Master Lock Comanche takes line honours in Sydney to Hobart filled with mass retirements

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Master Lock Comanche takes line honours in Sydney to Hobart filled with mass retirements

Master Lock Comanche took line honours in the 80th Sydney to Hobart on Sunday in conditions that forced more yachts to retire than the catastrophic weather of last year.

LawConnect owner and skipper Christian Beck was more confident in his rival’s abilities to win the race before it began, saying only a mistake from Comanche could give him his third consecutive win.

Skippers James Mayo and Matt Allen celebrate their fifth line honours win with the Comanche crew.

Skippers James Mayo and Matt Allen celebrate their fifth line honours win with the Comanche crew.Credit: Getty Images

The luck went Beck’s way last year when Comanche’s main sail tore in a night of wild weather that claimed two lives and forced a man overboard. Comanche retired alongside 32 other yachts and like many returning, this year was supposed to be her redemption.

Comanche sailed out of Sydney Harbour on Boxing Day behind LawConnect but raced in front about five hours after the race began. It was only briefly for a few hours on the final day, when SHK Scallywag 100 found her way in front of Comanche down the Tasmanian coast, that her lead looked in doubt.

It would have been a fairytale win for Scallywag skipper David Witt who has twice promised he would not return to the Sydney to Hobart, having entered 27 times and never won. But just past midday, near Coles Bay on Tasmania’s coast, Comanche took the lead again and soon LawConnect pushed Scallywag back to third.

On LawConnect, bad luck determined their fate. A ripped sail lead to conversations about whether the yacht should retire. Had they decided to, it would have added to a list of 33 – including high-profile retirements Wild Thing 100, URM Group and Moneypenny.

Three yachts reported injuries to crew members’ ribs, two of them suspected to be broken. Three yachts retired with sailors suffering seasickness, which even affected the most comfortable in the water, including Olympian Ian Thorpe and his skipper on LawConnect.

LawConnect’s sail ripped on the final day of sailing.

LawConnect’s sail ripped on the final day of sailing. Credit: LawConnect

Two yachts retired after losing their life rafts and thus failing to comply with safety regulations. The oldest in the fleet, Maritimo Katwinchar, joined them, retiring to Eden despite having been a contender for overall honours, awarded to the fastest yacht after a handicap is applied.

Instead, by 6.30pm on Sunday, reigning overall winner Celestial V70 looked to be defending the Tattersall Cup.

Its skipper, Sam Haynes, called the conditions on the second night nasty.

Master Lock Comanche claims line honours in the 80th Sydney to Hobart race.

Master Lock Comanche claims line honours in the 80th Sydney to Hobart race.Credit: Getty Images

“Hard, hard work,” he said. “Hard on the boat, hard on the crew. Felt like a very, very long time since we left Green Cape and then got ourselves across to finally be here on the Tasmanian coastline.”

And Beck, who had begun the race hopeful, even with a torn sail, had all but resigned to the second place finish by 3pm.

“It’s starting to spread out a bit now,” he said. “We’re starting to get the winds that Comanche wanted.”

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