Please select your home edition
Edition
Henri-Lloyd Dynamic Range

Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race - Southerly still the big question

by Jim Gale on 24 Dec 2016
Panel (Anthony Bell, Mark Richards, David Witt, Ludde Ingvall and Sir Michael Hintze) at the press conference after the CYCA’s Weather Briefing this morning Rolex/Daniel Forster http://www.regattanews.com
Skippers and navigators of the 89 yachts competing in the 2016 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race have received their Christmas Eve weather briefing from the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) at the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia this morning.
BOM’s Jane Golding has told them the forecasts produced by the various models that meteorologists use, have been pretty consistent in recent days, confirming a fast start on Sydney Harbour in a brisk north-easterly, and that the breeze will strengthen throughout the afternoon as the boats run down the NSW coast.


It translates to spinnaker sailing in a 20 to 25 knot nor-easter on day one for everyone. This is when the super-maxis will streak away from the boats chasing them. As expected, a big front currently lying in the Southern Ocean, south of Western Australia, will reach the southern NSW coast around midnight, turning the winds to the south. The southerly will slow the super maxis first, and then make its way back through the fleet during the night.

How long the southerly lasts, and how strong it is, will go a long way to determining which type of boat will win overall, and whether the record is broken. Most likely it will be around 15-25 knots, lighter than was expected a few days ago, and great news for the sailors after last year’s battering. One model is saying it could be even lighter.

A second front is also expected to move through Bass Strait on Tuesday, affecting the leaders, and there could well be some areas of very soft wind lying in wait when the super maxis get there. By Tuesday afternoon, winds will start shifting around to the north again, and the spinnakers will get another outing.

The softening forecast would seem to favour the slimmer Wild Oats XI and CQS over the broader, more powerful upwind Perpetual LOYAL and Scallywag in the race for line honours. “We liked the forecast from a couple of days ago actually,” Perpetual LOYAL skipper, Anthony Bell said this morning. “We were excited by a big southerly, but it looks like we won’t get as much of that.

“We’re going to have to make some calls that could put us back, but could also put us further in contact with the other super maxis. Going down the Tasman coast is a lottery, light running suits the skinny boats, so we’ll have to become more tactical. On the plus side, the theoretical weather and the real weather are often distant cousins. I don’t think I’ve ever, even two days out, received what the forecast said it was going to be,” Bell says.

As you would expect, Mark Richards, the cagey skipper of Wild Oats XI, is not counting any chickens yet. “It’s never fun for anyone to get a flogging, so the latest forecast is good for everyone. All these boats (super maxis) are going to have their moments, so it’s just a matter of who does a good job in their not-so-good moments.”

And then there is CQS, Ludde Ingvall’s radical 100 footer. The softer forecast will suit his slimmer boat, the dark horse of this race. As Richards points out, he doesn’t really know what to expect or how fast this boat will turn out to be. Neither does her skipper, Ingvall, who says, “We have a boat with lots of toys in the toy box and we have no idea how to use them yet.”

Outright boat speed is always critical in the dash for line honours, but sail into a hole and even the fastest boat stops dead in the water. This will be a tactical race, and managing the transition Monday evening from brisk northerly to we-are-not-so-sure how brisk southerly – being in the right place with the right sails up – could be a game changer.

“The first change will be interesting. Whoever does a good job there, will get a good jump,” says Scallywag skipper David Witt.

But all this is crystal balling. Whatever the weather eventually throws up, Witt pretty much summed up the Hobart race for all 89 skippers and crew: “Start at one o’clock and go south. It is what it is.”

The start of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race will be broadcast live on the Seven Network throughout Australia.
V-DRY-XSea Sure 2025Mackay Boats 728x90 BOTTOM

Related Articles

Second Annual Women's Regatta Camp
Still Time to Enter! The Second Annual Women's Regatta Camp will take place January 26-31, 2026, hosted by the St. Thomas Sailing Center (STSC) at the St. Thomas Yacht Club (STYC).
Posted on 23 Jan
Crunch time for SailGP and the Cup
Outside the Cup teams and Italian politicians, interest in the America's Cup appears to be fading Outside the Cup teams and Italian politicians, interest in the America's Cup appears to be fading fast, and SailGP is foiling into the vacated media space.
Posted on 23 Jan
Jules Verne Trophy: Sodebo enters Storm Ingrid
The Famous Project CIC mainsail rips in half Thomas Coville and his time on Sodebo Ultim 3 have just 1,100 nautical miles to go to finish their Jules Verne Trophy record attempt, but Storm Imogen is standing in their way, with 55 knot winds and waves up to 38 feet high.
Posted on 23 Jan
IDEC SPORT permanently deprived of its mainsail
The Famous Project CIC sailing under their wing mast and headsails They will now have to do without what remained of this sail and sail exclusively under their wing mast (30m2) and their headsails. So it was under sail that they performed a series of gybes during the night to round the island of Ponta Delgada.
Posted on 23 Jan
ALMA Class Globe 580 – Breaking all the Rules?
Circumnavigating the globe is the unattainable dream for most sailors Circumnavigating the globe is the unattainable dream for most sailors, while solo racing around the world is considered extreme at best and too expensive for most? That assumption has now been turned upside down.
Posted on 23 Jan
Ready to rumble: Bacardi Winter Series kicks off
Event doubles as Melges 24 North American Championship The road starts here. Bacardi Winter Series Event No. 1 launches January 23-25 on Biscayne Bay, bringing the J/70 and Melges 24 fleets back to Miami for the opening act of the 2026 Bacardi racing season.
Posted on 23 Jan
Incredible GLOBE40 Leg 4 Finish
Seconds split Belgium Ocean Racing - Curium and Credit Mutuel After nearly 7,000 miles of ocean racing, Belgium Ocean Racing - Curium and Credit Mutuel finish the stage in the incredible situation with a gap that is counted in seconds.
Posted on 23 Jan
America's Cup: Match dates announced
The 38th America's Cup Match will begin on July 10, 2027 from Naples. The 38th America's Cup Match will begin on July 10, 2027 from Naples, and is expected to conclude by the following weekend.
Posted on 23 Jan
Sodebo Ultim 3 set for Storm Ingrid
The final massive hurdle in their Jules Verne Trophy record attempt Nearly 1,500 nautical miles (2,778 km) remain to the finish line of the Jules Verne Trophy between Ushant and Lizard Point. However, the team know that these final hours will be extremely challenging.
Posted on 22 Jan
ILCA Under 21 World Championships 2026 day 4
Margins at the top of both fleets continue to shrink With the final series now fully underway in Lanzarote, margins at the top of both fleets continue to shrink. A demanding fourth day of racing delivered shifting conditions, decisive moments and further changes in the standings.
Posted on 22 Jan