Bondi victims honored as Sydney-Hobart race sets sail

Yachts compete at the start of the annual Sydney to Hobart yacht race on Boxing Day at Sydney Harbor on Friday. (AFP)
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Updated 26 December 2025
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Bondi victims honored as Sydney-Hobart race sets sail

  • At Sydney Harbor,  crowds gathered around the shore or watched from scores of boats as a starting cannon set the fleet on its way for the race’s 80th edition
  • Wind and ocean forecast leaves little prospect of any competitor beating Comanche’s 2017 record time of one day, 9 hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds

SYDNEY: Skippers of 129 yachts set sail on a “bumpy” Sydney-Hobart ocean race Friday, with many to scatter rose petals for the Bondi Beach shooting victims as they venture into rolling seas.

On a cool, grey summer’s day at Sydney Harbor, crowds gathered around the shore or watched from scores of boats as a starting cannon set the fleet on its way for the race’s 80th edition.

Crews can expect waves of up to four meters (13 feet) and 25-knot winds on the first day of the 628-nautical-mile race from Sydney to the Tasmanian capital Hobart, a meteorologist warned in a final weather briefing.

“It’s going to be cold. It’s going to be wet. It’s going to be bumpy,” race committee chairman Lee Goddard said ahead of the race.

“People are going to get seasick, and there will be incidents, and there probably will be injuries.”

But conditions at sea are expected to ease off later, the weather forecast indicated, as sailors race down the east coast before tackling the treacherous Bass Strait crossing to Tasmania.

In last year’s edition, two sailors died in separate incidents as gale-force winds and big seas pummelled the fleet.

This year, scores of sailors will make a special tribute to those who died on Dec. 14 when gunmen attacked a Jewish festival on Bondi Beach, killing 15 people and wounding scores more.

As yachts pass the beach, they will spread rose petals on the ocean “out of respect for the tragic loss of life,” said Sam Haynes, commodore of race organizer the Cruising Yacht Club of Sydney.

‘Better than us’

Olympic swimming great Ian Thorpe is entering the Sydney-Hobart race for the first time aboard LawConnect, which is aiming to be first across the finish line for a third straight year.

“I’ve spent my life in and around water, but this is a completely different test, both mentally and physically,” Thorpe said.

LawConnect is one of five ultra-fast 100-foot supermaxis competing for line honors, alongside Palm Beach XI (formerly Wild Oats XI), Comanche, Wild Thing 100 and Scallywag.

LawConnect skipper Christian Beck has been playing down his chances, telling reporters last month that highly favored Comanche was “better than us in every way” and that he was hoping for lighter winds to even up the contest.

The wind and ocean forecast leaves little prospect of any competitor beating Comanche’s 2017 record time of one day, nine hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds.

Weather is a critical factor in the race, which was first held in 1945, with winds often shifting rapidly in direction and intensity.

In 1998, when a deep depression exploded over the fleet in the Bass Strait, six men died, five boats sank and 55 sailors were rescued.

Last year, 30 of the 104 yachts failed to finish.

The fleet, one of the largest this century, includes Celestial V70, which last year won the overall trophy that takes into account boat size and other factors.

There are 17 international entrants, including from Germany, Hong Kong, the US and Poland.

Among the entrants, there are 13 women owners and skippers, but only one has an all-woman crew — First Light, captained by Elizabeth Tucker as part of her preparation for the 2027-28 Global Solo Challenge, a single-handed, non-stop round-the-world race.
 


Drake Maye aims to do what Tom Brady couldn’t with the Patriots: win a playoff game in Denver

Updated 24 January 2026
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Drake Maye aims to do what Tom Brady couldn’t with the Patriots: win a playoff game in Denver

FOXBOROUGH, Mass.: Drake Maye has a chance to accomplish something not even Tom Brady did with the Patriots.
Maye is hoping to beat the Broncos in the AFC championship game in Denver on Sunday and lead New England to the Super Bowl for the first time since 2018. The Patriots have never won a playoff game in Denver — losing all four tries, with Brady going 0-3.
“Just the AFC championship, the chance to go to the Super Bowl. That’d be huge,” Maye said. “Another road environment that’s had success in the past. … I know it would be a big-time win.”
The Patriots advanced to their 14th AFC championship game in the last 25 years on Sunday when they beat the Houston Texans 28-16 in Foxborough. Denver beat Buffalo 33-30 to reach the conference title game.
New England and Denver both finished 14-3 in the regular season, but the Broncos won the tiebreaker for home-field advantage because they had a better record against common opponents: Denver beat the Raiders twice this season but the Patriots lost to them.
That loss — to the worst team in the NFL in the first game of the Mike Vrabel era — sent New England into one of the most inhospitable environments in the league. In addition to the high-energy crowd, the Patriots will also have to contend with a low-oxygen environment that they won’t have a chance to acclimate to.
“Kind of what we’ve been doing on the road all season long,” said Maye, who has guided the Patriots to an 8-0 road record this season. “They’ve got a great team, so we’re going to have a tough challenge. But I’m looking forward to getting out there. And getting a chance to possibly celebrate on an away field would be pretty special.”
The last team to go undefeated on the road with a new head coach was the San Francisco 49ers under George Seifert in 1989; they won the Super Bowl.
“Coach  has always been saying, ‘Road warriors,’” Maye said. “So, we’re trying to find that one more time and finish out strong what we’ve done this year.”
The Broncos are 18-5 in home playoff games all-time. But they’ll will be without starting quarterback Bo Nix, who broke his ankle near the end of the divisional round victory over Buffalo. Instead, the offense will be led by former Patriot Jarrett Stidham, who hasn’t thrown a pass since 2023.
That’s why New England opened as a 5½-point favorite — the biggest road favorite ever in a conference championship game. The line has since moved to Denver plus-4½.
“We always feel as though no matter what anyone else has to say, we still have something to prove,” said cornerback Marcus Jones, who returned an interception for a touchdown against Houston. “We’re trying to always prove ourselves right and not trying to prove other people wrong. That’s kind of the philosophy we’ve had for a long time.”
Win or lose, the Patriots could have trouble getting back to New England: A major snowstorm is expected to dump a foot or more of snow on the area.
Vrabel said the team is prepared if it can’t leave Denver on Sunday night.
“We have multiple plans of what could go on based on the weather.  something that they’re familiar with here,” he said. “I mean, there’s things I can control,  that I can’t control.”