Please select your home edition
Edition

Hobart Opinions poles apart - Heat vs Depth debate

by Crosbie Lorimer on 23 Dec 2007
Roger Hickman describes the virtues of spinnaker poles - Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Crosbie Lorimer http://www.crosbielorimer.com

Rolex Sydney Hobart - At a time when bowsprits, bumpkins and prodders proliferate on everything from singlehanded dinghies to 30 metre Supermaxis, you might be forgiven for wondering whether the humble spinnaker pole has had its day.

But for some of the skippers whose crew are still wrestling with this foredeck hardware, the forecast for this year’s Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race is bringing smiles to their faces.

Roger Hickman, who will be sailing master aboard Alan Brierty’s Corby 49 ‘Limit’ in this year’s race believes that there will be some real advantages to a spinnaker pole if the forecast for predominantly northerly winds holds good.

‘In a nor’easter Hobart is directly downwind from the start, so the ability to sail deep is a real plus’ said Hickman after today’s press conference for some of the possible handicap winners.

Expanding on his comments in the conference on the virtues of poles versus bowsprits in the conditions predicted, Hickman explained his perspective.

‘With a pole we can sail 160s (160 degrees off the breeze) and that’s perhaps 10 degrees lower than others like the TP52s or downwind flyers like Chutzpah with their asymmetricals set on bowsprits’.

‘Boats with asymmetrics may have more speed, but there’s an important distinction here between planing and surfing.

We may be a knot or two slower and while they may be 'heating up' and planing across the waves we can soak down, get more depth and surf more easily. If they run too deep their spinnakers die; so in the end we think our VMG (Velocity Made Good) will be better.’

‘The other consideration is the forecast change of wind direction to the northwest; when it follows a nor’easter that change can kick up an awkward quartering wave under the stern of the lighter planing boats. If you can’t run deeper that can result in more wipe outs when the breeze is up.’

Mike Green, sailing master aboard Graeme Wood’s TP52 ‘Wot Yot’ has a different perspective.
‘Sure, boats with poles can run a bit deeper’ said Green later ‘but I don’t think the advantage will be that significant. In those conditions TP52's are running only two knots under windspeed. We’ve also had a larger spinnaker made for the race and reckon that will make a difference for us’.

‘We think that one of the biggest factors in the speed equation is crew fitness and endurance. These boats are really demanding to sail at these speeds and with no canting keel we also need weight on the rail as much as possible. So you need a younger fitter crew’.

‘We’ve done a lot of work on sleep deprivation management, especially around diet. For instance we’ve been finding out what the effects of carbohydrates are when you’re tired’.

‘I’ve been off coffee for days just so that when I do drink it during the race its effects are maximized’ added Green, making a face that suggested a coffee would be very welcome right then.

On one matter a number of the skippers agree; they’ll be heading offshore on the first afternoon to get out to the current which, despite running very wide and weakly off this part of NSW coast will nonetheless help the run south and also set up a good bearing for a straight run across Bass Strait, assuming north west changes materializes.

That bearing may also allow them to get a slingshot effect off one of the current eddies southwest of Green Cape.

‘You don’t want to be the wrong side of that one' added Green.

Poles or no poles all of the skippers at today’s conference agreed that the competition gets no easier from one year to the next.

South African Mike Joubert, bowman aboard the American TP 65 'Rosebud', which has enjoyed handicap success in this month’s Rolex Trophy and Big Boat Challenge, added an international perspective to the rivalry that surrounds this race.

‘We came here anticipating getting beaten up; the Australian sailing scene really is fiercely competitive. But this is a race that everyone has got to do.’

Festival of Sails 2026Armstrong 728x90 - Performance Mast Range - BOTTOMCyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTER

Related Articles

RSHYR Line Honours Champ throws down gauntlet
Beck, Owner/Skipper of LawConnect, will be facing four other 100-foot maxi racers Line Honours winning Skipper from the last two Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Races, Christian Beck, has again thrown down the gauntlet to claim underdog status as the psychological warfare starts before the 2025 race.
Posted today at 2:58 am
YJA Young Journalist of the Year 2025 announced
Lydia Mullan has been named as the winner Lydia Mullan has been named as the Yachting Journalists' Association (YJA) Young Journalist of the Year 2025.
Posted on 25 Nov
Passion, Precision and Innovation at Metstrade
If you want a positive outlook on the marine industry then there's no better place to be If you want a positive outlook on the marine industry then there's no better place to be than Amsterdam in mid-November.
Posted on 25 Nov
Jackman and Reynolds cheer on BONDS Flying Roos
Ahead of this weekend's SailGP Abu Dhabi Grand Final Hugh and Ryan dropped a fun new video today introducing global audiences to SailGP and the Australia team. The duo bring their signature banter as they join BONDS Flying Roos Driver and CEO Tom Slingsby.
Posted on 25 Nov
IOM Worlds 2026 Runners and Riders Part 1
A design history of the class and what the likely winning designs will be A competitor said to me last weekend, "I learnt more in 3 months of radio sailing than 30 years racing a dinghy". There will be nowhere better to extend your learning of racing than by watching the best in the world in a stadium like setting.
Posted on 25 Nov
Trofeo Princesa Sofía Mallorca example of success
Ferran Muniesa participated as a speaker at the Yacht Racing Forum A renowned annual meeting of the main players in international competitive sailing, the Yacht Racing Forum, included the Trofeo Princesa Sofía Mallorca as an example of the organisation of top-level international regattas in its 2025 edition.
Posted on 25 Nov
iQFOiL Senior Europeans at Sferracavallo Day 2
Strong breeze and tight racing in Sicily After a slow start on Day 1, conditions at the 2025 iQFOiL Senior European Championship came to life today in Sferracavallo. With sunshine and a solid breeze filling in across the racecourse, all fleets were able to complete five full course races.
Posted on 25 Nov
Six recognised into Cape Horn Hall of Fame
Cape Horners take centre stage in Portsmouth It was a time for seafaring memories as 126 Cape Horners met up in Portsmouth to applaud the latest in a Who's Who list of global circumnavigators to be inducted into the Cape Horn Hall of Fame.
Posted on 25 Nov
Groundbreaking 15th Yacht Racing Forum
The leading meeting point for brands, event organizers and teams The international yacht racing community gathered in force in Amsterdam on November 20-21, as the Yacht Racing Forum welcomed a full house of 250 delegates from 26 countries for two days of high-level debate, knowledge sharing, and business.
Posted on 25 Nov
Zhik Black Friday - Up To 40% Off Offshore Gear
Dependable protection for offshore and ocean sailors Dependable protection for offshore and ocean sailors. Up To 40% Off Offshore Gear
Posted on 25 Nov