27 Dec 2016

Wild Oats out of Sydney to Hobart

1:29 pm on 27 December 2016

Race favourite Wild Oats Eleven has retired from the 72nd Sydney to Hobart yacht race, citing a broken hydraulic ram.

Wild Oats XI' skippered by Mark Richards

Wild Oats XI' skippered by Mark Richards Photo: Photosport

The supermaxi was on course for a line honour record, leading rival Perpetual LOYAL and the rest of the fleet on day two.

Before the race, Wild Oats had boasted of its hydraulic ram, a feature of supermaxi yachts that controls the angle of the keel.

"The hydraulic mechanism is so powerful it can lift a jumbo jet off the ground," Wild Oats XI's website said.

Wild Oats XI's 2016 heartbreak comes off the back of a similar early retirement in last year's race due to equipment failure, with the line honours claimed by rival Comanche.

Roughly 20 hours into the treacherous race, as the yachts entered the Bass Strait which separates the mainland from Tasmania, the leader was forced to retire, allowing super maxi Perpetual Loyal to take the lead from New Zealand's Giacomo.

Near perfect weather conditions on Monday had helped Wild Oats XI, which was on pace for a record time before its hydraulic fault.

Wild Oats XI's second consecutive retirement is a disappointing rerun for skipper Mark Richards, who was seeking redemption for his crew after high winds tore their mainsail and forced them to retire last year.

Covering approximately 630 nautical miles (1170 km) of the Tasman Sea and notoriously treacherous Bass Strait, the annual race is Australia's premier yachting event and among the world's most gruelling.

Strong north-easterly winds built throughout Monday, helping Perpetual Loyal and Wild Oats XI break away from the fleet of 88 yachts, with Wild Oats XI taking the lead late in the day.

Yachtsmen had earlier predicted the race record of one day, 18 hours, 23 minutes, 12 seconds set by Wild Oats XI in 2012, was in jeopardy.

The leaders are expected to finish on Wednesday in Hobart, the capital of Australia's island state of Tasmania.

-RNZ and Reuters