jib or Genoa plus extras such as a spinnaker The race has encouraged innovation in yacht design Between 1945 and 2005 the most successful yacht designer has been the New Zealand designer Bruce Farr who has designed 15 overall winners nbsp 77th 2022 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race at 16 minutes after the startWinners and fleet sizes EditMain article List of Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race winners 34 Year Line honours Elapsed timed hh mm ss Handicap winner Corrected timed hh mm ss fleet sizeat start at finish1945 nbsp Rani 6 14 22 nbsp Rani 4 09 38 9 81946 nbsp Morna 5 02 53 33 nbsp Christina 4 11 53 27 19 111947 nbsp Morna 5 03 03 54 nbsp Westward 4 00 24 56 28 211948 nbsp Morna 4 05 01 21 nbsp Westward 3 07 45 48 18 131949 nbsp Waltzing Matilda 5 10 33 10 nbsp Trade Winds 3 23 39 43 15 131950 nbsp Margaret Rintoul 5 05 28 35 nbsp Nerida 3 20 17 13 16 141951 nbsp Margaret Rintoul 4 02 29 01 nbsp Struen Marie 2 19 48 26 14 121952 nbsp Nocturne 6 02 34 47 nbsp Ingrid 4 09 56 18 17 171953 nbsp Solveig IV 5 07 12 50 nbsp Ripple 3 16 12 12 24 201954 nbsp Kurrewa IV formerly Morna 5 06 09 47 nbsp Solveig IV 3 17 58 01 17 151955 nbsp Even 4 18 13 14 nbsp Moonbi 3 09 21 05 17 161956 nbsp Kurrewa IV formerly Morna 4 04 31 44 nbsp Solo 3 08 33 52 28 261957 nbsp Kurrewa IV formerly Morna 3 18 30 39 nbsp Anitra V 3 00 55 37 20 181958 nbsp Solo 5 02 32 52 nbsp Siandra 3 13 46 35 22 191959 nbsp Solo 4 13 33 12 nbsp Cherana 3 08 33 02 30 241960 nbsp Kurrewa IV formerly Morna 4 08 11 15 nbsp Siandra 3 07 48 04 32 301961 nbsp Astor 4 04 42 11 nbsp Rival 3 03 57 31 35 331962 nbsp Ondine 3 03 49 16 nbsp Solo 2 12 45 14 42 401963 nbsp Astor 4 10 53 00 nbsp Freya 3 06 03 17 44 341964 nbsp Astor 3 20 05 05 nbsp Freya 3 05 58 14 38 311965 nbsp Stormvogel 3 20 30 09 nbsp Freya 3 10 03 26 53 491966 nbsp Fidelis 4 08 39 43 nbsp Cadence 4 02 46 24 46 441967 nbsp Pen Duick III 4 04 10 31 nbsp Rainbow II 3 16 39 15 66 591968 nbsp Ondine II 4 03 20 02 nbsp Koomooloo 3 13 38 52 67 541969 nbsp Crusade 3 15 07 40 nbsp Morning Cloud 3 04 25 57 79 751970 nbsp Buccaneer 3 14 06 12 nbsp Pacha 3 10 07 39 61 471971 nbsp Kialoa II 3 12 46 21 nbsp PathFinder 3 03 14 34 79 761972 nbsp American Eagle 3 04 42 39 nbsp American Eagle 3 02 15 59 79 751973 nbsp Helsal 3 01 32 09 nbsp Ceil III 2 17 28 28 92 921974 nbsp Ondine III 3 13 51 56 nbsp Love amp War 3 13 25 02 63 581975 nbsp Kialoa III 2 14 36 56 nbsp Rampage 2 13 16 56 102 991976 nbsp Ballyhoo 3 07 59 26 nbsp Piccolo 3 07 45 07 85 701977 nbsp Kialoa III 3 10 14 09 nbsp Kialoa III 3 13 58 10 131 721978 nbsp Apollo 4 02 23 24 nbsp Love amp War 3 12 13 00 97 871979 nbsp Bumblebee IV 3 01 45 52 nbsp Screw Loose 3 03 31 06 147 1421980 nbsp New Zealand 2 18 45 41 nbsp New Zealand 2 21 13 29 102 931981 nbsp Vengeance 3 22 30 00 nbsp Zeus II 3 19 25 59 159 1441982 nbsp Condor of Bermuda 3 00 59 17 nbsp Scallywag 2 19 19 16 118 1081983 nbsp Condor 3 00 50 29 nbsp Challenge II 2 23 07 42 173 1581984 nbsp New Zealand 3 11 31 21 nbsp Indian Pacific 3 07 45 03 151 461985 nbsp Apollo 3 04 32 28 nbsp Sagacious 3 04 34 37 179 1461986 nbsp Condor 2 23 26 25 nbsp Ex Tension 3 01 14 30 123 1061987 nbsp Sovereign 2 21 58 08 nbsp Sovereign 3 01 58 41 154 1461988 nbsp Ragamuffin formerly Bumblebee IV 3 15 29 27 nbsp Illusion 3 18 20 35 119 811989 nbsp Drumbeat 3 06 21 34 nbsp Challenge II 3 02 18 45 126 1011990 nbsp Ragamuffin formerly Bumblebee IV 2 21 05 33 nbsp Sagacious V IOR nbsp Doctor Who IMS 2 19 44 322 10 06 28 105 861991 nbsp Brindabella 3 11 14 09 nbsp She s Apples IMS nbsp Atara IOR 3 15 19 202 20 05 11 99 911992 nbsp New Zealand Endeavour 2 19 19 18 nbsp Assassin IMS nbsp Ragamuffin IOR 3 10 50 112 21 21 04 110 1021993 nbsp Ninety Seven 4 00 54 11 nbsp Micropay Cuckoos Nest IMS nbsp Solbourne Wild Oats IOR 3 18 45 103 20 36 30 104 381994 nbsp Tasmania formerly New Zealand Endeavour 2 16 48 04 nbsp Raptor IMS 2 11 41 00 371 3091995 nbsp Sayonara 3 00 53 35 nbsp Terra Firma 3 10 22 36 98 921996 nbsp Morning Glory 2 14 07 10 nbsp Ausmaid 2 12 35 59 95 771997 nbsp Brindabella 2 23 37 12 nbsp Beau Geste 2 17 21 27 114 991998 nbsp Sayonara 2 19 03 32 nbsp AFR Midnight Rambler 2 12 36 23 115 441999 nbsp Nokia 1 19 48 02 nbsp Yendys 1 20 32 53 79 492000 nbsp Nicorette II 2 14 02 09 nbsp SAP Ausmaid formerly Ausmaid 2 19 13 38 82 582001 nbsp Assa Abloy 2 20 46 43 nbsp Bumblebee V 2 19 13 38 75 572002 nbsp Alfa Romeo I 2 04 58 52 nbsp Quest 2 19 13 38 57 552003 nbsp Skandia 2 15 14 06 nbsp First National Real Estate 3 14 14 17 56 522004 nbsp Nicorette III 2 16 00 44 nbsp Aera IRC 4 02 52 09 116 592005 nbsp Wild Oats XI 1 18 40 10 nbsp Wild Oats XI 3 03 54 32 85 802006 nbsp Wild Oats XI 2 08 52 33 nbsp Love amp War 3 22 02 37 78 692007 nbsp Wild Oats XI 1 21 24 32 nbsp Rosebud 3 09 32 14 82 792008 nbsp Wild Oats XI 1 20 34 14 nbsp Quest II 2 17 43 32 100 922009 nbsp Alfa Romeo II 2 09 02 10 nbsp Two True 4 07 57 43 100 942010 nbsp Wild Oats XI 2 07 37 20 nbsp Secret Men s Business 3 5 4 01 29 40 87 692011 nbsp Investec Loyal 2 06 14 18 nbsp Loki 3 22 34 32 88 762012 nbsp Wild Oats XI 1 18 23 12 nbsp Wild Oats XI 3 10 26 31 76 712013 nbsp Wild Oats XI 2 06 07 27 nbsp Victoire 3 18 27 43 94 842014 nbsp Wild Oats XI 2 02 30 00 nbsp Wild Rose formerly Solbourne Wild Oats 3 07 04 43 117 1032015 nbsp Comanche 2 08 58 30 nbsp Balance V formerly Quest II 4 07 27 13 108 772016 nbsp Perpetual LOYAL 1 13 31 20 nbsp Giacomo 2 16 13 37 88 832017 nbsp Comanche 1 09 15 24 nbsp Ichi Ban 2 12 13 31 102 962018 35 nbsp Wild Oats XI 1 19 07 21 nbsp Alive 3 06 41 16 85 792019 36 nbsp Comanche 1 18 30 24 nbsp Ichi Ban 3 04 11 05 157 154 37 2020 Race cancelled due to the COVID 19 Pandemic 20 2021 38 nbsp Black Jack 2 12 37 17 nbsp Ichi Ban 4 10 17 39 88 50 37 2022 nbsp Andoo Comanche 39 1 11 56 48 nbsp Celestial 40 2 16 35 26 109 100Notes Time in bold denotes new race record time No first place in 1985 Drake s Prayer was disqualified after winning on handicap but 1985 NOR did not allow for lower placed finishers to move up following a disqualification In the years 1990 1993 the winner of each of the IMS and IOR classes were declared the joint handicap winners From 1994 to 2003 the IMS handicap rule was used to determine the overall winner and from 2004 the IRC rule has been used The 1975 Kialoa III was a ketch rig which was modified in 1976 and returned as a sloop to win line honors and overall in 1977 Apollo in 1978 and 1985 were different yachts New Zealand in 1980 and 1984 were different yachts Brindabella in 1991 amp 1997 were different yachts Records and statistics Edit nbsp Wild Oats XI the 2005 2008 2010 2012 2014 2018 line honours winner and 2005 and 2012 handicap honours winner about to finish the 2011 Sydney to Hobart nbsp A graph of Sydney Hobart starters and finishers from 1945 to 2018Inaugural race winner 1945 Rani line and handicap honours as well as the inaugural race record Fastest race 1 day 9h 15m 24s LDV Comanche NSW 2017 41 Total fleet 5 509 yachts 81 01 yachts per race Fleet finishing statistics Of 5 509 yachts who have started the race since 1945 a total of 4 548 82 56 have completed and 961 17 44 yachts have retired Highest retirement 70 of the fleet in 1984 On average after 62 races 81 7 of the fleet finishes annually Largest fleet 371 starters 1994 Smallest fleet 9 starters 1945 first race Smallest yacht 27 ft 8 23m Klinger NSW 1978 Smallest yacht Line Honours winner 35 ft 10 67m Nocturne NSW 1952 and Rani UK 1945 Largest yachts entered 100 ft 30 48m Wild Oats XI NSW 2009 2019 2022 Black Jack formerly Alfa Romeo MON 2009 2017 2019 2021 2022 Scallywag formerly Investec LOYAL Ragamuffin 100 HK 2009 2016 2018 2019 2021 ICAP Leopard UK 2009 Rapture USA 2009 Wild Thing VIC 2013 LawConnect formerly Perpetual LOYAL Infotrack NSW 2013 2019 2021 2022 Rio 100 USA 2014 Comanche NSW 2014 2015 2017 2019 2022 and CQS NSW 2016 Largest yacht Line Honours winner 100 ft 30 48m Alfa Romeo NZ 2009 Wild Oats XI NSW 2010 2012 14 2018 Investec LOYAL NSW 2011 Comanche USA NSW 2015 2017 2019 2022 Perpetual LOYAL NSW 2016 Black Jack MON 2021 Most Line Honours victories Wild Oats XI 9 victories Most Line Honours victories by skipper Mark Richards New South Wales Australia 9 victories Most Handicap Honours victories Freya NSW Love amp War NSW and Ichi Ban NSW 3 victories each Most Handicap Honours victories by skipper Magnus and Trygve Halvorsen NSW Australia 4 victories Oldest competitor Maluka was built in 1932 and raced in 2008 aged 76 The 9 1 metre yacht was restored by Sean Langman Most races by skipper 49 Tony Cable New South Wales 44 John Bennetto Tas dec Lou Abrahams Vic dec 2014 Race treble Race record Line amp Handicap Honours in the same year 1945 Rani UK 2005 2012 Wild Oats XI NSW Double Line amp Handicap Honours in the same year 1945 Rani UK 1972 American Eagle USA 1977 Kialoa III USA 1980 New Zealand NZ 1987 Sovereign NSW 2005 2012 Wild Oats XI NSW Back to back Line Honours titles Morna NSW 1946 1947 and 1948 Margaret Rintoul NSW 1950 and 1951 Kurrewa IV Formerly Morna Vic 1956 and 1957 Solo NSW 1958 and 1959 Astor NSW 1963 and 1964 and Wild Oats XI NSW 2005 2006 2007 2008 Back to back Handicap Honours titles Freya NSW 1963 1964 and 1965 Westward Tas 1947 and 1948 Closest Line Honours race finish 7 seconds 1982 Condor of Bermuda Bermuda defeated Apollo NSW Closest finish for Handicap Honours 1 minute and 43 seconds also in 1982 when Scallyway NSW Australia defeated Audacity NSW Australia Yachts winning Line Honours to be later disqualified Wild Wave 1953 Nirvana 1983 and Rothmans 1990 Yachts to win Handicap Honours to be later disqualified Drake s Prayer 1985 Most successful yacht designer Bruce Farr NZ 15 overall winners First known female sailors Jane Tate and Dagmar O Brien both in 1946 O Brien s yacht Connella retired thus Tate has the honour of being the first female to complete the event and a trophy is now named in her honour First all female crewed yacht Barbarian 1975 skipper Vicki Wilman Most races for one woman 15 by Adrienne Cahalan AUS navigator for 2000 winner Nicorette First indigenous woman to take part Kathy Collingridge former NSW award winning police officer age 37 crewed on One Time Sidewinder 1996 In 1994 at the 50th Sydney to Hobart Albert Lee was a part of the making waves foundation s team which was the first time a fully disabled crew had sailed in an ocean race 42 Worst disaster 1998 6 sailors died and 5 yachts sunk 115 yachts started but only 43 finished Sunken yachts Clywd 1993 Adjuster 1993 Winston Churchill 1998 VC Offshore Stand Aside 1998 Sword of Orion 1998 Miintinta 1998 Midnight Special 1998 Ray White Koomooloo 2006 and Georgia 2008 Yachtsmen to have lost their lives Mike Bannister Winston Churchill 1998 Glyn Charles Sword of Orion 1998 Ray Crawford Billabong 1988 John Dean Winston Churchill 1998 Bruce Guy Business Post Naiad 1998 Jim Lawler Winston Churchill 1998 Wally Russell Yahoo II 1984 John Sarney Inca 1973 Phillip Skeggs Business Post Naiad 1998 Peter Taylor BP Flying Colours 1989 and Hugh Barry Vallance Zilvergeest III 1975 Sponsors supporters and prizes EditRolex has been the naming rights sponsor of the race since 2002 43 Other sponsors of the race include Appliances Online Nortel Networks 44 and TasPorts 45 It generally costs each of the major contenders for line honors millions of dollars to equip themselves for the race however there is no prize money The only award is a Rolex watch from the race sponsor for the fastest and handicap winning yacht captains Entrants compete for the honor of the title The overall handicap winner on corrected time is awarded The George Adams Tattersall Cup first awarded to the winner of the 1946 race and retrospectively to the 1945 winner 46 Among the other trophies awarded during the race are the J H Illingworth Challenge Cup for the line honours boat and the Jane Tate Memorial Trophy for the first female skipper 47 In popular culture EditThe race features in the 2007 novel The Storm Prophet by Hector Macdonald See also EditNewport Bermuda Race Fastnet race Melbourne to Hobart Yacht Race TurtlingReferences Edit Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race About Archived from the original on 12 July 2014 Retrieved 9 May 2013 Tough legacy of a Sydney classic BBC News 29 December 2001 Retrieved 24 May 2010 Standings Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2017 rolexsydneyhobart com Retrieved 28 December 2017 Vindin Nick 28 December 2017 Sydney to Hobart Comanche wins line honours as protest against Wild Oats XI upheld The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 28 December 2017 Wild Oats XI wins Sydney to Hobart and sets new race record The Daily Telegraph 28 December 2012 A founding father of the Sydney to Hobart The Sydney Morning Herald 18 October 2007 Retrieved 24 January 2023 scheme AGLSTERMS AglsAgent corporateName State Library of New South Wales address Macquarie Street Sydney 23 March 2021 Great love story of the seas revealed State Library of NSW Retrieved 24 January 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Sydney Hobart Race Everything you need to know Yachting World Retrieved 24 January 2023 a b c View Condensed Results rolexsydneyhobart com Archived from the original on 19 August 2006 Retrieved 1 June 2021 a b c d The requested URL was not found on this server www google com Retrieved 1 June 2021 dead link Sailors with disABILITES Yacht Racing History Making Waves Foundation makingwavesfoundation com au Retrieved 24 May 2022 Knecht G Bruce 2001 The Proving Ground The Inside Story of the 1998 Sydney to Hobart Race Boston Mass Little Brown and Company ISBN 978 0 316 49955 2 1998 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race Deaths at Sea about com Archived from the original on 28 December 2007 Retrieved 17 December 2005 Riviera Larry Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race goaustralia about com Archived from the original on 20 September 2005 Retrieved 1 June 2021 2004 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race Nicorette Wins Line Honors about com Archived from the original on 21 December 2005 Retrieved 17 December 2005 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race goaustralia about com Archived from the original on 20 September 2005 Retrieved 1 June 2021 Vale Geoff Ruggles one of two surviving men from first Sydney Hobart Yacht Race mysailing com au Mysailing 1 August 2019 Retrieved 20 December 2020 From conversation with Geoffrey Ruggles 9 1 2013 Wild Oats XI takes back to back line honours rolexsydneyhobart com 28 December 2006 Archived from the original on 11 October 2007 Retrieved 1 June 2021 a b Sydney to Hobart yacht race cancelled due to NSW coronavirus outbreak ABC News 19 December 2020 Retrieved 19 December 2020 Warren Adrian 25 December 2021 Two Handed division makes SydHob debut 7news com au 7 News Network Retrieved 27 December 2021 Sydney Hobart 2016 Perpetual Loyal smashes Wild Oats race record CNN 27 December 2016 Cahalan gets top yachtswoman nod The Sydney Morning Herald 6 October 2004 Clarey Christopher 25 December 2018 Libby Greenhalgh Keeps Her Eye on the Weather for Wild Oats X The New York Times Heinrich Karen January 2006 Taking to the sea The Australian Women s Weekly p 230 ROLEX SYDNEY HOBART YACHT RACE 2005 PDF cyca com au Archived PDF from the original on 27 December 2005 Retrieved 1 June 2021 Two Handed division makes SydHob debut 7NEWS 25 December 2021 Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b Segaert Anthony 21 December 2022 Two person crews excited to finally get a shot at overall prize The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 2 January 2023 Keoghan Sarah 25 December 2021 Sydney to Hobart s biggest names slam ridiculous call to make autopilot boats ineligible for overall prize The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 2 January 2023 The 2021 Rolex Yacht Race Sydney to Hobart NAVIS April May 2022 NAVIS Luxury Yacht Issues www navisyachts com Retrieved 2 January 2023 Pearson Di 1 January 2022 Disko Trooper takes inaugural Rolex Sydney Hobart Two Handed honours Live Sail Die Retrieved 2 January 2023 Two handed high hopes in Rolex Sydney Hobart www sail world com Retrieved 2 January 2023 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2022 rolexsydneyhobart com Retrieved 2 January 2023 ROLEX SYDNEY HOBART YACHT RACE WINNERS 1945 2005 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 January 2007 Retrieved 1 June 2021 Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2018 Cruising Yacht Club of Australia retrieved 31 December 2018 Comanche claims Rolex Sydney Hobart line honours Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 28 December 2019 a b Standings Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race Honour roll 2021 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 01 Jan 2022 Andoo Comanche wins Line Honours in 2022 Rolex Sydney Hobart Rolex Sydney Hobart 28 December 2022 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Celestial wins 2022 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Rolex Sydney Hobart 29 December 2022 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Standings Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2017 rolexsydneyhobart com Retrieved 28 December 2017 Sailors with disABILITES Yacht Racing History Making Waves Foundation makingwavesfoundation com au Retrieved 23 May 2022 Rolex extends naming rights sponsorship of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race to 2015 Offshore s NorTel Sydney to Hoboard Official Race Issue PDF Offshore Magazine Retrieved 16 June 2020 Links Archived from the original on 25 August 2012 Tattersall Cup Archived from the original on 6 August 2019 Trophies Archived from the original on 18 April 2021 Ludeke M 2002 The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race 1945 2001 Hobart Ludeke Publishing Ludeke M 2014 fourth edition The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race Hobart Ludeke Publishing MotorSM Archived 8 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine Wilmap Analysing Sydney to Hobart yacht race winning times Archived 30 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine University of MelbourneExternal links EditRolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Official site NSW Maritime site Aquatic Events PDF Distance from Sydney to Hobart Photos from the start of the 2009 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race Archived 16 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine Sydney to Hobart yacht race Dictionary of Sydney Dictionary of Sydney Trust 2008 Retrieved 5 October 2015 CC By SA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race amp oldid 1177782301, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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