The overall win by Jaing Lin’s JPK 10.30 Min River in the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart Race has rightly been hailed as a great achievement for women’s sailing. And as the little boat’s gallant owner admits to being sixty years old, she has also struck a mighty blow for the perception of sailing as being a sport for all ages.
Plus that, her home port at Balmain Sailing Club has been described as Sydney Harbour’s version of “the Inner City Sailing Facility”. Thus already we have ticked many boxes before we even consider the role played by her co-skipper in the Min River victory.
ALEXIS LOISON THE SUPREME ACHIEVER
For her co-skipper is of course is French super-star Alexis Loison. He had recorded an extraordinary high-achievement national and international sailing CV before the 2025 season got under way. But then at the height of it in July, co-skippering with ace boat-builder Jean-Pierre Kelbert on the JPK 10.50 Leon racing in the Rolex Centenary Fastnet Race 2025 against a record fleet, he won overall. Then in September he won the Figaro Solitaire overall at his 19th attempt.
Small boat, big achiever. The JPK 10.30 Min River in one of the gentler stages of the 628-mile Rolex Sydney-Hobart Race 2025. Photo: Rolex
And now he has added overall victory in the 80th Rolex Sydney-Hobart Race. On the final day of 2025, French offshore racing has even managed to soar above the fact that back in November, their own Charlie Dalin was feted in Dun Laoghaire as World Sailing “Sailor of the Year”. The movement inaugurated by dedicated pioneers like Glenans Sailing and the late great Eric Tabarly has now reached heights which – fifty years ago – would have been dismissed as the wildest fantasy.

















































