Sydney to Hobart yacht race: LawConnect wins Sydney to Hobart line honours after two-way river battle
Topic: Sailing
In a finish for the ages, LawConnect has sensationally overtaken Andoo Comanche in the final moments to snatch line honours in the 2023 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.
Andoo Comanche held the lead a lot more comfortably when rounding the Tasman Peninsula and entering the River Derwent for the final sprint, but LawConnect started to rapidly gain on them.
LawConnect and Andoo Comanche racing to the finish line. ( ABC News: Maren Preuss )
The two crews could wave to each other, if they wanted to. ( ABC News: Maren Preuss )
The speedier LawConnect closed several nautical miles between them along the river until they were neck and neck to a nail-biting finish.
LawConnect's finish time in the end was 1 day, 19 hours, 3 minutes and 58 seconds. Andoo Comanche's was just 51 seconds behind.
If you're new to the Sydney to Hobart race, we've got a shortcut guide at the bottom of the story. Tap the link below to get the gist of the race: Explained: Common Sydney to Hobart yacht race questions
The LawConnect crew celebrate their win. ( ABC News: Maren Preuss )
LawConnect owner Christian Beck described their dramatic win as a dream come true.
"I can't believe that result. Honestly, it's a dream come true," he said.
"I never thought it was possible, actually."
Despite trailing by a significant margin as they passed the Iron Pot on the final approach, LawConnect had the advantage of being able to watch Andoo Comanche to see where the slow spots were.
LawConnect entered with a protest flag flying, after being on standby for about 30 minutes during the race due to concerns Andoo Comanche was in distress, but a formal protest was not lodged.
There was also some interference from a spectator boat in the final moments, with a catamaran passing close to Andoo Comanche and the crew being seen yelling and gesturing.
Tasmania Police said this afternoon action would be taken against a 57-year-old man for "allegedly breaching" marine and safety regulations.
"The man was skippering a private vessel when it reportedly encroached into the exclusion zone set by Marine and Safety Tasmania," it said in a statement.
The offence carries a fine of up to $3,900.
Sailing master Tony Mutter said spectator boats were something the competitors had to deal with.
"It's pretty fair that everyone had troubles with the spectator boats. That's part of it when it's so busy," he said.
Andoo Comanche skipper John Winning Jr said they only had themselves to blame for the last-minute loss.
LawConnect is racing to the Sydney to Hobart finish line. ( ABC News: Megan Whitfield )
"We should have been miles ahead of them with our boat," he said.
"The conditions suited us, I think they just outsailed us."
First local boat home
URM Group has claimed third place line honours, crossing the finish line at 3:07pm to record a race time of 2 days, 2 hours, 7 minutes and 19 seconds.
The first Tasmanian yacht to finish, Alive, crossed the line almost 12 minutes later.
Alive is currently in first place to win overall handicap honours.
Four yachts have now docked at Kings Pier, with Moneypenny and Wild Thing 100 expected to be the next to arrive.
Live Moment
Join us for the finish of the 2023 Sydney to Hobart yacht race.
Possible problem?
In the final moments, a catamaran appeared to cut in front of Andoo Comanche as the boat turned into the finish.
Eyewitness accounts say crew on Comanche were yelling at the catamaran to move as they tried to turn.
Could this make for an official race protest? We'll have to see.
After leading all the way into the River Derwent, Andoo Comanche won't make it back-to-back Line Honours wins. LawConnect snatched it away from them at the last moment!
How incredible. These boats set off together three days ago and it came down to mere seconds to the finish.
Andoo Comanche was in the lead when it approached the Tasman Peninsula this morning. ( Supplied: Andrea Francolini )
It has been a testing 78th edition of the Sydney to Hobart, with a man overboard, stormy seas, damaged yachts and rapid wind changes.
Eleven boats have retired, including race favourite SHK Scallywag, which broke its bow sprit on the first day.
The skipper of two-handed Rum Rebellion, Shane Connelly, was sent overboard at 6pm on Boxing Day after encountering rapid wind changes off the coast between Cronulla and Wollongong.
Two-handed Currawong also retired, after facing various issues in rough conditions off New South Wales.
Owner Kathy Veel said they were disappointed but believed they made the right decision.
"Last night was quite difficult and there was a lot more of that ahead of us in a long race," she said.
They were the last boat to cross the finishing line at last year's event, making a well-received arrival in Hobart at midnight on New Year's Eve.
Your questions answered
Here are the answers to some of the most common questions.
Who won Sydney to Hobart 2023?
When we talk about the Sydney to Hobart race, there are two major "winners":
- Line honours: This is the order in which boats cross the finish line.
- Overall winners: The order of winners once race times have been calculated to take into account the differences between boats (handicaps). This is because the boats aren't exactly the same — adjustments have to be made for things like the weight and length of the boat.
Line honours will always go to the biggest, fastest yachts (supermaxis) but is likely one of the smaller vessels will be crowned the overall winner (which is seen as the more prestigious of the two prizes).
Here's the line honours as of Thursday morning:
- Andoo Comanche
The difference between the two was just 51 seconds.
But the overall winner won't be decided for days.
Until then, we can only wait.
However, before the race, there were a few main contenders for the overall title – here they are listed in alphabetical order:
- SHK Scallywag
Who owns LawConnect?
Christen Beck.
Mr Beck is the founder of a legal software company, which he created off the back of building a system for his father's legal firm in the 90s.
In 2017, he was named EY Entrepreneur of the Year and in 2018, he was ranked 99th on the Financial Review's Rich List .
Who owns Andoo Comanche?
John 'Herman' Winning Jnr.
He's the chief executive of Winning Appliances, a company started by his great grandfather in 1906.
Mr Winning Jnr took over the role from his father in 2011.
How far is the Sydney to Hobart distance?
It's a 628-nautical-mile course – that's 1,163 kilometres .
Starting at Sydney Harbour, the course runs down the south-east coast of Australia, across the Bass Strait before turning into the Derwent River to finish in Hobart.
It usually takes about 48 hours for the first boat to cross the finish line.
What is a nautical mile?
A nautical mile is the equivalent to 1.852 kilometres .
It's an internationally used standardised term used for maritime navigation, based on the Earth's latitude and longitude coordinates.
A nautical mile is the equivalent of one minute of latitude.
Because of this, a nautical mile is slightly longer than land mile.
How many boats are in the Sydney to Hobart race?
There's 103 this year.
What is the prize for Sydney to Hobart?
There's no prize money – just trophies. Here's the two main ones:
- JH Illingworth Challenge Cup: This is for the line honours winner – which is the first boat to cross the finish line.
- Tattersalls Cup: This goes to the overall winner.
What's the Sydney to Hobart record?
The line honours record is 1 day, 9 hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds .
It was set in 2017 by LDV Comanche.
If you've got even more questions, go read out Sydney to Hobart explainer or tap the link below to jump back to the top of the story.
Take me back to the top to read the recap
LawConnect’s all-time comeback to win Sydney-Hobart line honours in second-closest finish ever
LawConnect has claimed line honours in the 78th Sydney to Hobart with a stunning comeback, hunting down Andoo Comanche on the River Derwent to steal victory in one of the closest-ever finishes.
LawConnect – the perennial bridesmaid of the race – claimed a maiden victory by just 51 seconds, coming home in just over one day and 19 hours.
The two supermaxis had traded the lead in a back-and-forth battle throughout the trip down to Tasmania.
But it was Andoo Comanche who led from around midday Wednesday all the way to the River Derwent – only for the reigning champions’ lead to evaporate amid the notorious light winds on the home stretch.
LawConnect stalked down the leaders and took the lead at around 7.55am before briefly losing it again minutes later, with the two yachts separated by just metres as they desperately sought out any pocket of wind in the crawl to the finish line.
In the end, LawConnect came home in 8:03:58 — just 51 seconds before Comanche’s 8:04:49. It was the second-closest finish in race history behind 1982, when Condor of Bermuda beat Apollo by a mere seven seconds.
LawConnect owner Christian Beck finished as runner-up for the past three years, but brilliantly navigated the final stage of the 628nm race to pip reigning champion and favourite Andoo Comanche.
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Andoo Comanche had also won in 2019 (as Comanche), 2017 (as LDV Comanche) and 2015 (as Comanche).
But this was a first-ever win for LawConnect under skipper Beck, and came against the odds after a sail was destroyed on the first night of the race.
The same boat had won as Perpetual Loyal under skipper Anthony Bell in 2016, the year before Beck bought her.
Beck had told Channel 7 an hour before the finish: “We’re sort of happy at the moment because Comanche looks very slow up there … we’re in with a good chance still.
“The Derwent is notorious for having these dead spots you get stuck in.”
He added: “You can watch where they go, and if they go slow, we go somewhere else.
“We’ve come second three times in a row, so we really want to win.”
But there could be a potential protest, with a spectator craft appearing to impede Andoo Comanche in the final seconds of the race.
The catamaran cut in front of Andoo Comanche as it prepared for its final jibe.
The ABC reports that eyewitnesses heard Andoo Comanche sailors yelling at the catamaran to get out of the way.
No protest has yet been lodged, and vision appears to show Andoo Comanche marginally behind her rival at the time.
Meanwhile, URM Group, Alive, and Moneypenny are battling for third place, but are still some hours from the finish.
Many of the smaller boats are not likely to finish for another day or two.
Follow live updates below and check out the live tracker here .
6AM THURSDAY — OVERNIGHT UPDATE
There haven’t been any reports of more retirements from the second night of the race with a thrilling finish still looming between Andoo Comanche and LawConnect.
The number of retirements from this year’s race sits at 11 following carnage across the first day-and-a-half.
Andoo Comanche narrowly led over LawConnect as the two yachts went past Port Arthur.
Meanwhile, LawConnect’s Tony Mutter described the drama on the first night when his yacht lost a main sail in the wild weather.
“The first day went okay through the daylight hours, and when nighttime came all hell broke loose because there was plenty on,” he said.
10:20PM WEDNESDAY - BIG FINISH LOOMS... AND CHAOS BEHIND
Either Andoo Comanche or LawConnect will claim line honours in the Sydney to Hobart on Thursday morning, and they’ve avoided the worst of the weather which is about to hit the rest of the race.
As of 10:20pm AEDT on Wednesday night Andoo Comanche was 108.7 nautical miles from glory, holding a steady lead of 6-7nm to LawConnect, with URM Group third but a whopping 91.4nm from the leader.
The problems are with the rest of the fleet, with only a handful of boats having actually cleared Bass Strait so far.
“There could easily be 30 retirements by tomorrow night,’’ meteorologist Roger Badham told News Corp late on Wednesday .
“There’s far worse to come for them. It’s not a nice place to be, Bass Strait tomorrow (Thursday). It just gets increasingly bad all day.’’
12PM WEDNESDAY - MAN OVERBOARD AS RETIREMENTS MOUNT
Currawong has been forced to retire from the race — becoming its sixth casualty — while one of the retirees has opened up about a scary ‘man overboard’ incident.
The Daily Telegraph reports that it’s still unknown why Currawong, the smallest yacht in the fleet, was on the way back to Sydney on Wednesday afternoon.
Meanwhile, Shane Connelly from Rum Rebellion, which was one of the first retirements, spoke about the “burst of wind” that ruined their race on Boxing Day.
Connelly was briefly unclipped and was thrown from the boat, which was knocked on its side by the burst.
He was reportedly sent about two metres from the boat but was able to swim back before retiring.
“We are both well and the main thing is our systems and drills all worked well,’’ he said.
6.15AM WEDNESDAY - OVERNIGHT RETIREMENTS
Two yachts retired on the first night of the Sydney to Hobart with Sticky and Maritimo 52 pulling out.
It was a night led by Andoo Comanche and LawConnect with the frontrunners making it through fast overnight conditions unscathed.
Andoo Comanche was slightly ahead of LawConnect as they approached the Bass Strait.
Meanwhile, Sticky was forced to pull out with electrical damage, while Maritimo 52 had damage to rigging.
They join Scallywag, Rum Rebellion and Arcadia as the race’s retirements.
8:30PM TUESDAY - EARLY LEADER OUT IN DISASTER
Scallywag is out of the Sydney to Hobart yacht race after the bow sprit broke while the early leader was in a three-way fight for glory with Andoo Comanche and LawConnect.
News Corp reported skipper David Witt had declared their race over in what was to be their final chance at line honours.
The yacht was involved in the early drama when it performed two 360 penalty turns after an altercation with Andoo Comanche.
Arcadia (torn mainsail) and Rum Rebellion are also out of the race.
At the time of the incident Scallywag was within a couple of nautical miles of the leaders.
At 8:30pm AEDT it was Andoo Comanche travelling at 27.3 knots sitting 498.7nm away from the finish, seven nautical miles ahead of LawConnect - and just five behind LDV Comanche’s 2017 race record.
5:30PM TUESDAY - WEATHER FEARS AS LEADERS PULL AWAY
There are hopes intense weather will be avoided as leader Andoo Comanche, LawConnect and Scallywag made it a race in three at the front.
With the top boats hitting over 25 knots winds have clearly picked up.
The Bureau of Meteorology, whose representatives briefed the competitors ahead of the race, said there was a high degree of uncertainty for the forecasts over coming days.
“A trough and low pressure system over eastern Australia is slowly moving to the southeast and will reach the Tasman Sea later today or tomorrow,” a bureau spokesperson said.
“Uncertainty remains about its exact placement. Weather, wind and wave forecasts will depend on the location of this system.”
At the start of the race, competitors were set for light easterly winds, the bureau said, with the chance of a shower or thunderstorm.
“Thunderstorm potential increases during the afternoon along the NSW coast and over Sydney – with very erratic winds, hail, lightning and heavy rain reducing visibility possible,” the bureau said.
“Strong wind warnings are likely during the race, and there is a slight risk of local gale-force winds over the Bass Strait on Tuesday night.”
2PM TUESDAY - DRAMATIC START INCLUDING PROTEST
LawConnect, the Big Boat Challenge winners, took the early honours to lead early from Teasing Machine, Andoo Comanche and Wild Thing after a heavy downpour in Sydney Harbour cleared for the 1pm starter’s cannon.
LawConnect then had trouble putting up its big sail forcing it to jibe away from the lead handing the ascendancy to Andoo Comanche, who is defending line honours.
The lead swapped again shortly after but not before an explosive moment between Scallywag and Andoo Comanche.
Dramatic vision showed the two boats coming within a few feet of each other with the latter claiming their rival tacked too late, prompting Andoo Comanche to throw a protest flag.
ABC reported ‘colourful language’ was exchanged between the two boats.
Andoo Comanche Sailing Master Iain Murray was not impressed with the incident when asked about it on Seven’s coverage.
“It’s a classic port-and-starboard (incident). That’s too close (from Scallywag),” he said.
“You can’t do that with 100-footers. We’ll see.”
The controversy allowed Scallywag to sail clear into first place and be first out of the Heads, ahead of Andoo Comanche in second and LawConnect in third.
Earlier the Bureau of Meteorology predicted that potentially dangerous weather could mar this year’s Sydney to Hobart race, which gets underway on Boxing Day.
Rain, strong winds, low visibility and even hail is expected to hit parts of the course, including the Bass Strait crossing, due to a rain-bearing low pressure system impacting the southeast.
Competitors have been advised to prepare for changing conditions throughout the event, with plenty of upwind sailing and winds coming from different directions.
The fleet left the dock at the CYCA well ahead of the 1pm race start with sailors nervous for what lay ahead.
“You’d think after so many races you wouldn’t be nervous but you are,’’ Alive navigator Adrienne Cahalan said.,
“This forecast is a tough one. It will be like a chess game.’’
During Sunday’s briefing, a race official warned participants that they “strongly recommended to take your sea sick tablets in your grab bag’’.
HK Scallywag skipper David Witt declared: “Pack another set of thermal gear. It’ll be cold.”
The 78th edition of the 1163km race, one of Australia’s most famous sporting events, began the day with a fleet of 103.
The course record was set by LDV Comanche in 2017, completing the race in 1 day, 9 hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds. Last year’s winners Comanche, who is tipped as one of the favourite this year’s race finished in one day, 11 hours, 56 minutes and 48 seconds, the second-fastest time for any Sydney to Hobart victors.
Scallywag had been the early leader and was in a fight with Andoo Comanche and LawConnect before it was forced to abandon its campaign.
Two more vessels were forced to retire in the early hours of Wednesday morning with Sticky and Maritimo 52 pulling out.
Sticky was forced to pull out with electrical damage, while Maritimo 52 had damage to rigging.
As first reported by News Corp , Arcadia on Tuesday returned to Sydney with a torn mainsail and Rum Rebellion also turned back due to an unspecified reason.
Reigning champions Andoo Comanche and LawConnect are continuing to battle for line honours as they head towards Bass Straight.
Tuesday’s retirement was a gut-punch for the Scallywag crew which had already declared the 2023 Sydney to Hobart would be its last.
News Corp reported skipper David Witt and his crew were “devastated”. The vessel has returned safely back to Sydney.
The team earlier confirmed their sad news via its social media channels.
The five retirements mean there are 98 entries remaining of the 103-yacht fleet that sell sail from Sydney.
Scallywag was also involved in early drama when rival Andoo Comanche flew a protest flag alleging SHK Scallywag had tacked too close as the pair exited Sydney Harbour.
Scallywag subsequently performed a 720 penalty turn to exonerate the vessel from facing a potential disqualification.
The race tracks the eastern coast of Australia southward from Sydney, crossing the Bass Strait, before continuing along the eastern coast of Tasmania and finally reaching Hobart.
Widely considered one of the most challenging yacht races in the world, teams competing in this year’s event — the 78th edition — also risk facing thunderstorms, hail and gale-force winds through the race.
With the Bass Strait crossing often the hardest part of the race, teams can expect a larger southwest swell and strong winds.
“This year there is easterly winds and easterly swell forecast, as well as thunderstorms, which will make conditions challenging on Tuesday and Wednesday. These conditions are forecast to ease from later Wednesday,” the bureau said.
Some 113 vessels will be competing in this year’s event.
The record for the race was set in 2017 by LDV Comanche, a 100ft maxi yacht, which completed the event in just over 33 hours.
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Finish line. LAWCONNECT, Sail no: SYD 1000, Owner: Christian Beck, Design: Juan K 100 Custom, Country: AUS ANDOO COMANCHE, Sail no: CAY 007, Owner: John Herman Winning, Design: Vplp Verdier 100, Country: AUS
2023 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race – 28 December Summary
Andoo Comanche skipper lauds LawConnect crew for victory
Andoo Comanche skipper John Winning Jnr could not hide the pain of seeing his dream of a “swansong” victory on the boat slip away in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race.
This year’s race had added significance for Winning Jnr with his crew including his father John, sister Jamie, and close mates Peter and Nathan Dean, the sons of John Dean, one of six people to die in the 1998 Sydney Hobart who was also a friend of his father.
However, Winning Jnr had nothing but praise for Christian Beck and his crew for how they sailed LawConnect towards a sensational come-from-behind Line Honours victory today.
“I don’t like coming second. I don’t mind it sometimes, but certainly when you are the favourite it’s pretty painful,” said Winning Jnr from the boat at dockside in Hobart.
“We were the favourite because we’ve got an amazing boat that should have won the race.
“We’ve got an amazing crew. I know I beat myself up around not being able to deliver a win for those guys and my sister [Jamie] is included in that. But the other guys [on LawConnect ] sailed their butts out. They sailed out of their skin. They left nothing on the table.
Credit: CYCA/Salty Dingo
“We should have beaten them had we sailed as well as I know we can. I think our boat was definitely the better boat, as Christian sort of said in the past. I say that with a bigger compliment to them that they didn’t just beat us, but they beat us with an underdog boat.”
Andoo Comanche , the defending champion, went into the 628 nautical mile race organised by the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia (CYCA) as the major favourite to cross the line first.
Written by Rupert Guinness/RSHYR Media
Chances of a second Tasmanian win are ‘Alive’
Duncan Hine and his international crew aboard Tasmanian entry, Alive, have kept the Reichel/Pugh 66s chances of winning a second Sydney Hobart well and truly alive, having crossed the finish line at 3.19.04 hours in Hobart today, throwing down the gauntlet to the rest of the fleet.
The yacht, owned by Phillip Turner, won the Rolex Sydney Hobart in 2018 and came close again in 2019, but ultimately finished fourth in the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia’s 628 nautical mile race. Alive is in the box seat to win right now, but there are others that could topple her.
“Now, it’s a waiting game,” her skipper, Duncan Hine, said. “It’s a shame Phillip couldn’t do the race with us,” he said of the owner.
“We’re looking good though. I believe we could do it again, but the reality may be different,” Hine said of the possibility they had won the race.
“Now we wait with bated breath to see if anyone can beat our time…”
Hine believes that apart from a well-prepared boat and a race-winning crew, “a lot of luck is involved in this race: “You can be lucky and you can just as easily be unlucky. I think we had some luck.
“The main thing is, we’ve all had fun, but we’re tired and cold.
Hine was his usual relaxed self. “It was tight competition, the ratbags were doing anything they could to stay in front of us,” he said laughing, describing Anthony Johnston’s Reichel/Pugh 72, URM Group that would just not go away. The two were in a concentrated race-long battle and were two of the early race favourites.
“We had many changes in the lead between the two of us. Moneypenny was right there too, this morning. Sean (Langman) decided to take the shorter route to the finish, but I don’t think it paid off.”
Of the crew, Hine said, “We had a good crew. The Kiwis were great and Adrienne – she’s only had 31 years’ experience at this,” he said of the navigator who has six line honours wins inclusive of two triples of line, overall and race record.
Adding accomplished Kiwi sailors Brady and Stu Bannatyne to the crew and Australian Adrienne Cahalan, to an already strong Australian line-up from Tasmania and other states, may be the secret to Alive’s success this year, although she has had her share of successes in other races and regattas over the past 18 months.
Written by Di Pearson/RSHYR media
Alice Parker project gets thumbs up from Adrienne Cahalan
URM Group navigator Alice Parker had “mixed emotions” after the RP72 she navigated to third on line honours in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race this afternoon.
While URM Group secured a line honours podium place, it was unable to finish ahead of the fourth placed RP66 Alive by enough time to move into provisional first place overall.
URM Group , owned by Anthony Johnston, finished the 628 nautical mile race organised by the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia in 2 days 02 hours 07 minutes 19 seconds.
Alive , skippered by Duncan Hine, finished in 2 days 02 hours 19 minutes 09 seconds 04 seconds. That left the two boats in provisional first and second place overall respectively.
“Mixed emotions, I guess,” Parker said when asked how she felt about the outcome.
“It was a tough race. We were kind of neck and neck a lot of time, and then at the end on the Derwent it just came back together.”
But as a navigator, Parker said: “It was a great race to do because there was so much going on. I never really had time off. But you never really do when you’re a navigator.”
Parker had nothing but praise for her opposite on Alive , navigator Adrienne Cahalan, for whom this year’s Sydney Hobart marked a record 31 for women.
Written by Rupert Guinness/RSHYR media
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LawConnect pips Andoo Comanche by 51 seconds to win Sydney to Hobart
LawConnect has won the 2023 Sydney to Hobart line honours in incredible fashion, in what was the second closest finish ever.
The 100-foot supermaxi sailed into Hobart harbour just after 8am on Thursday, 51 seconds ahead of Andoo Comanche.
The closest recorded finish to the race was in 1982, when Condor Of Bermuda beat Apollo by just seven seconds.
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The race came down to the wire as the two superyachts duelled over the final few miles, and LawConnect made up significant ground to overtake and then beat Andoo Comanche before the line.
Andoo Comanche had led by as much as four kilometres only half an hour earlier. Andoo Comanche was the reigning champion.
LawConnect (left) and Andoo Comanche go down to the wire in the 2023 Sydney to Hobart. Nine
LawConnect and its owner Christian Beck had been runner-up in the race the past three years.
The yacht was first out of Sydney harbour, while Andoo Comanche ran into trouble and almost collided with fellow supermaxi Scallywag, which was forced to retire six hours later.
LawConnect wins the 2023 event in one day, 19 hours, three minutes and 58 seconds. Andoo Comanche took one day, 19 hours, four minutes and 49 seconds to complete the 628-nautical mile course.
Earlier, Beck had spoken as his yacht attempted to chase down Andoo Comanche, who several media outlets had already declared the line honours winner.
"You can watch where they go, and if they go slow, we go somewhere else," Beck told the broadcast.
The LawConnect crew celebrates winning the 2023 Sydney to Hobart. Nine
"We've come second three times in a row, so we really want to win...we're obviously happy to be in the Derwent too, but we'd like to be a little closer to Comanche."
LawConnect was flying a protest flag as it crossed the finish line, which confused spectators.
Sailing master Tony Mutter later explained the crew were protesting Andoo Comanche, but may not follow through with it.
"We did notify the race committee that we were flying a protest flag... for an incident during the race that we thought affected our performance," Mutter said.
"We slowed down for half an hour… on standby for a boat we thought was in distress.
"There was no intent on their part to create that problem...we're not suggesting that at all."
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Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race 2023 as it happened: Andoo Comanche holds slender lead, Olympian among three more retirements By Billie Eder and Dan Walsh Updated December 27, 2023 — 9.05pm first ...
The 2023 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race, sponsored by Rolex and hosted by the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia in Sydney, was the 78th annual running of the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.It began on Sydney Harbour at 1 pm on Boxing Day (26 December 2023), before heading south for 628 nautical miles (1,163 km) through the Tasman Sea, Bass Strait, Storm Bay and up the River Derwent, to cross the ...
Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race 2023 as it happened: LawConnect wins line honours in thrilling finish against Andoo Comanche By Billie Eder Updated December 28, 2023 — 10.32am first published at 5.46am
78th Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race. 04/01/2024. The 2023 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race began with 103 starters on Boxing Day and concluded with 85 finishers sailing into Hobart on the 3rd of January. This year's race delivered nearly every condition possible, from lulls and no breeze to intense thunderstorms, followed by picturesque rainbows.
2023 RSHYR UPDATE Saturday 0835hrs. At this morning, just 30 yachts from 103 starters had finished the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia's Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, with 16 yachts retired from the race. MWF Kayle, the Lyons 54 owned by the Making Waves Foundation and Will Vicars' pretty Hoek TC78, Oroton Drumfire, were among the ...
In a finish for the ages, LawConnect has sensationally overtaken Andoo Comanche in the final moments to snatch line honours in the 2023 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.
Tuesday's retirement was a gut-punch for the Scallywag crew which had already declared the 2023 Sydney to Hobart would be its last. ... Spectators watch the start of the Sydney to Hobart yacht race.
URM Group navigator Alice Parker had "mixed emotions" after the RP72 she navigated to third on line honours in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race this afternoon. While URM Group secured a line honours podium place, it was unable to finish ahead of the fourth placed RP66 Alive by enough time to move into provisional first place overall.
Simon Brunsdon. December 27, 2023 - 2.19pm. LawConnect has won the 2023 Sydney to Hobart line honours in incredible fashion, in what was the second closest finish ever. The 100-foot supermaxi sailed into Hobart harbour just after 8am on Thursday, 51 seconds ahead of Andoo Comanche. The closest recorded finish to the race was in 1982, when ...
LawConnect has claimed line honours in the 78 th edition of the Sydney to Hobart yacht race following a stunning finish to the annual spectacle.. With approximately two nautical miles to the ...