The skipper of the line honours-winning yacht in this year’s Sydney to Hobart race says the victory is all the more remarkable because his boat, LawConnect, is a “shitbox” compared to second-place getter and race favourite Andoo Comanche.
“I know it looks good on TV but if you go up close to that boat, it’s rough as anything and Comanche is a beautiful boat, it’s better in every way, four tonnes lighter etc.,” Christian Beck said.
“Shitbox” or not, LawConnect overtook Andoo Comanche in the River Derwent in the final moments of the 2023 race to take out its first line honours in a sensational daylight finish, just 51 seconds ahead of its rival.
“The lead changed several times, they took the lead pretty close to the line, we thought there’s no way we can get it back,” Beck said.
“There were guys [on board] that couldn’t watch, it was very nerve-racking.”
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In a race that took the two leaders almost two days to finish, the turning point began just a couple of nautical miles from the finish line.
As Andoo Comanche tried to build speed off the Hobart suburb of Sandy Bay and seemed to stall in very little wind, Law Connect made its move.
‘”They seem to be accelerating out of the jibes a lot quicker than Andoo Comanche, so I don’t think Andoo have a lot of options here, I think they’re going to get rolled … really aggressive moves by LawConnect,” said Lisa Darmanin, a commentator for the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia.
But, not long after Andoo Comanche snatched it back again.
Then, in the second-closest finish in race history, LawConnect came back about 100 metres from the finish line.
After being runner-up three times in a row, the sweetest moment arrived for Christian Beck as LawConnect crossed the finish line in a time of 1 day, 19 hours, 3 minutes and 58 seconds.
“I can’t believe that result. Honestly it’s a dream come true,” he said.
How did they pull it off?
So just how did the “underdog” manage to snatch the win away from Andoo Comanche after it held the lead comfortably while rounding the Tasman Peninsula and entering the River Derwent?
As we’ve heard, a lack of wind was a big factor.
“Our boat is big and wide and heavy and it’s fast offshore but it is terribly slow when it is bumpy and no wind,” the disappointed skipper of Andoo Comanche, John Winning said.
“[As the finish line neared] we sent a guy up the rig and he said ‘There’s no wind at the finish, zero wind at the finish.'”
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But sailors are used to dealing with changes in wind so strategy was obviously a major factor at play too.
As well as the “aggressive jibing” from LawConnect, the winners were focused on learning from Andoo’s “mistakes”.
“Broadly, the strategy is to watch them and if they get into a bad spot, we avoid that bad spot,” Beck said.
Spectator craft another factor
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Then there were all the spectator boats to contend with.
In the final moments, a catamaran passed closely to Andoo Comanche and the crew was seen yelling and gesturing.
Tasmania Police said “the private vessel encroached into the [race] exclusion zone” and that it was reviewing the matter and would consider any potential offences”.
“We had all the spectator boats and we’re trying to clear them out and they were like ‘You’ve won’, and we were like ‘No! We have not won yet. Stop making waves everything is going to make a difference,'” Winning said.
But Winning doesn’t blame spectators for the result.
“I wouldn’t have it any other way, I wish there were 500 of them,” he said.
“It’s even, everyone gets the same thing if they were ahead of us they would have had the wash but unfortunately we got the wash.
“Makes a little difference but that didn’t cost us the race, we cost us the race.”
And as the bubbly flows for the LawConnect crew, Beck is joking about now being able to offload the “shitbox”.
“It’s probably a good afternoon to sell it, the afternoon it beats Comanche, probably its highlight of its career, I’m sure.”
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