• [email protected]
  • (+61) 1300 183 365
  • Open Facebook account in a new tab.
  • Open Instagram account in a new tab.
  • Open Tripadvisor account in a new tab.
  • Open Youtube account in a new tab.

Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race- 26 December

Avoid the Crowds

Front Row Seats!

Bucket List Experience

Sydney Harbour to Hobart Yacht Race.

On Boxing Day each year, one of the world’s premier yacht races departs from Sydney bound for Hobart. Take our private VIP charter option or join a group cruise and experience the harbour amid a sea of colour, pomp and ceremony that is the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.

Click the Tabs to Find out More

Vip private charter - $3,375, harbour cruise - $285 per person.

Enjoy one of Sydney Harbour’s and the yachting world’s biggest days of the year in style and comfort aboard our VIP European SportsCruiser. You’ll get up close to some of the world’s most impressive maxi yachts as we line up alongside the starting grid and follow the flotilla towards the harbour entrance. Once the yachts have disappeared beyond the heads, we cruise to the picturesque and historic Quarantine Bay for lunch, a wander, and an afternoon swim. But if you have a spot in mind, your local skipper will make sure we get there during the day.

VIP Sports Cruiser – Our 11 metre, open-top cruiser brings a touch of Italian Riviera class to the stunning Sydney Harbour. This sleek powerboat comfortably seats 10 (plus a skipper) and is equipped with ample shade covering, downstairs bedroom, kitchenette and toilet facilities, generous food and drink storage and plenty of space for lounging in the sun and moving about the boat. Find out more about your boat here (opens in a new tab) .

11:30 am from Convention Wharf, Darling Harbour.

Maximum Group Size

Lunch and drinks.

Bring your own picnic and drinks (alcohol permitted) or we can stop at one of many harbourside restaurants.

Price includes

Watch the start of the world-famous Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race and follow the flotilla of impressive maxi yachts out towards the heads. We’ll take a short tour of some of the key sights of Sydney Harbour, and head to picturesque and historic Quarantine Bay for lunch, a wander, and an afternoon swim. Your ticket includes a cafe lunch and soft drink at a waterside bar/cafe but you’re welcome to bring other snacks and drinks aboard.

Harbour Explorer – a comfortable open-top boat that seats 16 guests and can drop you right onto the beach. It’s 8.5m with an enclosed toilet and some shading. Find out more about your boat here (opens in a new tab) .

  11:30 am from Convention Wharf, Darling Harbour.

Boat capacity

  16 – single bookings welcome.

Lunch and drinks

  A simple cafe lunch and soft drink are included, but you’re welcome to bring your own snacks and drinks.

Not Quite the Tour for You? Have a Look at Some of Our Other Options!

New years eve – 31 december, australia day – 26 january.

Buy now with PayPal

Along with events such as the AFL Grand Final and the Melbourne Cup, the annual Sydney to Hobart Yacht race is a truly international event viewed by millions when the 628 nautical mile journey begins on Sydney Harbour each boxing day bound for Hobart.  

For the first time, The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race has uncovered the race's origins with analysis of each race and provided a host of statistics and full race results dating back to the race's 1945 inception.  This fourth edition also provides some wonderful personal stories of individual legends and yachts from this great event's history.

Yacht Mark Twain being refurbished in bid to compete in Sydney to Hobart race once more

Man leading over the edge of the railing on a yacht.

For the better part of five decades, one yacht returned to the starting line of the Sydney to Hobart race more than any other.

The timber and fibreglass hulled Mark Twain was built in 1971 and has competed in the race a record-breaking 26 times.

But since its last effort in 2018, it has languished at port.

The yacht's new owner, Rob Payne, who refers to himself as the boat's custodian, has grand plans to refurbish the vessel, a Sparkman and Stephens 39, and return the Mark Twain to its former glory.

Although he hopes to return the boat to the starting line of the Sydney to Hobart, he also believes the yacht can be used for a greater good.

Along with Beaconsfield mine disaster survivor Brant Webb , Mr Payne has plans to establish a group called Old Saltys, which will aim to use sailing as a vessel to empower youth through sharing knowledge.

"Sailing is a metaphor for life. You've got to trim your sails and set your course and you're gonna get buffeted around," he said.

The Old Salty's motto will be 'well-weathered wisdom', and the men believe they have a lot of life experience they can share with young people anywhere Mark Twain can sail.

How the Hobart Was Won

  • By Christopher Lewis
  • April 2, 2024

LAWCONNECT, Sail no: SYD 1000, Owner: Christian Beck, Design: Juan K 100 Custom, Country: AUS

We interrupt your regularly scheduled program to bring you live coverage from the finish of the 2023 Rolex Sydney Hobart Race. We now take you to Hobart, Tasmania, where two of the race’s 100-foot supermaxis are ghosting toward the finish line, with underdogs LawConnect closing in on pre-race favorite, AndooComanche .

That’s about what is heard on television stations across Australia when, after nearly 628 nautical miles, the “Great Race” is coming down to an even greater finish. After 42 hours of hard sailing, there are mere boatlengths between the 100-foot rivals of LawConnect and Andoo Comanche . As the navigator, I’m now standing behind the twin wheels of LawConnect, but I can’t see the finish marks, so I dart to leeward to see what’s under the massive masthead zero headsail that obscures our view of the finish line and half of the city of Hobart. Releasing the tablet computer that’s tethered around my neck, I point with both arms outstretched, targeting each of the two yellow inflatable marks so that our sailing master and driver, Tony Mutter, and our tactician, Chris Nicholson, can visualize the finish line. I then glance back at Andoo Comanche , which is arguably the fastest conventional monohull in the world. The big black-and-red boat with its giant prod is aimed right at our transom.

They are behind us, which is where we need them to be, and they’re losing ­momentum. I shoot a look forward again toward the finish line, and a rush of elation hits me. Wow . We are about to win Rolex Sydney Hobart Race line honors. Moments later, as the finish cannon booms, most of us on the boat are genuinely stunned, as are livestream viewers around the world. LawConnect crosses the finish line, one single, beautiful boatlength ahead of Andoo Comanche . The underdogs have done it. David topples Goliath. Rocky puts Apollo Creed to the mat. This is our Miracle on Ice, our Super Bowl and our World Series all in one. A mere 51 ­seconds is the difference.

One of the greatest ­spectacles in yachting is the start of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Race, which has been contested for 77 years and counting. It’s relatively rare for an ocean race to field a single 100-foot supermaxi, let alone four, all gunning for line honors. This year’s race has LawConnect , Andoo Comanche , Scallywag and Wild Thing 100 . There are also ­mini maxis, TP52s, and an armada of IRC-optimized race machines sailed by amateurs and pros alike, each striving to win the race’s coveted Tattersall Cup (ultimately claimed by the great sailors aboard Alive ).

It wouldn’t be hyperbole to say that it feels as if the entire population of the great city of Sydney turns out on Boxing Day for the start of the race. On the water, the harbor is madness. Thousands of spectator boats, helicopters and media boats add to the chaos. Plus, it’s midsummer Down Under, so the weather is normally gorgeous. Not so this year. While mostly sunny, a small, pre-race rain shower dampens the start and hints at the punishing and ­unforgiving weather to come. 

On board LawConnect , we take our starts seriously, and we have a well-earned ­reputation for being the best off the line because LawConnect owner Christian Beck loves to be first out of Sydney Heads. It’s great fun and great publicity for our sponsor. In contrast to the yelling and cursing that’s audible from some of our competitors in the live broadcasts, LawConnect ’s afterguard has a low-key running dialogue. It’s an all-business and data-driven sort of conversation. There’s no onboard drama made for TV, and it’s ruthlessly effective. Nicholson, an Olympian and two-time Australian Yachtsman of the Year, is a tactical genius, and I’m confident that Mutter, a round-the-world legend, can drive this 100-footer through a 30-foot hole.

In preparing for the race, we’ve spent a lot of time on conference calls dissecting the start and analyzing archival race footage, which helps me build a Sydney Harbor starting model so that I can quickly and effectively answer any questions Nicholson might ask when the battle begins. This year’s start is what I’d term a “SailGP reaching start,” which plays right to Nicholson’s strength as a SailGP coach. We set up early in a strong position on starboard tack, patiently killing time to the boat end of the line, and then hit the afterburners by deploying the massive masthead zero, which slingshots us across the line with pace. Andoo Comanche and the others are in our wake, and we comfortably lead the drag race out to the first turning mark.

The early minutes of this race are always extra special to me, especially knowing that my family is in one of the team RIBs following us as we lead out past the Heads. My daughters once told me that sharing in the start was one of the most exciting moments of their lives. This year, we unintentionally make it extra exciting for ­everyone when our furling rope breaks. We can’t roll up the massive zero, which means we can’t tack, but our quick-thinking team instead executes a jibe right at the exclusion zone. Carlos Hernandez Robayna and Simbad Quiroga acrobatically lead the rigging of a backup, and off we go, securing the lead again as we fight through the choppy, light-air conditions.

LAWCONNECT, Sail no: SYD 1000, Owner: Christian Beck, Design: Juan K 100 Custom, Country: AUS

In the pre-race ­coverage ­leading up to the start, the media has repeatedly reminded the team that it is “three times the bridesmaid.” It also mercilessly points out that LawConnect has yet to beat Andoo Comanche to Hobart, and that the other ­supermaxi juggernauts of Scallywag and Wild Thing 100 have undergone dramatic optimizations for the race. Regardless, we know from our pre-race forecast that there are a number of tricky sections of the racecourse where we might have the opportunity to remain tight with Comanche , the odds-on favorite. I remember going into the race saying, “The messier the forecast, the better.”

Andoo Comanche is an exceptionally well-sailed boat by top professionals, and is a faster boat than LawConnect in almost all conditions. Mutter, who knows both boats better than anyone, points out that Comanche had a decade’s worth of newer technology embedded in it when it was first built in 2014, and it is literally 4 tons lighter. If we are close, even or ahead, we know that we are in good shape, knowing that the Derwent River at the finish could give us a shot.

In the run-up to the race, we had spent a lot of time with our weather team and performance analysts, so before leaving the dock, we had an excellent idea of what to expect and a great game plan. This is important because we end up seeing wind from 3 knots to almost 40 knots, from every direction. It is also important that we know our polars and which sails to put up in every condition. The boat is sailing better than ever because of the optimization programs and the talented crew. But we’ve also been leveraging data analytics to squeeze as much performance as ­possible out of the boat.

After racing down Australia’s east coast and entering the notorious Bass Strait, our J-Zero headsail is the only casualty, shredded when the wind suddenly doubles to nearly 40 knots and shifts 180 degrees. Otherwise, we escape the lightning-filled and angry weather, and enjoy a hard and fast ride to Tasman Island, where the weather models and observations indicate that the breeze will shift massively yet again, this time from a downwind northeasterly to an upwind southwesterly, with a windless zone somewhere in between. Here we have our sights locked on Andoo Comanche and jump them by cutting the corner on a jibe.

When we sail into the light patch between the two different breezes, our trimmers smoothly shift gears, and suddenly Andoo Comanche is alongside us once again in this epic seesaw battle. Their 13-nautical-mile lead has evaporated. Now it’s a match race, but with one puff, they are faster again and slingshot ahead.

There’s not a whiff of despair on our boat though. We know that these final miles on the Derwent River are expected to be fickle, and this year we have the extra advantage of daylight. Oftentimes, the supermaxis reach the Derwent on the second night of the race, when it’s impossible to see the light puffs in the dark.

Just after passing John Garrow Light, we hunt down Comanche again for what is the 10th or so time in this marathon game of cat-and-mouse. We’re in a dead heat with only about 2 miles to work with. We want this win badly, more than anything. We are hungry, but they are too, and it’s in these moments where the subtleties of these giant programs reveal themselves. 

LawConnect ’s crew work shines as we roll-jibe our 100-footer like a dinghy. Mutter, who is easily one of the best drivers and yachtsmen in the world, works the canting keel and the turning rate through the jibes to perfection, while trimmers Brad Jackson and Scott Beavis on the main and Lucas Chapman, Alex Gough, and Charlie Wyatt on the front sails are fully synchronized with Mutter’s turns. In the pit, Rodney Daniel, Dylan Clarke, and Mustafa Ingham keep the maneuvers sharp and orchestrated.

Our crew boss, Mitch White, ensures that everyone on the boat is all on the same page—from our experienced Spanish bow team to the ride-along LawConnect employees who won the office raffle to our water-ballast engineer Ryan Phillips and to our afterguard at the back of the boat.

Because all of our ­trimmers are also amazing drivers, the choreography is flawless. Everyone moves in sync, without the usual jerky starts and stops of maneuvers. But my teammates are far more than light-air specialists. Over each of the more than 600 nautical miles of this race, the afterguard has never once second-guessed a risky or complicated maneuver. They simply deliver whatever is asked of them.

The people are what make LawConnect a special team. And there are a couple in particular who make the program as competitive as it is. There’s Ty Oxley, our boat captain, a jack-of-all trades and master of all: electronics, rig loads, water-ballast systems, and sails. Oxley is also a gifted sailor, which is absolutely critical because LawConnect , a Juan K 100-footer first launched in 2008 as Speedboat , is a complicated boat and demands someone with Oxley’s skillsets. He also implemented key upgrades for this boat, including what might be the largest bowsprit on the planet, which extends more than 20 feet beyond the forestay pin.

Most importantly, there’s LawConnect ’s owner, Christian Beck. He’s a passionate sailor and a tremendously charismatic individual. We are fortunate that he hired great leaders for the program in Oxley, Mutter and Nicholson. He doesn’t ­micromanage, and he truly brings out the best in the entire team. Without fail, every time he saw me during the race, he always asked the most important question: “Lewy, where is Comanche ?”

He doesn’t need to ask the question again as we approach the river. We know exactly where they are, and we’re on the hunt. Andoo Comanche is parked in the expected windless zone ahead, and the breeze is stacking up along the Western shore of the Derwent. Nicholson asks me whether we can continue into the shallows to squeeze the most out of the breeze rather than having to jibe into the lighter air.

I spent a lot of time before the race analyzing the course’s depth constraints. Most people don’t realize how deep the keels are on these supermaxis. In 21 feet of water, LawConnect would be aground, and those who are more willing to push the depth envelope, especially when factoring in heel and canting keels (which can temporarily reduce draft), have more tactical options in the “shallows.” So, when Nicholson asks about the depth, I consult the chart and see my race notes drawn into Expedition. I’ve done my homework, and I know that tiptoeing along the shore in better pressure is possible. At one point, our resident Tasmanian (“Chaz from Taz”) on board nervously asks, “Hey Lewy, you see the rocks just over there?”

With confidence, I reply, “Yep, I got it.” And soon after a series of perfect maneuvers, a master class in light-wind tactical sailing, and a bit of luck, we can all say, “ LawConnect wins the John H. Illingworth Challenge Cup for Line Honors in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race.”

  • More: Offshore Racing , Print March 2024 , Racing , Sailboat Racing , Sydney Hobart Race
  • More Uncategorized

sydney to hobart yacht race book

Changes to Sailing World

2014 Sailing Industry Study

The State of the Sailing Industry: 2014 Sailing Market Study

Dinghy Sailor Runyon Colie Jr.

Runyon Colie: The Dinghy Ace

Sailing World

Catch Dekker Documentary in Newport

SailGP New Zealand's "Black Foils" team

SailGP’s New Zealanders Win Destructive Event No. 9

sydney to hobart yacht race book

Reineke’s Battle For the Berth

windfoiling in Arendal, Norway

One-Design Wingfoil Racing Takes Off

Augie Diaz at the Helly Hansen Sailing World Regatta Series in St. Petersburg

The Wisdom of Augie Diaz

Sailing World logo

  • Digital Edition
  • Customer Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cruising World
  • Sailing World
  • Salt Water Sportsman
  • Sport Fishing
  • Wakeboarding

facebook

  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • NEWSLETTERS
  • SUBMIT NEWS

Colligo Marine 2024 MPU

Father son duo poised to race into the Rolex Sydney Hobart record books

sydney to hobart yacht race book

Related Articles

sydney to hobart yacht race book

IMAGES

  1. Sydney Hobart Yacht Race :HarperCollins Australia

    sydney to hobart yacht race book

  2. 1945 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race, 978-620-0-68565-0, 6200685657

    sydney to hobart yacht race book

  3. Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race 2021

    sydney to hobart yacht race book

  4. Sydney To Hobart Yacht Race 2021 Tracker 2021

    sydney to hobart yacht race book

  5. Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race

    sydney to hobart yacht race book

  6. Quick guide to Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race

    sydney to hobart yacht race book

COMMENTS

  1. Fatal Storm: The Inside Story of the Tragic Sydney-Hobart Race

    The first book to recount the disastrous events of the 1998 Sydney to Hobart yacht race, Fatal Storm is sure to be a popular paperback selection. Rob Mundle takes readers through every white-knuckling hour of the gale that descended in the predawn hours of December 27, stretching over 900 miles from Australia to New Zealand, bringing with it ...

  2. Fatal Storm: The Inside Story of the Tragic Sydney-Hobart Race

    Fatal Storm is based on the 1998 Sydney to Hobart yacht race in which 6 people perished. This is the story of their survival, courage and skill in getting thru the worst storm to affect the race. I loved part 2 of the book, which shares each yacht and how they faced the storm.

  3. The Inside Story of the 1998 Sydney to Hobart Race

    I truly have mixed emotions about The Proving Ground, G. Bruce Knechts true life account of the disastrous 1998, 630 mile Sydney, Australia to Hobart yacht race. Some have compared this book to The Perfect Storm, but aside from the basic scenario of man versus the treacherous whims of Mother Nature there is really no comparison.

  4. Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: The story of a sporting icon

    Hardcover - 18 November 2019. The Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is the story of one of the world's greatest sporting challenges. One evening in May 1945, a small group of Sydney sailing enthusiasts decided that their planned post-Christmas cruise south to Hobart would be more enjoyable if they made it a race. And so began the story of a contest ...

  5. Sydney Hobart Yacht Race :HarperCollins Australia

    About the Book. The Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is the story of one of the world's greatest sporting challenges. One evening in May 1945, a small group of Sydney sailing enthusiasts decided that their planned post-Christmas cruise south to Hobart would be more enjoyable if they made it a race. And so began the story of a contest that quickly ...

  6. Fatal Storm : The 54th Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race

    the Sydney to Hobart yacht race is one of the world's major sporting events. In 1998, it became one of the world's major sporting disasters. Six sailors tragically perished and numerous yachts sank or were badly damaged. the subsequent search and rescue operation was one of the most phenomenally accomplished peacetime effortsthe world has ever seen.

  7. Sydney Hobart Yacht Race: The Story of a Sporting Icon

    20 ratings3 reviews. The Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is the story of one of the world's greatest sporting challenges. One evening in May 1945, a small group of Sydney sailing enthusiasts decided that their planned post-Christmas cruise south to Hobart would be more enjoyable if they made it a race. And so began the story of a contest that quickly ...

  8. Sydney Hobart Yacht Race : The story of a sporting icon

    The Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is the story of one of the world's greatest sporting challenges. One evening in May 1945, a small group of Sydney sailing enthusiasts decided that their planned post-Christmas cruise south to Hobart would be more enjoyable if they made it a race. And so began the story of a contest that quickly became ranked among the world's premier offshore racing events - a race ...

  9. The Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

    Rob Mundle established his international identity as an author in 1999 with his gripping factual account of one of the world's most dramatic sporting tragedies, the 54th Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race. His book, Fatal Storm, became an international bestseller. It is published in six languages and has sold well over 200,000 copies a remarkable ...

  10. 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 ...

  11. Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

    The Sydney Hobart Yacht Race is the story of one of the world's greatest sporting challenges. One evening in May 1945, a small group of Sydney sailing enthusiasts decided that their planned post-Christmas cruise south to Hobart would be more enjoyable if they made it a race. And so began the story

  12. Sydney Hobart Yacht Race by Rob Mundle

    About the Author. Rob Mundle established his international identity as an author in 1999 with his gripping factual account of one of the world's most dramatic sporting tragedies, the 54th Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race. His book, Fatal Storm, became an international bestseller. It is published in six languages and has sold well over 200,000 copies ...

  13. Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race

    One evening in May 1945, a small group of Sydney sailing enthusiasts decided that their planned post-Christmas cruise south to Hobart would be more enjoyable if they made it a race. And so began the story of a contest that quickly became ranked among the world's premier offshore racing events - a race that demands both immense physical and mental endurance of the individual sailor along with ...

  14. Sydney to Hobart yacht race: everything you need to know

    From Sydney... to Hobart. Look, this one's in the name. Boats travel from our state's capital past Wollongong, southern NSW and then through the Bass Strait to Hobart. The quickest route to ...

  15. Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race

    HARBOUR CRUISE - $285 PER PERSON. The Day. Watch the start of the world-famous Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race and follow the flotilla of impressive maxi yachts out towards the heads. We'll take a short tour of some of the key sights of Sydney Harbour, and head to picturesque and historic Quarantine Bay for lunch, a wander, and an afternoon swim.

  16. Bowen Books

    01 Jan 2014. Price. $45.00. Weight. 0.570kg. ISBN. 9780957928459. Along with events such as the AFL Grand Final and the Melbourne Cup, the annual Sydney to Hobart Yacht race is a truly international event viewed by millions when the 628 nautical mile journey begins on Sydney Harbour each boxing day bound for Hobart.

  17. Sydney to Hobart yacht race

    The cannon sounds and they are off in the Sydney to Hobart for another year. (Rolex/Studio Borlenghi) From its beginning in 1945, the Sydney to Hobart yacht race remains one of the pinnacles for ...

  18. Yacht Mark Twain being refurbished in bid to compete in Sydney to

    Once a fine racing yacht, the Mark Twain had fallen into disrepair in port at George Town in recent years. From its first entry in the Sydney to Hobart in 1971, the boat long held the steadily ...

  19. The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race

    Books. The Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race. Michael Ludeke. Ludeke Publishing, 2011 - Sports & Recreation - 264 pages. History of the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.

  20. How the Hobart Was Won

    One of the greatest ­spectacles in yachting is the start of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Race, which has been contested for 77 years and counting. It's relatively rare for an ocean race to field a ...

  21. 2023 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

    Join group. Discussion. Events. Welcome to join official group of Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2023 Tuesday 26 December 2023 Sydney Harbour #RolexSydneyHobartYachtRace...

  22. SYDNEY TO HOBART YACHT RACE

    Get onboard Sydney Charter Boat luxury catamaran, Eclipse to watch the start of the 2023 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race. Tickets include premium catering and drinks, for only $225pp. ... Captain Todd Hull knows where to position Eclipse for the greatest viewing of the Sydney Hobart Yacht Race 2023. Book direct from boat owners and operators!

  23. Father son duo poised to race into the Rolex Sydney Hobart record books

    Related Articles Rolex renews support of Sydney Hobart Yacht Race CYCA renew sponsorship for a further ten years The Cruising Yacht Club of Australia (CYCA), is delighted to announce that Rolex, the Title Partner of the Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, has recently confirmed a continuation of its twenty-year relationship with the iconic Australian sporting event Posted on 11 Mar Oldest videos from ...