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HomeSailGPSailGP 2026Sydney SailGP weather throws out the usual Harbour script

Sydney SailGP weather throws out the usual Harbour script

An uncommon easterly and tidal nuances around Shark Island could turn this weekend’s racing into a tactical contest.

KEYPOINTS
  • Sydney Sail Grand Prix weather is set to break from the normal summer pattern

  • A moderate easterly replaces the usual northeasterly or southerly

  • Saturday breeze forecast around 22 to 31 kmh

  • Easterly angle may create turbulence and sharp shifts

  • Local knowledge could count for less than usual

  • Flat water keeps the focus on precision and positioning

  • Shark Island and tidal flow may influence side choices

  • Sunday may edge back toward a more familiar northeast direction

Sydney SailGP weather shifts the focus

Sydney Harbour normally delivers one of two summer staples. A clean northeasterly sea breeze builds with the heat. Or a southerly change barrels in and reshapes the track in minutes.

This weekend looks different.

After heavy rain earlier in the week, strong high pressure is building into the Tasman Sea. That pattern is setting up a moderate easterly flow across the Harbour for the KPMG Sydney Sail Grand Prix.

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SailGP chief meteorologist Chris Bedford believes it will test the fleet in subtle ways.

“The course area isn’t really designed for an easterly. It’s better suited to a northeasterly or a southerly, so it will be interesting to see how the racecourse is configured, particularly on Saturday.”

Saturday’s wind is expected between 22 and 31 km/h. Solid pressure, but not extreme. The real challenge lies in direction.

An easterly places land to the south upwind of the course. That can produce disturbed air, uneven pressure, and quick shifts. In a foiling fleet, small errors at speed can become big losses.

Bedford also cautioned that the unusual angle could neutralise home advantage.

“It’s possible that Saturday could catch teams out. Local knowledge may not be much of an advantage because this is a relatively uncommon wind direction for Sydney Harbour.”

Precision over survival

The sea state inside the Harbour should remain flat. Ocean swell will not factor. Instead, attention turns to positioning, clean manoeuvres, and reading pressure lines early.

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General view of the SailGP F50 catamaran fleet on Race Day 1 of the KPMG Australia Sail Grand Prix in Sydney, Australia. Saturday 8 February 2025. Rolex SailGP Championship Event 3 Season 2025. Photo: Ricardo Pinto for SailGP. Photo credit: SailGP

If the course splits around Shark Island, tidal flow could influence decisions. Teams may need to commit to one side and live with it. In shifting conditions, hesitation often costs more than a bold call.

Sunday is forecast to trend back toward the northeast. It may not build into a classic thermal sea breeze, but the angle should feel more familiar. Wind strength remains less certain, potentially similar to Saturday or slightly lighter.

This weekend will not be about survival in heavy weather. It will be about discipline, awareness, and making the right call before the opportunity closes.

For spectators, that usually delivers the best kind of racing.

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Chris Woodhams
Chris Woodhams
Adventurer. Explorer. Sailor. Web Editors of Boating NZ

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