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WILD OATS XI
WILD OATS XI is a 30.48 m Sail Yacht, built in New Zealand by McConaghy Boats and delivered in 2005.
Her power comes from a diesel engine. She has a 5.1 m beam.
She was designed by Reichel-Pugh Yacht Design , who also completed the naval architecture. Reichel-Pugh Yacht Design has designed 14 yachts and created the naval architecture for 23 yachts for yachts above 24 metres.
WILD OATS XI is one of 390 sailing yachts in the 30-35m size range.
WILD OATS XI is currently sailing under the Australia flag (along with a total of other 171 yachts). She has recently entered the superyacht marina Jones Bay Marina, in Australia. For more information regarding WILD OATS XI's movements, find out more about BOATPro AIS .
Specifications
- Name: WILD OATS XI
- Yacht Type: Sail Yacht
- Builder: McConaghy Boats
- Naval Architect: Reichel-Pugh Yacht Design
- Exterior Designer: Reichel-Pugh Yacht Design
- Refits: 2015
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- Meet the Team
The supermaxi yacht Wild Oats XI, owned by the Oatley family , is one of the fastest and most technologically advanced ocean racing yachts in the world. Her record in Australia¹s international offshore classic, the Rolex Sydney Hobart Race, is unrivalled.
The sleek, 30-metre (100ft) long ocean racing thoroughbred is undisputedly the most successful yacht in the event’s 76-year history. Helmsman Mark Richards is recognised as the race¹s most successful skipper.
Wild Oats XI¹s success went further in 2020 Hobart race
Wild Oats XI was launched only a matter of days before her first Rolex Sydney Hobart race in 2005, yet she proved so fast that the supermaxi blasted its way to a rare triple crown – line honours, a race record time and overall handicap victory. The time for the 628 nautical mile course was 1 day, 18 hours, 40 minutes, and 10 seconds.
This was pioneered successfully in 2013 and proved once again to give the yacht an advantage over the fleet.
Wild Oats XI has rewritten the Rolex Sydney Hobart record books many times. Apart from being first to finish on nine occasions, the Oatley family’s pride and joy was the first yacht ever to take four back-to-back line honour victories.
In 2009, after being lengthened to 100ft, the supermaxi surrendered its line honours crown to the almost identical Alfa Romeo but returned to its winning ways the following year.
In the 2012 Rolex Sydney Hobart, Wild Oats XI again took the triple-crown of line and handicap honours and a race record time.
In 2015 the stern was shortened by 2m and 12m forward sections were replaced by a 14m longer, sleeker bow, keeping the midship sections unmodified and in effect moving the entire sail plan aft by 2m.
The boat faced challenges between 2015-2017 but made a comeback in 2018 when Wild Oats XI won its ninth line honours in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, with a time of 1 day, 19 hours, 7 minutes and 21 seconds. This win made Wild Oats XI the most successful yacht in the race’s history with Mark Richards holding the title of the skipper with the most line honours victories.
© 2024 Wild Oats XI | Striving To Achieve Excellence.
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The Sydney Hobart Yacht Race Has a Boat-Size Absence
Wild Oats XI, a crowd favorite that is one of the most successful yachts in the event’s history, will not compete this year pending repairs and rethinking.
By Kimball Livingston
When the hundred-foot Maxi yachts hit the starting line for the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, one absence will loom as a powerful presence.
There will be no Wild Oats XI, and Wild Oats XI is more than a boat.
Speculation is inevitable when a crowd favorite is missing. The report from the boat’s skipper, Mark Richards, is straightforward, but it won’t put an end to wondering. Of the boat and its owners, Richards said: “We had a structural failure in the bow and are having that addressed. The Oatley family are re-evaluating how to progress forward in our sport and they have just decided to have a break this year while they work it out.”
That resonates because in this race, Wild Oats XI has taken line honors (first boat to cross the finish line) nine times, set records three times and, beyond that, won the hearts of Australians.
“Kids 6, 7, 8 years old know the name,” Richards said.
No one dares use the past tense in speaking of Wild Oats XI, but questions arise when a boat that is synonymous with the Sydney Hobart, and that has been rush-repaired in the past to make a race, is absent.
Last year, the boat finished fourth at the Sydney Hobart after a sail ripped underway. It was in August of this year during a race in Australia’s Whitsunday Islands that the hull failure occurred.
In 2005, Bob Oatley commissioned the build of Wild Oats XI and set the standard — the boat swept all honors in its first Sydney Hobart race, only two weeks after launch. The boat would win line honors seven more times before Oatley’s death in 2016. His son Sandy, also passionate about sailing, carried on.
“I’d love to get one more crack,” Richards said. “I guess we’ll know more next year.”
Steve Quigley got his first crack as a crewman in 2012 and felt “daunted” joining the famously accomplished crew. Then, “We were first over the finish line, we set another course record, and we won our division on handicap,” he said. “I should have retired from racing then and there, but it wasn’t until I went walking around Hobart in my team shirt, with strangers asking for autographs, that I understood that Wild Oats XI had become the people’s boat.”
What next? Richards said, “The boat is still very capable.”
Quigley, a naval architect, was part of a team responsible for a bold 2015 redesign that bought the boat some time. In Quigley’s recollection, “I was the one in the meeting who had to tell Bob, ‘You may have the fastest Maxi in the world, but if you want to keep it that way, let’s chop it in half,’” he said.
Then they chopped it twice.
To respect the 100-foot maximum limit for the Sydney Hobart race, length was removed from the stern and added in a new bow section that accommodated bigger sails. Wild Oats XI.2 proved effective across the wind range, and success continued as the boat won line honors again in 2018.
Imagining a 2024 race, Quigley said, “Given the right combination of wind strength and direction, we could find a window to win, but the newer boats have a wider window.”
Design DNA in 2023 is different from 2005. Boats are now wider, yielding stability to carry taller masts and more sail. The maximum width of Wild Oats XI, 17 feet, is 45 percent less than LawConnect, winner of the most recent lead-up regatta series and yet not the newest or widest.
Sandy Oatley did not respond to a request for comment. More than one member of his crew spoke of the team as a “family,” so any decision is charged with emotion: Do you throw money at an unlikely Wild Oats XI.3, or would it satisfy if the boat slipped into the role of sentimental favorite and long shot?
The citizens of Hobart cheer for all, but it doesn’t hurt to arrive on Wild Oats XI. Andrew Henderson, part of the crew since 2005 and a 25-race veteran, said: “Anyone who can get a boat to Hobart deserves respect. The town offers the warmest reception in Australia. All of us understand how special that is.”
This year, however, after many years racing, he said, “I’m spending Christmas with the kids.”
Wild Oats XI
The supermaxi yacht Wild Oats XI, owned by the Oatley family , is one of the fastest and most technologically advanced ocean racing yachts in the world. Her record in Australia¹s international offshore classic, the Rolex Sydney Hobart Race, is evidence of that.
This sleek, 30-metre (100ft) long ocean racing thoroughbred is undisputedly the most successful yacht in the 75-year history of the arduous event. Her helmsman, Mark Richards, is recognised as the race¹s most successful skipper.
Wild Oats XI¹s success went further in the most recent Hobart race when she claimed a record-breaking ninth win. Her line honours achievement in 2014 saw her beat the previous record of seven line honours which was achieved by Morna (later renamed Kurrewa IV) over 14 years ¬ between 1946 and 1960. Wild Oats XI claimed her eight line honours in just ten years.
Wild Oats XI was launched only a matter of days before her first Rolex Sydney Hobart race in 2005, yet she proved to be so fast that she blasted her way to a rare triple crown line honours, a race record time and victory on handicap. Her time for the 628 nautical mile course was 1 day, 18 hours, 40 minutes, and 10 seconds.
When launched, Wild Oats XI¹s ground-breaking design and construction included a radical and technically brilliant canting keel, a feature Bob Oatley pioneered into this form of ocean yacht racing. A canting keel means the keel is hinged on the underside of the yacht¹s amazing carbon fibre hull and controlled by a huge hydraulic ram so it can swing from one side to the other and increase stability. The hydraulic mechanism is so powerful it can lift a jumbo jet off the ground. It is manufactured using aviation grade steel.
With the 12-tonne, torpedo-shaped lead ballast bulb moved 40 degrees out to windward, Wild Oats XI enjoys an exceptional power-to-weight advantage over a conventional design. If she had a non-canting keel, Wild Oats XI would require an additional five tonnes in ballast to achieve the same level of stability. In that configuration she would be 20 percent heavier, and considerably slower.
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Wild Oats XI: A giant of Australian racing
The supermaxi yacht Wild Oats XI is here at the museum for a short visit. Wild Oats and its crew have become an Australian sporting brand, recognised by the public as Australia’s premier racing yacht and team through their dominance of the iconic Sydney to Hobart yacht race, since Wild Oats XI was launched in 2005.
Wild Oats XI in full flight. Image: Rolex – Carlo Borlenghi.
The supermaxi yacht Wild Oats XI is here at the museum for a short visit . Wild Oats and its crew have become an Australian sporting brand, recognised by the public as Australia’s premier racing yacht and team through their dominance of the iconic Sydney to Hobart yacht race, since Wild Oats XI was launched in 2005. This is Australia’s team, in the eye of the public Wild Oats XI is defending the country’s pride in the nation’s major ocean race – and its public adoration is thoroughly deserved.
Wild Oats XI . Image: Rolex – Daniel Forster.
Triple Crowns and breaking records
The national focus of the Sydney to Hobart is always on the boat to finish first, and in this regard, Wild Oats XI has an impressive scorecard. It has claimed eight line honours wins – at one point, with a run of four in a row! Twice it has achieved the Triple Crown: line honours, handicap win AND a race record. Wild Oats XI is one of the most successful yachts in the history of the arduous event and her helmsman, Mark Richards, is recognised as one of the race’s most successful skipper.
Wild Oats XI was launched just days before its first Rolex Sydney to Hobart Yacht race in 2005, and despite a limited warm up, it sprinted to the finish line and into history taking the Triple Crown for the first time since 1945, and that was when Rani won the race that began the annual event. Wild Oats XI’s record time for the completing the 628 nautical mile course was 1 day, 18 hours, 40 minutes, and 10 seconds. In 2012, Wild Oats XI shaved 16 minutes, 58 seconds off that record and pulled off another Triple Crown, an unprecedented result. Since then the record has been taken by arch-rival Perpetual Loyal, but Wild Oats XI is ready to maximise the opportunity again if the right conditions are present on the 26th of December this year and try to reclaim that record.
Beneath Wild Oats XI’s elegant silver-grey hull is a racing machine. The crew operate an engineering masterpiece and remember, long distance blue water ocean racing takes place over a matter of days, not hours. The team live and work on board, it’s like a military vessel where their off-watch habitation quarters are fitted around a high tech structure, first and foremost designed for racing (and winning).
Brisbane to Keppel Tropical Regatta Yacht Race 2016. Image: Andrea Francolini/Wild Oats XI.
Designed to win
Wild Oats XI was commissioned by well-known winemaker the late Robert Oatley AO in 2005, the largest in a series of successful ocean racers he had owned and sailed on. It was designed by celebrated team Reichel/Pugh Yacht Design in San Diego USA. A protégé of Doug Petersen, John Reichel’s partnership with UK yacht designer Jim Pugh has produced a long series of successful ocean racing craft.
When the IMS rule took over from the IOR in the late 1980s as the means of handicapping offshore racing yachts it lead to cleaner/leaner and fairer hull shapes, assessed by computers for their potential speed rather than handicapped around a series of measurement points to produce a rating. Reichel/Pugh took advantage of the new direction in sleek racing yachts to create a sled like hull that dominated the local Trans Pac event from Los Angeles to Honolulu – a sleigh ride under spinnaker.
In 1999, their design Pyewacket for Roy Disney Jr (yes, Walt Disney’s nephew) grabbed the race and everyone’s attention, a narrow flat skateboard that was unstoppable. In 2004, Oatley invited Reichel Pugh team to produce his Wild Oats X, a 66-footer but wound up the ante with a canting keel, his perseverance with that concept helped pioneer the technology in ocean racing. When authorities drew the limit out to almost 100-foot maximum length for offshore ocean racers, Oatley and Reichel Pugh answered the challenge with Wild Oats XI, a super maxi sled optimised to the nth degree and built in Australia. The builder McConaghy Yachts at Mona Vale Sydney is a world-class yacht builder and Wild Oats XI speaks of their superior skills in crafting fine vessels.
Happy with the concept, the team had Oatley’s support to keep Wild Oats XI up to date. Sail and rig modifications are never-ending, but almost every year the hull and appendages were given a makeover, to the point it was known as the ‘Swiss Army Knife’: new and improved canards, hydrofoils, rudder and canting keel. Lighter is faster too – the keel can be angled 40 degrees sideways, so the modest amount of mass in the bulb, 12 tonnes, creates the same stability out wide as something almost 50% heavier would if stuck on the centreline. The downside is a loss of keel efficiency, so a canard profile centreboard just forward of the mast brings back the balance and lift. Better still Wild Oats XI has two centreboards, one each side, and they only put the leeward one down as required for even more effectiveness.
Heading up the Derwent River, towards Line Honours. Image: Andrea Francolini/Wild Oats XI.
One of the biggest updates was putting a longer bow on the yacht in 2015, which meant taking the extra length of the back end to keep to the required 100-feet. It’s stopped the tendency to dive into waves downwind. The team can drive her harder now, and have abandoned the hydrofoils sticking out horizontally, meaning less drag and more speed in racing conditions.
A huge square top mainsail, a massive Code Zero headsail for light weather, gigantic asymmetric spinnakers (which the crew control using hydraulic winches) and, the entire time the boat is racing, the engine is running to power the hydraulics. All this is handicapped severely, in fact, the boats elapsed time is pretty much doubled to create it’s handicap time, yet Wild Oats XI can still win. In favourable conditions, with the wind behind or abeam, the super maxi can keep up with the moving weather and optimise it’s race strategy around that one pattern, whereas the slower boats start in one system and then have to negotiate another before they finish.
Wild Oats XI can reach speeds of over 30 knots and boasts an average speed of 15 knots for the course – which is a remarkable achievement as many of the competing fleet can’t even reach that at their maximum speed. It’s in another league, and races just a few other similar size yachts each year, but in battle, it takes no prisoners.
Super maxi Wild Oats XI being toed from Woolwich to Sydney City Marine to undergoing radical changes for the Rolex Sydney to Hobart 2015. Image: Andrea Francolini/Wild Oats XI.
Ready to race
The 2015 Sydney to Hobart saw Wild Oats XI retire for the first time, due to a gear failure, while its recently launched nemesis, the skiff-like Comanche from the USA, got its revenge by winning line honours in a rough and damaging race. In the 2016 race, it was up against three other 100-foot long rivals, the modified 2008 designed Perpetual Loyal , Scallywag ( ex- Ragamuffin 100, launched 2014) and the newcomer CQS (the radically modified Nicorette, first launched in 2004 when it won line honours as a 90-footer, now its 100-feet long). Bad luck struck again, and whilst in lead, Wild Oats XI had to retire again, and the eventual line honours winner Perpetual Loyal and set a new race record.
Wild Oats XI is by no means outclassed by the newer rivals, the different design and configuration approaches have their strengths and weaknesses and these advantages can even out over a long course, but Wild Oats XI has one strength over many others: over ten years of teamwork and spirit, which is recognised and adopted by the Australian public. All of which just adds to the team’s determination to win again.
— David Payne, Curator of Historic Vessels.
Take a tour aboard Wild Oats 10am-12pm and 1-4pm, 26-28 January 2018. See our website for details .
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David Payne
David Payne is Curator of Historic Vessels at Australian National Maritime Museum, and through the Australian Register of Historic Vessels he works closely with heritage boat owners throughout Australia researching and advising on their craft and their social connections. David has also been a yacht designer and documented many of the museum’s vessels with extensive drawings. He has had a wide sailing experience, from Lasers and 12-foot skiffs through to long ocean passages. Since 2012 he has been able to work closely with Aboriginal communities on a number of Indigenous canoe building and watercraft projects.
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WILD OATS XI yacht NOT for charter*
30.48m / 100' | mcconaghy boats | 2005 / 2015.
- Previous Yacht
The 30.48m/100' sail yacht 'Wild Oats XI' was built by McConaghy Boats in Australia. This luxury vessel's exterior design is the work of Reichel-Pugh and she was last refitted in 2015.
Guest Accommodation
She is also capable of carrying up to 29 crew onboard to ensure a relaxed luxury yacht experience.
Range & Performance
Wild Oats XI is built with a composite hull and composite superstructure, with composite decks.
Length | 30.48m / 100' |
Beam | 5.1m / 16'9 |
Draft | 5.91m / 19'5 |
Cruising Speed | - |
Built | | (Refitted) |
Builder | McConaghy Boats |
Model | Custom |
Exterior Designer | Reichel-Pugh |
*Charter Wild Oats XI Sail Yacht
Sail yacht Wild Oats XI is currently not believed to be available for private Charter. To view similar yachts for charter , or contact your Yacht Charter Broker for information about renting a luxury charter yacht.
Wild Oats XI Yacht Owner, Captain or marketing company
'Yacht Charter Fleet' is a free information service, if your yacht is available for charter please contact us with details and photos and we will update our records.
Wild Oats XI Photos
NOTE to U.S. Customs & Border Protection
Specification
S/Y Wild Oats XI
Length | 30.48m / 100' |
Builder | |
Exterior Designer | Reichel-Pugh |
Built | Refit | 2005 | 2015 |
Model | Custom |
Beam | 5.1m / 16'9 |
Draft | 5.91m / 19'5 |
Cruising Speed | - |
Top Speed | - |
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Published on December 16th, 2019 | by Editor
Wild Oats XI: Bruised but not beaten
Published on December 16th, 2019 by Editor -->
Launched in 2005, the 100-foot Wild Oats XI is as much about the 628nm Sydney Hobart Yacht Race as family is about Christmas. The two go together, so the thought of the supermaxi not being on the start line for the 75th edition would have been a shocker.
But what’s more of a shocker is that she will be on the start line among the 164-boat fleet.
Having claimed line honors on 9 occasions, won on corrected time twice, and twice set a race record time, the yacht suffered major structural damage a little more than a month ago when its 45-metre high carbon fibre mast fractured at deck level, resulting in a large part of the deck structure failed.
Occurring during the 180-nautical mile Cabbage Tree Island race out of Sydney, the crew miraculously was able to stabilize the broken mast and reach shore before the yacht suffered any additional damage.
Subsequently, during the past five weeks Wild Oats XI has undergone a major rebuild at its dock in Sydney, an endeavor that was designed to have it ready for the race start on December 26.
This included replacing an 8 m x 3 m piece of the deck and fractured frames, and repairing the mast. At one stage during the mast repair specialist technicians worked around-the-clock for 4 days to ensure maximum strength was achieved.
Last week, when the supermaxi was back in one piece, it completed a successful test on Sydney Harbour and now takes the next step by undertaking a 24-hour offshore passage off Sydney so it meets one of the many qualification requirements for yachts entered in the Hobart race.
“We will be in full race mode and treat this passage as we would if we were racing,” said skipper Mark Richards. “The entire race crew will be on board, including our navigator, Juan Vila, who has just flown in from Europe.”
Richard revealed that Wild Oats XI will start in the Hobart race a remarkable 1200 kg lighter than it was last year when it took line honours in the classic.
“We have replaced two large daggerboards with a small, and considerably lighter, rudder just forward of the mast,” he explained. “The few trials we have done using this new appendage indicate that it will be an advantage when sailing upwind.” Damage photos from Adventures of a Sailor Girl :
Race details – Entry list – Facebook
Background : The 2019 fleet will be chasing line honours and the overall Tattersall Cup win in the 628nm Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race which starts December 26, 2019. From Sydney Harbour, the fleet sails out into the Tasman Sea, down the south-east coast of mainland Australia, across Bass Strait (which divides the mainland from the island State of Tasmania), then down the east coast of Tasmania. At Tasman Island the fleet turns right into Storm Bay for the final sail up the Derwent River to the historic port city of Hobart.
Source: Rob Mundle, Scuttlebutt
Tags: Sydney Hobart , Wild Oats
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Mark Richards and Sandy Oatley unveiled Wild Oats XI's latest modifications.
Mark Richards and Sandy Oatley unveil newly modified Wild Oats XI
Mark ‘Richo’ Richards and Sandy Oatley have unveiled Wild Oats XI’s newest modifications at Woolwich Dock. The supermaxi has just undergone major reconstructive surgery after chopping 35 feet from the bow and 7 from the stern to create a longer bow.
Wild Oats XI has been in the sheds at McConaghy Boats in Mona Vale since returning from the Transpac Race earlier this year. Mark Richards described the modifications in terms of plastic surgery, breast augmentation, nose job, ear tuck and more, but was sure we would see the maxi launch out of the water on Boxing Day. And when asked why they didn’t build Wild Oats XII he explained the cost difference, “It would cost $25m to build a new boat, this cost us $2m.”
And as Sandy Oatley put it, “It would look exactly like this.”
Wild Oats XI is expected to have her first sail this weekend, she will then be training throughout December and competing in the SOLAS Big Boat Challenge on December 15.
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Sydney to Hobart yacht race — day one of the 77th edition of the bluewater classic, as it happened
Topic: Sport
Supermaxi Andoo Comanche is leading a closely bunched pack of supermaxis in the Sydney to Hobart yacht race, as the fleet heads south on day one of the contest's 77th edition.
Northerly winds helped the fleet, particularly the supermaxis, amid predictions the leaders may have supporting winds all the way to Hobart.
Leading into the traditional Boxing Day start, the Sydney to Hobart was seen as a race in four to be first to the finish — Andoo Comanche, last year's line honours winner Black Jack, Law Connect and Hamilton Island Wild Oats.
Big crowds were on hand on Sydney Harbour for the 1pm AEDT start — but the opening exchanges saw chaos reign, amid near-misses, protests and penalties for two of the big four.
Hamilton Island Wild Oats skipper Mark Richards let loose a number of audible obscenities on the TV coverage, as he and his crew tried to navigate their way to the Sydney Heads and out into the ocean for the trip south.
There were big crowds on hand on Sydney Harbour to watch the fleet set sail in the 77th Sydney to Hobart yacht race. ( Getty Images: Jenny Evans )
Race favourite Andoo Comanche had a poor start, not getting enough clear wind to move ahead of its rivals, and then being jammed by other craft making it difficult to do the required tacking down the harbour.
Skipper and owner John Winning Jr and sailing master Iain Murray were not happy, and even less so when they made it to the first turning mark but misjudged the turn and hit the mark.
They had to do a penalty turn, losing ground on their rivals. However Andoo Comanche raised a protest flag, claiming they had been infringed by another boat.
On board Hamilton Island Wild Oats, a spirited conversation took place between skipper Mark Richards and navigator Stan Honey, with suggestions the boat may have infringed rejected by Richards.
Finally Richards relented, ordering crew to "Deploy the jib! Deploy the jib!" before completing a 720-degree turn.
At one point Black Jack cut back across two of its rivals, running a fine line between LawConnect and Hamilton Island Wild Oats.
Supermaxi LawConnect (right) has hit the front and leads the fleet down the NSW coast on day one of the Sydney to Hobart. ( ABC News: Tim Swanston )
After the frantic start, LawConnect took the lead from Black Jack, with a gap to the two boats that had done penalty turns.
As the leaders got out into the ocean to turn south, LawConnect held the lead for some time before Andoo Comanche picked up some solid winds further out from shore and hit the front, 90 minutes into the race.
For much of the afternoon, Andoo Comanche then maintained and extended its lead over LawConnect.
As of 9:20pm AEDT, Andoo Comanche led by 4.6 nautical miles (about 8.5 kilometres) over LawConnect, with Black Jack in third and Hamilton Island Wild Oats in fourth. There were 8.7 nautical miles covering first to fourth.
Andoo Comanche is close to its own record pace, which was set in 2017.
The record is one day, nine hours, 15 minutes, 24 seconds.
On the race website, the estimated time of arrival for Andoo Comanche as of 9:20pm AEDT is 12:38am and 44 seconds AEDT just past midnight on Thursday morning — which would fall short of the existing mark by about two hours.
In the race for overall honours, NSW boat Celestial — which was in line to win overall last year before being demoted on protest — leads from New Zealand boat Caro, and American entry Warrior Won.
Only two of the 109 entries in the race have retired so far. The two-handed boat Avalanche retired early in the race, with a reported damaged bowsprit, while Yeah Baby retired early on Monday evening.
Look back at how the race unfolded on Monday on our blog.
Andoo Comanche's lead increases - a race record could be on the cards!
We have a battle at the top, lawconnect hits the front as andoo comanche protests, live updates, that's where we'll leave it, a by andrew mcgarry.
It's been an eventful first six hours of this year's Sydney to Hobart, with protests, near misses and a fast start that leaves Andoo Comanche in pole position for line honours and a possible race record.
But don't rule out its rival supermaxis - LawConnect, Hamilton Island Wild Oats and Black Jack!
The wrap of the day's racing will be live shortly. Keep an eye on this article for any major updates during the evening and there will be new stories tomorrow to keep track of the leaders as they get closer to Hobart.
Thanks to everyone for joining us today on the blog - from myself, Andrew McGarry, have a good evening.
Change in the placings
The order of the top boats on the water has not changed for some time, but now as we get towards the evening, there is one change we can report.
Hamilton Island Wild Oats is still getting a decent wind as it sits closest to the shore of the four leaders.
The boat has moved into third spot, passing Black Jack.
Hamilton Island Wild Oats is seven nautical miles from the leader, going at 22.3 knots. Black Jack (20.4 knots) is now 8.2 nautical miles from the leader.
An example of the effect handicap has on the race for overall honours
So when we talk about overall honours, we also call it handicap honours. That is because the organisers use a "handicap" - similar to horse-racing but not based on weight carried - to make the race fair between boats of different sizes.
As said previously, as of now, Andoo Comanche is on course to break its own race record from 2017.
However, when you look at the leaderboard for overall honours, you see why it is hard for the supermaxis to win overall.
The leader, Celestial, is predicted to cross the line on Wednesday morning at about 7:33am AEDT. When the handicap of 1.390 is applied, Celestial's corrected arrival time is for 12:09:48am on the Thursday (i.e) just after midnight.
If we look at Andoo Comanche, the predicted arrival time (which changes constantly) is now 7:53:17pm AEDT tomorrow night.
Because of its size, Andoo Comanche has a handicap of 2.047 - on corrected time, it's expected finish time is 4:13:40am AEDT on December 29, more than 32 hours after it would physically finish the race.
Right now, Andoo Comanche is 14th for overall honours. We will see if the northerly winds that are due to help the supermaxis help move the boat up the list as the race goes on.
Andoo Comanche is keeping up a solid speed on the way south, with the supermaxi still going at 25.4 knots, situated 32 nautical miles south-east of Jervis Bay - that's a lead of 5.5 nautical miles over LawConnect.
The interesting statistic right now is the estimated time of arrival - according to the race website, Andoo Comanche is due to come into Hobart at 7:52pm and 55 seconds AEDT tomorrow night.
If that happens, then the John Winning Jr-owned boat would smash the race record by more than two hours!
As things stand, LawConnect is estimated to finish at 10:16:07pm AEDT - 43 seconds outside the existing record of Comanche.
A word of caution, however. There is NO guarantee that winds will stay this strong all the way, and if there are flat spots then that estimated finish time will blow out.
Plus, of course, there is no idea what the Derwent will have in store. If the winds die down in the river tomorrow evening, then it may not matter how quickly the boats get down there.
A clip of LawConnect in the Sydney to Hobart
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LawConnect has had a good day so far, taking the lead for a section of the afternoon before giving up the top spot to Andoo Comanche.
The boat's team have released a clip of them in action on the harbour.
You can also follow them in action on the water with their livestream here .
Still a clear top four at the top
Back to line honours again, and the top four is clear, four hours into the race.
As the leaders approach Jervis Bay, Andoo Comanche leads by four nautical miles from LawConnect, then Black Jack trails the leader by 6.2 nautical miles, and Hamilton Island Wild Oats is fourth, 6.5 nautical miles back.
There is a gap of more than seven nautical miles from Wild Oats to the rest of the fleet, led by Stefan Racing, with Willow just behind further out from shore.
An early update on the race for overall honours
While the focus is on the four at the front, let's take a quick look at the race for the overall win.
As we said previously, the weather may well affect this more than most years. If it's true that the top four could make it to Hobart (or at least the Derwent) on just one set of northerly winds, while the smaller boats could be hit by one or two changes on the way south, then even the handicap may not be enough to even things out.
As of the latest update at 4:30pm AEDT, the American-owned Warrior Won is 21 nautical miles east of Kiama, and is going at 17.7 knots.
It's estimated finish on corrected time is 3:26:38am (AEDT).
It's nearest competitor is New Zealand boat Caro, which is at the same spot - 21 nautical miles east of Kiama - but whose estimated finish is five minutes 26 seconds behind Warrior Won.
In third is the NSW boat Gweilo, a further two minutes 45 seconds behind on estimated time.
Next is Celestial - which won overall line honours before being demoted on protest.
As they say in the (bluewater) classics, this is VERY early days, and will change a fair bit depending on events, the weather patterns and how clear a run the big four get.
Andoo Comanche is ripping along
Things are going well on board the leader Andoo Comanche.
The supermaxi is passing Nowra and has picked up speed again, to be running at 28.4 knots (52.6 kmh).
Clearly the further out you go, the better the wind - at least for them.
The winds are stronger again, with all three of Comanche's rivals going at a minimum of 22 knots (40.7 kmh).
One boat out of the race so far
We have confirmation that the two-handed boat Avalanche is the first entry out of this year's Sydney to Hobart.
It is understood that the James Murchison-owned Hick 40 boat went back to port with a damaged bow sprit.
It is the second time that the boat has been forced to retire from the race - in 2015 Avalanche was launched and contested the race, before retiring with hull damage.
Decent winds predicted for tomorrow evening
It's early days ... but having a look on Windy , the predictions are for 40 to 50km an hour northerly winds blowing the fleet due south through late tomorrow afternoon into the evening and night, which means if it's not going to be a race record, it might not be far off it.
The idea of the leaders being downwind the whole way to the Iron Pot will do their chances no harm - the big question is, what will the River Derwent have in store? Many a contender has slowed down or come to a standstill and watched their chances go out the window in the final stages.
We will have to wait and see.
The leaders have passed Wollongong
The head of the fleet is going past Port Kembla, two and a half hours after the start.
Andoo Comanche is still getting the best of the wind, furthest out from shore. The leader is picking up speed and going at 24.5 knots, extending the lead over Law Connect to 2.1 nautical miles.
Black Jack is going at 20 knots and is 3.2 nautical miles back, while Hamilton Island Wild Oats is 4.0 nautical miles back, at 21 knots.
Will this be a race of two races?
As we settle in for the run down the coast, the question is what the weather will do and how it will affect the fleet.
So far, the winds are solid but not spectacular. The leading four boats are all travelling at between 19 and 21.5 knots (35.2 - 39.8 kmh).
The expectation is that the winds will remain northerly (i.e. pushing the boats south towards Hobart) and will increase in strength as the afternoon goes on.
The overall forecast is that the winds will stay northerly all the way to Hobart - at least for the leading bunch of boats.
The first real change will come on Wednesday, when a trough is expected to shift the winds to southerly, making it harder for boats to keep speed up.
By the time that trough comes, however, the leading chances may well have finished the race!
Just remember, the race record is one day, nine hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds - so to set a new mark, boats will have to reach Hobart before 10:15pm AEDT tomorrow night.
It's getting tasty up the front
We are getting a sense of the different plans at play for the leading chances as we head towards the two-hour mark.
There is an arrayed line of four, outside to inside (out to sea to closest to shore).
Andoo Comanche leads on the wide line, with just under 600 nautical miles to go to the finish.
Inside her and a little further astern is LawConnect, which is still travelling well, 0.7 nautical miles behind.
Next is Black Jack, a little further in to shore and 1.5 nautical miles behind.
In fourth is Hamilton Island Wild Oats, but after all the swearing and penalties and lost ground earlier, Mark Richards and his crew are hitting the mark now. The boat is picking up speed on an inside line, and is going at 19.2 knots, just 2.3 nautical miles behind.
Some photographers will do ANYTHING for a Sydney to Hobart picture
There are camera crews on board various boats in the harbour for the start of the race, and they then have to make a hasty exit - unless they want to take the long route to Hobart!
But it's not just the TV folks who brave the water. Getty Images' Mark Evans got up close and personal to the water to get this amazing shot of Stefan Racing . Hopefully he's dry now...
With the leaders well and truly out in the open going down the coast, the supermaxis are able to take advantage of the winds from the north.
Andoo Comanche has found its sea-legs, so to speak, and is absolutely flying! Right now the John Winning Jr-owned entry is the furthest out to sea, going at just under 25 knots.
Comanche has caught up with LawConnect and is officially level, but has a 3.9 knot wind advantage over its rival.
A little further back is last year's line honours winner Black Jack, travelling at 20.1 knots. Hamilton Island Wild Oats is sticking closer to shore, but isn't getting the big wind. Wild Oats is 1.6 nautical miles behind the two leaders, going at 17.9 knots.
Get ready, this could be a four-way race all the way down the coast!
Big crowds watch the start
The rest of the top 10
We've been focused on the big four, because they are the ones likely to fight it out for line honours.
But the rest of the top 10 has some interesting names there.
In fifth is the Botin 80 boats Stefan Racing, owned and skippered by Grant Wharington.
Next is the Reichel Pugh Maxi 72 URM Group, followed by Willow, whose best finish was fourth for line honours in 2016.
Then we have Moneypenny, owned and skippered by Sean Langman, and then Tasmanian boat Alive, which won the race overall in 2018. Rounding out the top 10 is Whisper, owned by Phillip Turner and skippered by Duncan Hine.
What's the wind doing?
At the moment, the winds seem to be northerly / north-easterly, which will assist the boats in going down the coast.
The forecast says the leaders could well get all the way to Hobart with helping winds, which is why the tip is that the race record could be in danger.
The record is held by Comanche - in 2017 the race was won in one day, nine hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds.
Just to show you how things can change, depending on the winds ... last year, Black Jack took line honours, crossing the line in two days, 12 hours, 37 minutes and 17 seconds.
LawConnect still the one to catch
LawConnect is going nicely in the lead, the supermaxi has clear air in front.
Black Jack is second, and then there is a fair gap back to the other two leaders. Wild Oats is sticking closer to the coast, while Andoo Comanche is further out to sea in search of the best wind.
Another view from Sydney Harbour
Various ABC reporters have been out and about on the harbour for the start, and Nick Sas has posted this beautiful clip of the boats against a gorgeous blue sky.
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Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2024
Brett Eagle purchased Wild Rose in 2020 and reverted to her original name Wild Oats . The late Roger Hickman, crewed by male and female amateurs, won the 2014 Rolex Sydney Hobart with her as Wild Rose and scored wins in the Australian and NSW IRC Championships, among many great victories with this famous yacht, including taking Division 4 of the Rolex Sydney Hobart in 2011, 2012, 2013.
‘Hicko’, with Bruce Foye and Lance Peckman, also won the 1993 race (IOR) with the boat, alongside IMS winner, Cuckoos Nest. Her last Rolex Sydney Hobart was 2015, when Hickman skippered her to sixth overall and third in Division 4. New owner, Eagle, raced on Ted Tooher’s Chancellor for three years as second in charge and navigator prior to buying this boat. He has given Wild Oats a new paint job, with the rose remaining between the two words of her name. Eagle and crew are in still in the early days of learning this beautifully set up boat.
Competitor Details
Yacht Name | Wild Oats |
Sail Number | 4343 |
Owner | Brett Eagle, Marc Skjellerup & Gordon Smith |
Skipper | Brett Eagle (5) |
Sailing Master | Gordon Smith (6) |
Navigator | Marike Koppenol (3) |
Crew | Reece Theedam (3), Peter Carpenter (1), Muir Watson (2), Clifford Fairbrass (1), Drew Bagnall (1), Marc Skjellerup, Evan Watson, Sharon Bartle (2), Saul Davidson |
State | NSW |
Club | CYCA |
Type | Farr 43 |
Designer | Bruce Farr & Associates (USA) |
Builder | McConaghy Boats |
LOA | 13.1 |
Beam | 4.2 |
Draft | 2.5 |
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Wild Oats XI is a state-of-the-art maxi yacht designed by Reichel/Pugh and built by Mcconaghy Boats, five months after her near-sistership Alfa Romeo II, from which she borrowed extensively. [1] She was launched in December 2005 after a 9-month build and won her first Sydney-Hobart the same month. She is distinctively narrow with a 5.1 m (17 ft) beam and originally featured "canting ballast ...
WILD OATS XI is a 30.48 m Sail Yacht, built in New Zealand by McConaghy Boats and delivered in 2005.. Her power comes from a diesel engine. She has a 5.1 m beam. She was designed by Reichel-Pugh Yacht Design, who also completed the naval architecture.. Reichel-Pugh Yacht Design has designed 14 yachts and created the naval architecture for 23 yachts for yachts above 24 metres.
The Oatley family's renowned Wild Oats XI was extended to the new maximum overall length for yachts contesting the Rolex Sydney Hobart race - 30.48 metres (100ft). 2012 Under Skipper Mark Richard's expert captainship, Wild Oats XI again took the triple-crown in the Rolex Sydney Hobart race - line and handicap honours and a race record time.
The supermaxi yacht Wild Oats XI, ... Wild Oats XI was launched only a matter of days before her first Rolex Sydney Hobart race in 2005, yet she proved so fast that the supermaxi blasted its way to a rare triple crown - line honours, a race record time and overall handicap victory. The time for the 628 nautical mile course was 1 day, 18 hours ...
Wild Oats XI still holds the record for the most consecutive line honours wins - four - from 2005 to 2008, surpassing Morna's record of three in a row achieved from 1946-1948. She also holds the race record for the CYCA's Sydney Gold Coast Yacht Race (22hrs, 3mins, 46secs, set in 2012) and the CYCA's Cabbage Tree Island Race (12hrs ...
The 30.48m McConaghy Boats sailing yacht Wild Oats XI is currently not listed for sale. Visit our yachts for sale section to find similar superyachts on the market. Wild Oats XI yacht owner, broker or captain, use the Update Sales Info link to report any changes in the sales information. Wild Oats XI yacht was built in 2005 by McConaghy Boats ...
Dec. 23, 2023. When the hundred-foot Maxi yachts hit the starting line for the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, one absence will loom as a powerful presence. There will be no Wild Oats XI, and Wild ...
Earlier this year, Wild Oats XI claimed her third line honours win in the Audi Sydney Gold Coast Yacht Race and set a new Open race record of 22hrs, 3mins, 46secs, finally beating the 13 year record set by conventional yacht, Brindabella.The super maxi also broke her own 2010 Cabbage Tree Island Race record in November, slicing nearly two hours ...
It occasioned Wild Oats XI's record ninth line honours victory, an accomplishment destined to remain unbeaten. Wild Oats XI pipped 100ft Black Jack (by 3mins 31secs - the closest finish in 15 years) in the 2017 Sydney Gold Coast race. In the interim, her keel and its mechanism were gone over and a new North 3Di RAW mainsail added. Black Jack ...
The supermaxi yacht Wild Oats XI, ... Wild Oats XI was launched only a matter of days before her first Rolex Sydney Hobart race in 2005, yet she proved to be so fast that she blasted her way to a rare triple crown line honours, a race record time and victory on handicap. Her time for the 628 nautical mile course was 1 day, 18 hours, 40 minutes ...
The supermaxi yacht Wild Oats XI is here at the museum for a short visit. Wild Oats and its crew have become an Australian sporting brand, recognised by the public as Australia's premier racing yacht and team through their dominance of the iconic Sydney to Hobart yacht race, since Wild Oats XI was launched in 2005. Wild Oats XI in full flight.
The 30.48m/100' sail yacht 'Wild Oats XI' was built by McConaghy Boats in Australia. This luxury vessel's exterior design is the work of Reichel-Pugh and she was last refitted in 2015. Guest Accommodation. She is also capable of carrying up to 29 crew onboard to ensure a relaxed luxury yacht experience.
Launched in 2005, the 100-foot Wild Oats XI is as much about the 628nm Sydney Hobart Yacht Race as family is about Christmas. The two go together, so the thought of the supermaxi not being on the ...
Wild Oats XI, Hamilton Island. 20,065 likes. Official Facebook account for WildOats XI - 9 Times Line Honours winner of the Rolex Sydney Hobart. O
The legendary Hamilton Island Wild Oats (formerly Wild Oats XI) will be back on the race track in the 2022 Noakes Sydney Gold Coast Yacht Race, after two-and...
Wild Oats XI returns in 2022 racing under a refreshed name, Hamilton Island Wild Oats.Mark Richards and crew recently returned to racing in the fluky 2022 Noakes Sydney Gold Coast Yacht Race and finished third on Line Honours behind Andoo Comanche and Black Jack.. Wild Oats XI last competed in the Rolex Sydney Hobart in 2019 and finished third over the line, pipping SHK Scallywag by 38 seconds ...
03/12/2015. Mark 'Richo' Richards and Sandy Oatley have unveiled Wild Oats XI's newest modifications at Woolwich Dock. The supermaxi has just undergone major reconstructive surgery after chopping 35 feet from the bow and 7 from the stern to create a longer bow. Wild Oats XI has been in the sheds at McConaghy Boats in Mona Vale since ...
Hamilton Island Wild Oats is seven nautical miles from the leader, going at 22.3 knots. Black Jack (20.4 knots) is now 8.2 nautical miles from the leader. Copy link
View Address. Contact. Call Now. 200 Beach Drive NE, St. Petersburg, Florida, 33701, United States. Tampa Bay's premier yacht brokerage and charter business for over 30 years offering services including yacht and boat sales, yacht charters, and marine service. Save Search. Clear Filter Owner: broker-st-petersburg-yacht-sales-service-30654.
Whether you are looking to rent a sailboat in St Pete for a city sightseeing tour, a romantic sunset cruise or an active day on the water with your family or friends, we're confident you'll find the best one for you on Sailo. The average starting price to charter a yacht in St. Petersburg is $1100. You can however find excellent affordable ...
Brett Eagle purchased Wild Rose in 2020 and reverted to her original name Wild Oats.The late Roger Hickman, crewed by male and female amateurs, won the 2014 Rolex Sydney Hobart with her as Wild Rose and scored wins in the Australian and NSW IRC Championships, among many great victories with this famous yacht, including taking Division 4 of the Rolex Sydney Hobart in 2011, 2012, 2013.
The OG. We opened the doors to our original Rollin' Oats Market in St. Petersburg, FL in 1994 with a 2,000-square-foot store. We've expanded over the years, now offering the local community a 15,000-square-foot wellness campus where you can attend a class at Pilates with Leigh, find unique gifts at Upstairs Boutique, and shop for all your natural grocery and wellness products under one roof.
Specialties: Rollin' Oats is a locally owned, natural food market and café serving the Tampa Bay community since 1994. In our two locations - St. Petersburg and South Tampa - we offer a wide range of products from all natural grocery to 100% USDA organic produce to wellness supplements and vitamins to clean body care products to our comprehensive deli and café. Established in 1994. Rollin ...