Please select your home edition
Edition
Sea Sure 2025

Sidewinder wins first two-handed line honours in 2021 CYCA Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

by Rupert Guinness / RSHYR 30 Dec 2021 23:27 AEDT 26-31 December 2021
The Akilaria RC2 Sidewinder streaks out to sea - 2021 CYCA Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race © Rolex / Andrea Francolini

Tasmanians John Saul and Rob Gough etched their place in Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race history this evening by winning line honours in the inaugural Two-Handed division.

The pair, sailing their Akilaria RC2 designed by Frenchman, Marc Lombard, finished the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia's 628 nautical mile race in four days seven hours 12 minutes.

Saul and Gough were thrilled about their win and its historic significance for Australian sailing.

"For the CYCA and the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania to absorb two-handed racing is fantastic," Saul said after mooring in Hobart this evening.

"You see so much of it over in Europe, but to see it catch on in Australia is great."

The two also embraced the challenge from a physical and tactical perspective.

"It was a heap of fun, a great race," Saul said. "There was so much variety of racing, a really tough first day and a half and then so quiet it was tough in other ways.

"There were plenty of sail changes, plenty of activity. Plenty of water across the deck."

Gough, a former world champion as a windsurfer and in Moth sailing, concurred with his co-skipper, saying: "It had all the variables. The first two days were pretty tough.

"Both of us steered the whole time. It's just really long stints of steering. Like, today we stayed on the outside of Schouten [Island] all the way home."

Like all the crews who have finished this year's race, the pair found the first night when there was a southerly and sea current was punishing. For them, holding course was difficult.

"It was a really interesting sea state," Gough said.

"There were no backs on the waves. You just come out and slam. I thought we were going to break the boat in half. The pilot wouldn't know what to do there, so we steered on and off."

Gough's said his background in windsurfing and Moth sailing brought some specific assets.

"I get on the tiller when it gets really light," he said.

"I didn't do too well coming into Tasman. I made a bit of an error on the lay line, but I got us out of Tasman... I thought it was okay.

"That was a real gain for us. It was going to shut down, it was inevitable. We got in. We just sneaked into the start of the sea breeze, and once we get bowling along my job's done.

"So, I'm a light weather skipper."

Gough said the issue of sleep management in the race was based more on need than any specific plan or watch system.

"Usually John says, 'Rob, are you awake? I need you.' And that'd be the same for him," Gough said.

"We just sort of sleep just there (pointing to a corner of the pit near the door) with all our gear on, just trying to catch 20 minutes or something.

"We probably had two or three hours a day, I guess. And then the rest was cat naps."

What is sure, the pair bought the right boat for the Sydney Hobart.

"We always wanted to do a two-handed race. We always wanted it to be the first one of the Sydney Hobart" Gough said.

"We wanted the boat that we knew we could survive those conditions in, like on the first night or two.

"It is a really powerful boat. It will bite you badly if you don't get it right. But it's so much fun.

"We came across Storm Bay doing 16 knots... in only 18 knots of sea breeze."

Asked what is the most demanding part of sailing the boat two-handed was, Gough, who suspects he fractured a rib during the race, said driving the boat is the hardest.

"You have got do the runners and there is a really big main," he said.

"That's the trickiest, and then you often go to a spinnaker to try and deal with it, and it loads up really quite quickly. You think ahead and look at what's going on before you do that."

Saul also credited their performance to a "conservative" approach throughout the race.

"We were a bit conservative when it was rough, but then that was smart, which was proven by the guys that couldn't finish," Saul said.

To follow the race and for all information, please go to rolexsydneyhobart.com

Related Articles

New Caledonian duo set sights on RSHYR
Two French sailors based in New Caledonia will take on the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race When Yann Rigal and Michel Quintin began sailing Double Handed in 2020, Rigal had his doubts. "When Michel called me and said, 'Are you in?' I was like, 'Wow, that's crazy but yes, let's go'," Rigal laughed. Posted on 11 Jun
Teams poised to settle unfinished business
80th Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race preparations are well underway While the start of the 80th anniversary Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is still some time away, preparations are already well under way at the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia (CYCA). Posted on 14 Mar
80th Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race entries open
A fleet of over 120 yachts expected to compete in the milestone event The 80th anniversary of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is expected to attract huge interest from sailors from Australia and around the globe, all eager to participate in the milestone event. Posted on 12 Mar
80th Rolex Sydney Hobart entries to open soon
Promising to be a spectacular edition of the race The Cruising Yacht Club of Australia (CYCA) is thrilled to announce that entries for the milestone 80th edition of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race will open in the coming weeks. Posted on 14 Feb
RSHYR 2024 | 50 feet and below start videos
Start videos from the third and fourth lines Start videos from the third and fourth lines Posted on 8 Jan
RSHYR 2024 | Maxi and mini maxi start videos
Start videos from up in the chopper on Boxing Day, where the airspace is as busy as the Harbour Start videos from up in the chopper on Boxing Day for the annual Sydney Hobart race, where the airspace can get nearly as congested as Sydney Harbour itself... Posted on 7 Jan
2024 RSHYR: Fika wins PHS Double Handed
Annette and Sophie crossed the RSHYR finish line late last evening on Fika Mother and daughter, Annette Hesselmans and Sophie Snijders, crossed the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race finish line late last evening on Fika, the only one of the three female double handed crews to finish the tough 628 nautical mile race. Posted on 1 Jan
2024 RSHYR - Resilience in adversity
Competing crews confronted myriad challenges and a range of weather conditions The official prize-giving for the 2024 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race offered a poignant conclusion to an edition marked by tragedy and defined by resilience. Posted on 31 Dec 2024
RSHYR - Mountaineering skills come to the rescue
A crew member with mountaineering skills came to the rescue of Tasmanian boat A crew member with mountaineering skills came to the rescue of Tasmanian boat Tilting at Windmills as it approached the finish line of the 2024 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race on Monday. Posted on 31 Dec 2024
2024 RSHYR: No more dehydrated food
Kings Pier overflowed with spectators on Monday Kings Pier overflowed with spectators on Monday, all vying to get a prime view of the latest finishers in the 2024 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race and among the arrivals was Double Handed entry Disko Trooper_Contender Sailcloth. Posted on 31 Dec 2024
Hyde Sails 2024 - One DesignSydney Boat Show 2025 - Apply to ExhibitBoat Books Australia FOOTER