Clipper Race: One more day to Sydney

Published on December 14th, 2017

(December 14, 2017; Day 12) – After almost 2,500 nautical miles of racing, just half a nautical mile now separates the Clipper 2017-18 Round the World Yacht Race frontrunner Sanya Serenity Coast from second placed Visit Seattle, both led by the race’s two female Skippers, as the teams cross the 100 nm to finish mark.

After crossing paths with Qingdao, which has slipped from first to third place following an unfavourable tack, Sanya Serenity Coast Skipper Wendy Tuck cannot quite believe how close her team now is to Nikki Henderson’s Visit Seattle.

“Well this is just mad, after so many days racing and with 100 miles to go, we could high five the team on Visit Seattle, they are close!” said Tuck. “It might look close on the Race Viewer, well its closer in real life.”

But for Tuck, who is Skippering her second consecutive Clipper Race team entry, there is no time for complacency as she heads towards her Sydney hometown as she adds: “It has been an exciting race, so glad to have such great teams to race against, nothing is ever certain, every little bit you get a head could all just go crashing down so easily.”

On board Visit Seattle, Henderson echoes Tuck’s thoughts as she takes a moment to reflect on the race. She comments: “The last 500 nautical miles has seemed never-ending as we zig zag our way very, very slowly up the coast.

“It’s been an absolute pleasure to sail with this fabulous crew this leg. Our highest male to female ratio so far of almost 50:50, with some great characters and a general good feeling atmosphere.”

With the end so very nearly in sight for the top three teams, and a spectacularly close finish on the cards, each of the Skippers are eagerly awaiting the arrival of a wind shift from the south to help them along the way to Sydney.

Qingdao Skipper Chris Kobusch explains: “Just over 100 nautical miles (nm) to go. Unfortunately, we lost our lead last night on one terrible tack and are now in third position, behind Sanya Serenity Coast and Visit Seattle.

“The weather forecast suggests a wind shift to the south west, which would help us massively clearing the headlands in front of us. Without, we will have a long and unfavourable tack ahead of us.”

Following the leaders, PSP Logistics and Dare To Lead continue to make up the mid-pack remaining in fourth and fifth place and both report tricky upwind conditions as they push to claw back some miles on the leaders. PSP Logistics Skipper Matt Mitchell reports: “Well, this upwind stuff is getting tiresome! Thankfully the wind is due to shift around to the south over the next few hours giving us a last push before we arrive in.”

The battle for positions remains just as close towards the back of the fleet as just twelve nautical miles separates sixth placed Unicef from seventh placed Garmin, and just six nail biting nautical miles separatesg eighth placed GREAT Britain, Liverpool 2018 in ninth, Nasdaq in tenth and HotelPlanner.com in eleventh.

Andy Burns, Skipper of GREAT Britain, is already experiencing the Southerly winds that the leading pack are hoping for and says: “We are in the mix with Garmin, Nasdaq, HotelPlanner.com and Liverpool 2018. All, I’m sure, extremely keen to ride this southerly we are experiencing into Sydney Heads.”

With the last half of the fleet so tightly compacted, and mostly in sight of each other, teams have had a busy 24 hours and are making frequent sail changes to try and get ahead as they continue their drag race towards Sydney.

Nasdaq emerged from Stealth Mode at 0600 UTC and although currently sitting in tenth place, has been fluctuating up to eighth through the morning. Skipper Rob Graham explains: “We have spent most of our supposedly secret 24 hours within sight of GREAT Britain and/or Liverpool 2018, so unless that cloak of invisibility is operational, we’re not so sneaky after all.”

Looking ahead, the favourable southerly winds should kick in for the top half of the fleet over the next couple of hours and there will also be localised thermal effects with land and sea breezes for teams to consider as they approach Sydney. With so much still to play for and podium positions still very much up in the air, Race 4 is set to be the closest and most compelling race finish of the series so far.

The leaders are expected to finish by December 15. To see the ETA … click here.


Event detailsRace factsRace viewerFacebook

The fourth stage of the Clipper 2017-18 Race, officially known as Race 4: The Clipper Telemed+ Tasman Test, includes three races along the Australian coast. The 11 teams will race from Fremantle to Sydney, Sydney to Hobart, and Hobart to Airlie Beach in the heart of the picturesque Whitsunday Islands.

After starting the first of three races on December 2, the 11 teams are expected to complete the 2500nm course between December 14 and 17.

The All-Australian Leg is the fourth of eight legs that make up the 40,000-nautical mile, eleven-month Clipper 2017-18 Race.

Background: Held biennially, the Clipper 2017-18 Round the World Yacht Race got underway August 20 for the fleet of twelve* identical Tony Castro designed Clipper 70s. The 40,000nm course is divided into 13 individual races with the team having the best cumulative score winning the Clipper Race Trophy. Each team is led by a professional skipper with an all-amateur crew that signs up for one, some, or all the races. The 2017-18 race, expected to take 11 months, has attracted 712 people representing 41 nationalities, making it the largest to date.

* Twelve teams began the first leg but one yacht (Greenings) ran aground just hours after the start on October 31 of the third leg from Cape Town, South Africa to Fremantle, Australia. The crew was safely evacuated but damage to the boat was deemed too extensive for it to continue in the 2017-18 edition.

Race RouteRace Schedule and Miles

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Source: Clipper Round the World Yacht Race

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