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HomeSailingSydney to Auckland Ocean Race 2025Monday AM update: Lucky powers ahead as Tasman turns golden

Monday AM update: Lucky powers ahead as Tasman turns golden

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Two days into the Sydney to Auckland Ocean Race 2025, Lucky has broken away from the pack while the rest of the fleet settles into the long run east.

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KEYPOINTS
  • Lucky extends her lead to more than 300 nautical miles.

  • All yachts record a good 24-hour run overnight.

  • Antipodes and Frantic remain close, separated by roughly 10 miles.

  • Wings pulls slightly clear of Cooloola mid-fleet.

  • The weather outlook continues to favour quick sailing before a Tuesday front.

There’s Lucky, and then there’s everyone else.

By early Monday morning, the Juan K–designed 27-metre maxi had opened a yawning gap on the rest of the fleet. At 8 am NZ time, Lucky sat 547 nautical miles from Auckland — almost halfway across — after logging a blistering 24-hour run of 513 miles. Her lead over Antipodes has grown from 95 to more than 320 miles in just a day.

For owner Bryon Ehrhart and his crew, including Kiwi legend Brad Butterworth, it’s been a remarkable turnaround. The boat only just reached Sydney in time for Saturday’s start after an engine issue forced a return to Opua mid-week. Now she’s streaking east at an average of 18 knots, sailing well ahead of the pace needed to threaten the race record.

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The fleet behind

While Lucky charges ahead, the real contest is playing out astern.

Geoff Hill’s Antipodes and Mick Martin’s Frantic have barely been out of sight of each other since clearing Sydney Heads. They’re still only ten miles apart this morning, each making steady gains and maintaining an honest duel mid-ocean.

Frantic has been playing cat and mouse with Antipodes (in foreground). Photo credit: Salty Dingo

Behind them, Ian Edwards’ Wings and Alan Hill’s Cooloola continue their steady progress in near-perfect sailing weather. The pair have spent most of the crossing within VHF range, though Wings has eased slightly ahead overnight, now about forty miles in front.

Every yacht in the fleet improved its 24-hour run overnight — the kind of progress that speaks to settled crews, clean gear, and the sort of steady nor’wester sailors dream of.

Weather and what’s ahead

Meteorologist Roger “Clouds” Badham expects those same north-westerlies to hold through Monday before a front pushes off the New South Wales coast late tonight. That system should cross the Tasman and reach the top of the North Island on Tuesday evening, bringing a shift to cooler south-west winds.

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If Lucky keeps her current pace, she should make Auckland before the change. For Antipodes, Frantic, and the smaller boats behind, the last stretch could turn into a beat into the Gulf.

The shape of the race

Two days in, the Sydney to Auckland Ocean Race already feels like two separate contests — Lucky in a race against time and her own potential record, and a close-fought battle among the rest.

Wings underway. Photo credit to Craig Greenhill at Salty Dingo​

Either way, the rhythm of the Tasman is now set: strong breeze, long miles, and a fleet making the most of perfect offshore sailing conditions.

Sydney to Auckland Ocean Race 2025 — Monday 13 October, 8 am NZDT

Boat Type / Club Distance to Finish (nm) 24 h Run (nm) Line Honours Position IRC / PHS / ORC Placings ETA (Auckland NZDT)
Lucky Juan K 88 / NYYC 547 513 1st 1st IRC · 1st PHS Tue 14 Oct ~ 1 : 55 pm
Antipodes Santa Cruz 72 / CYCA 868 249 2nd 2nd IRC · 4th PHS Thu 16 Oct ~ 7 pm
Frantic TP 52 / CYCA 879 246 3rd 3rd IRC · 3rd PHS Thu 16 Oct ~ 10 pm
Wings Dehler 46 / RPAYC 948 220 4th 4th IRC · 2nd PHS · 1st ORC Sat 18 Oct ~ 12 am
Cooloola Swan 48 / RPAYC 992 199 5th 5th IRC · 5th PHS · 2nd ORC Sat 18 Oct ~ 9 pm

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Chris Woodhams
Chris Woodhams
Adventurer. Explorer. Sailor.

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