Advertisement

How a Hong Kong tycoon’s ‘expensive curiosity’ led to a sea rescue and a record in the Sydney to Hobart race

Sun Hung Kai & Co’s Lee Seng Huang buys a boat on impulse and then abandons creature comforts to join a ‘rock star’ skipper and his crew of ‘Scallywags’

Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Scallywag during the Sydney to Hobart race. Photo: Rolex

When a tycoon says that “I’d like to have a serious conversation” you listen.

Advertisement

And experienced yachtsman, David Witt was all ears after a chance meeting last year with Hong Kong-based tycoon Lee Seng Huang.

The winds had blown them together in Hong Kong after a corporate sailing event, setting in motion the purchase of the 100 foot supermaxi now named Scallywag, which finished a record-breaking third in line honours in last month’s Sydney to Hobart race.

As group executive chairman of Sun Hung Kai & Co, Lee was quick to see an opportunity when it hit him in the face like a wet spinnaker.

Lee Seng Huang (right) and skipper David Witt. Photo: Rolex
Lee Seng Huang (right) and skipper David Witt. Photo: Rolex
Advertisement

“The moment we came off the boat ‘Antipodes’ on a corporate sail and were still standing in the rain, I said to skipper David Witt, ‘I’d like to have a serious conversation’,” said 42-year-old Lee.

“It was totally unplanned. Witty told me that Syd Fisher, at nearly 90, was ready to hang up his sailing shoes. And that if no buyer could be found for his biggest yacht, the supermaxi Ragamuffin 100, the crew would be forced to disband.”

loading
Advertisement