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CoastWaterSports 2014

ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami - Day 3

by ISAF 29 Jan 2015 06:12 GMT 26-31 January 2015

Moguls? In the Wind?

There's a world of difference between skiing a long, smooth run and skiing on moguls. Today, forget the waves, it was the breeze on Biscayne Bay that was "moguls." Shift upon shift upon shift upon shift.

This is the ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami, presented by Sunbrella, with 599 boats and 768 sailors who were adjusting all day to one thing or another. If it wasn't the wind direction that was changing, it was the wind speed. Which made it all the more notable that three classes produced back-to-back race winners.

Dave Ullman, among many things the 1996 US Rolex Yachtsman of the Year and a three-time 470 world champion, is now coaching U.S. Olympic hopefuls. He was a keen observer of the day's events. The direction shifts, he said, were coming at "15 to 20 degrees, but more than that it was about velocity-on and velocity-off. Downwind, if you were in the velocity, you could make big gains.

"It was much windier today than the forecast called for," Ullman said, "but the racecourse is fine. The race officials are doing a good job with some challenging circumstances.

"But, it was cold out there."

He wasn't the only one who said so.

Wednesday was the third of six days of racing for ten Olympic classes. Top qualifiers will sail a Medal Race on Saturday. Competitors in three Paralympic classes will conclude their racing on Friday.

Men's 470

A second win in six races settled Luke Patience and Elliot Willis of Great Britain into a six-point lead in their 44-boat fleet, and they had reason to be glad that race six went as long as it did, and ended when it did. They had boats to pass. And then it was over. Second-place skipper Mat Belcher of Australia observed that Patience and Willis had a good second weather leg, "They went heavily to the right, and that got them around a lot of boats."

With four more races scheduled before Saturday's Medals Race, Patience and Willis have scores of 1-2-(5)-4-3-1 to a count of 5-1-2-(12)-2-7 for Belcher and crew Will Ryan. The six-point delta allows for discarding worst scores. Panagiotis Mantis and Pavlos Kagialis dropped out of their leadership position (two firsts on Tuesday) and now are looking at (25)-4-1-1-8-10 for third place.

Farther down in the lists, Matthias Schmid's Austrian crewman, Florian Reichsteaedter, like everyone out there in a 470, spent his day balancing on the wire, adjusting in and out with the puffs. "There was no system to it" he said. "Sometimes you had to be on the left. Sometimes you had to be on the right. And it was up and down, up and down all day. Eight knots. Eighteen knots.

"And it was cold out there."

His handshake proved that.

And we may have already mentioned that. But, to be fair, it was Miami-on-the-water cold. Readers in northern climes, please hold those cards and letters.

Women's 470

The London 2012 gold medalists Jo Aleh and Polly Powrie, aka Team Jolly, tightened their grip on the lead in the Women's 470 with a pair of firsts, demonstrating that, yes, there must be an answer to the dilemma of a dicey racecourse. "We're sort of getting used to the wind being up and down and shifty," Aleh said.

She offered, "If you can't pick the right place to be on the racecourse, try to not pick the wrong place. We didn't always have the best start or the best first leg, but we would keep chipping away and chipping away until we could look around and say, Oh, we're in front. We'll take it."

Team Jolly, sailing out of Auckland, New Zealand, has placings of 2-2-1-(7)-1-1. The London 2012 silver medalists, Hannah Mills and Saskia Clark of Great Britain, are nine points back at 6-1-(7)-1-3-5.

Sophie Weguelin and Eilidh McIntire, also of Great Britain, are in third, another ten points back.

49er

Diego Botin and Iago Lopez's (ESP) overnight 14 point lead was shattered by a culmination of bad results and tight performances from their rivals.

John Pink and Stuart Bithell (GBR) and Joel Turner and Iain Jensen (AUS) kept things together, remaining at the front of the pack and now share the lead on 42 points. But for Botin and Lopez, a U flag penalty, a tenth and an 18th allowed the British and Australian teams to advance, leaving them one point behind.

Last to arrive back on-shore, last to take their sails down and last out of the boat park, Botin and Lopez looked deflated on the slipway. After their bright start they received a thorough debrief from their coach upon conclusion of the third day. All is not lost. They remain in contention; teachings will be applied and tomorrow is another day.

For Turner and Jensen, their short term partnership, is a one off for Miami with Jensen's usual helm Nathan Outteridge missing out for personal reasons.

"It's the first time I've sailed the 49er without Nathan for a long time," said Jensen. "Joel's doing great and he's picking some clever shifts out there and we're doing a lot better than we expected considering we only had three days in the boat together before this."

Routine, rhythm and reliability are three buzz words for Outteridge and Jensen. The pair sailed together as teenagers, winning the ISAF Youth Worlds, and a partnership in the 49er was inevitable.

Seven years after forming, three 49er world titles and an Olympic gold medal later, Miami is the first time Jensen has been without his formidable helm in the Men's Skiff, "If you sail with someone for years, like I have with Nathan, you get stuck in your routine. It's always the same but if you sail with someone else it forces you to problem solve differently and that's beneficial for when you go back with the other person.

"The roles are still the same with Joel as with Nathan. There are subtleties with the way he [Turner] sails and the way Nathan steers and approaches things. Neither is right or wrong, it's just the individual style."

Whilst the partnership is flourishing in Miami, when teased with the question – reckon you'll stick with Turner? – Jensen replied, "Joel's doing an awesome job and I think he'll be a force in the 49er for years to come, he's 19-years-old and got a bright future but in the next couple of years I might just stick with what I know."

Outteridge will be flying in on Thursday, ensuring his crew sticks to what he knows and to enjoy the Miami racing from the coach boat.

49erFX

When those around you all discard 41 points from a DNF or a DNC, the odds will always be stacked in your favour. That's the case for Alex Maloney and Molly Meech (NZL) who have opened up a 25 point lead in the 49erFX.

The Kiwis were just one of eight teams to complete the single race on the first day and they are reaping the rewards. Their discard is a 21 and they hold a comfortable advantage after nine races.

Martine Grael and Kahena Kunze (BRA) are second overall on 62 points whilst Nina Keijzer and Claire Blom (NED) sit third on 90 points.

Maloney and Meech certainly won't be resting on their laurels with six fleet races and Saturday's Medal Race ahead of them but things are certainly going their way.

Women's RS:X

Two wins and a second is a perfect day for some but not for 2014 ISAF Sailing World Cup Final gold medallist Bryony Shaw (GBR).

On the face of it, the Briton dominated the day but in her words, "It's strange, it didn't feel like a perfect day out there. I made a lot of mistakes actually. It was really shifty and puffy and I think it was my awareness, especially on the downwinds that really pulled me through.

"I made a couple of silly calls by going a bit too extreme at the start so I had to make some pretty big comebacks today."

Shaw, the defending champion, is firmly in control. She is 17 points clear of the second placed Olga Maslivets (RUS) and is carrying a superb 2014 conclusion forward into the New Year, "I feel like this [leading in Miami] is momentum from winning in Abu Dhabi at the end of last year and the event we had in Rio. It's nice to come out here and put on a good show.

"I really feel like 2015 is my year and it's important for performance. I want to try and be selected for the games and win a medal in Rio, so I need to be performing at that level now."

Men's RS:X

Consistency was at a premium for the first day of gold fleet racing in what was an up and down day for all.

Only the second placed Nick Dempsey (GBR) put together a trio of top ten finishes, 8-8-3, whilst those around him finished out of the top ten at least once.

It's still France atop of the leader board, but with a new face lighting the path ahead. Overnight leader Louis Giard (FRA) has dropped to fourth whilst Thomas Goyard (FRA) claimed a 12-4-2 which is enough for a slender one point lead over Dempsey.

Dorian Van Rijsselberge (NED) took out the first bullet of the day and is third overall. The remaining victories went the way of Byron Kokkalanis (GRE) who is in seventh and the 14th placed Mattia Camboni (ITA).

Laser

If others demonstrated that it is possible to win two race back-to-back on a wacky race course, five-time Olympic medalist Robert Scheidt of Brazil demonstrated that the best can stumble. He won his first race of the day, then burned his throw-out race on a 27th.

Scheidt's closest competition, Australian Matthew Wearn, went with him and burned his throw-out on a 20th.

Neither of the two leaders can afford another bad race. Scheidt has a seven-point cushion over Wearn, but Germany's Philipp Buhl is only one point behind Wearn, and only four points separate him from Julio Alsogaray of Argentina and Nick Thompson of Great Britain.

At 106 boats in two divisions, the Laser is by far the largest class here and as hard as any when it comes to getting to the top. A few years ago, American Jensen Mctigh was acing it in the Snipe class. Here he's paying his dues ("I'm probably the youngest person here") with three-digit standings, but he's seeing the racecourse as clearly as anyone. McTigh's take from his end of the Laser fleet, "The shifts were bigger yesterday, but those blew evenly across the course. Today the shifts were smaller, but they never stopped. They never stopped."

Laser Radial

Denmark's Anne-Marie Rindom took two bullets today.

And, frankly, that ought to be enough said. Difficult. Shifty, Tricky. Challenging. Those are the sort of words used throughout ten Olympic and three Paralympic fleets to describe race day three and — Did we mention, Anne-Marie Rindom took two bullets today. She was 13th at the 2012 Olympics. She was seventh at the 2014 ISAF Sailing World Championship in Santander. Maybe something made her mad.

Allowing for a throw-out race apiece, Rindom is now in first with a four-point lead over Annalise Murphy of Ireland and a 12-point lead over the Santander winner from the Netherlands, Marit Bouwmeester.

Bouwmeester was the Radial silver medalist at the 2012 Olympics.

Murphy, known for liking a big breeze, took advantage of a big-breeze day at the Worlds in Santander to qualify Ireland for the Laser Radial class in the Rio de Janeiro Olympiad of 2016.

And Miami? It's a long week.

Finn

It was Ioannis Mitakis day in the Finn fleet on Biscayne Bay today.

Mitakis, who represented Greece in the 2012 Olympic Games and won the European Finn Championship the same year—leading the Medal Race start to finish—today took back-to-back firsts. Fleet leader Giles Scott of Great Britain faded.

Faded, but not far enough to cost Scott the lead that he hopes will keep an 18-month winning streak intact.

With a worst score of sixth to discard, Scott now has finishes of 1-1-1-5-4-(6). Computing throw-out races, he has a five-point lead over Jake Lilley of Australia and a 12-point lead over Mitakis. Anything can happen, but Lilley is carrying a 22nd as his discard. Another bad race would probably sink him below the podium. It's game faces all around.

Nacra 17

It's a high scoring affair in the Nacra 17 with consistency a rarity in a highly competitive fleet.

Defending Miami champions Vittorio Bissaro and Silvia Sicouri (ITA) and Ben Saxton and Nicola Groves (GBR) share the lead on 50 points. The teams recorded two scores outside the top ten with one top ten finish.

Anything can happen in the 49-boat fleet and early front runners Gemma Jones and Jason Saunders (NZL) fell victim to a 29-14-28 day that sees them drop to seventh. Not helped by a late night disqualification after a jury hearing the pair count all three scores and are 36 points off the top. But as shown, anything can happen.

Paralympic Events

There's a tussle at the top in the 2.4mR between Megan Pascoe (GBR), Helena Lucas (GBR) and Bjornar Erikstad (NOR) with one point of separation. An intriguing two days is ahead with four more races to decide the winner.

Dan Fitzgibbon and Liesl Tesch (AUS) are on track to make it two ISAF Sailing World Cup Regatta wins in a row with a two point lead over Marco Gualandris and Marta Zanetti (ITA) in the SKUD18. Defending champions Alexandra Rickham and Niki Birrell (GBR) complete the podium after six races.

In the Sonar, Alphonsus Doerr, Brad Kendell and Hugh Freund (USA) and John Robertson, Hannah Stodel and Steve Thomas (GBR) are tied atop on 11 points.

Results are available at www.sailing.org/worldcup/results/index.php

Kiwi women lead the way (from Jodie Bakewell-White, Yachting New Zealand)

New Zealand still leads in the Women's 470 and 49erFX after day three of 2015 ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami where gold fleet racing got underway today.

Both of New Zealand's women's double-handed crews extended their overall leads with Jo Aleh and Polly Powrie (pictured above © Walter Cooper) winning both of their races today and Alexandra Maloney and Molly Meech using their four races to open an even wider points gap on the chasing pack.

After a double-gun display on day three Aleh and Powrie have stretched their leading margin out to nine points over Hannah Mills and Saskia Clark (GBR), who managed a 3rd and a 5th today.

"We had a nice consistent day three here in Miami, the breeze was anywhere from 12-20 knots, rather gusty and shifty and a little tricky at times, but we sailed well overall to come home with two wins," reports Jo Aleh.

"We came from behind in both races, with good pace, some smart down-winds and good second beats, as well as just sending it on the reaches! Great fun."

There are two races a day for the women's 470 gold fleet, over the coming two days before the top ten in the fleet sail their medal race on Saturday in Miami.

Aleh describes what conditions they're expecting; "Looks like a softer day tomorrow, and we are racing slightly later in the day, listening to the other classes who have been racing after us, it sounds like the wind gets shiftier and crazier as the day gets on."

Skiff sailors Alexandra Maloney and Molly Meech are now 25 points in front of reigning 49erFX world champs Martine Grael and Kahene Kunze (BRA).

While they blotted their single-digit consistency in today's opening two races the kiwis hit back in races eight and nine with a 2nd and a 5th to keep them well out in front in the women's skiff.

In the Men's 470 Paul Snow-Hansen and Daniel Willcox hold onto 4th overall which they share with the Spanish crew both on 32 points. The New Zealanders were 4th and 15th in their two races today.

Elsewhere the day produced mixed for the NZL Sailing Team who have two days remaining to earn a place in their respective top ten and a medal race start.

Gemma Jones and Jason Saunders sailed three races today in the Nacra fleet relinquishing their overall lead and dropping back to 7th overall after placing 29th, 14th and 28th on the water today.

Sara Winther is in 12th overall in the Women's Laser Radial, while in the Men's Laser fleet kiwis Andy Maloney, Sam Meech and Mike Bullot are lying 11th, 17th and 27th respectively.

Racing continues tomorrow with three days of competition remaining to determine the podium placings.

ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami runs from 26-31 January and 856 sailors from 63 nations are competing across the ten Olympic and three Paralympic events. It is the second regatta in the 2015 ISAF Sailing World Cup Series which includes events in Melbourne (AUS), Miami (USA), Hyeres (FRA), Weymouth (GBR), Qingdao (CHN) and Abu Dhabi (UAE).

Australian Sailing's Youngsters make waves as regatta reaches half-way mark (from Cora Zillich, Yachting Australia)

Australian Sailing's youngsters are making waves at the first international regatta of 2015, with 19-year old Matt Wearn (WA) grabbing the lead in the Laser class on day three of the ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami (Wednesday, 28 January 2015 local time) and Olympian Iain Jensen (NSW) sailing in Miami with up and coming skipper Joel Turner (QLD) moving into second, tied on points with first, in the 49er skiff.

Paralympic Gold medallists Daniel Fitzgibbon (NSW) and crew Liesl Tesch (NSW) are leading the SKUD-18 after five races. Men's 470 World Champions Mat Belcher (QLD) and Will Ryan (QLD) are ranked second after six races and with another four races to go before the final medal race on Saturday, 30 January (Sunday 31 January AEDT). Finn sailor Jake Lilley (QLD), who is currently also ranked second, completes the Australian contingent of five crews with promising medal prospects at this 2015 World Sailing Cup series event.

49er – Men's Skiff

It is the 49er skiff which has been attracting a lot of attention in Miami with Australian Sailing Squad's Joel Turner (QLD) making waves by filling in for Olympic gold medallist Nathan Outteridge and successfully competing with Outteridge's Olympic gold medal winning crew Iain Jensen. On the third day of racing the pair has moved into second place, tied on points with Great Britain in first. And 19-year Joel Turner, Junior World Champion, who usually sails with fellow Queenslander Lewis Brake, is making the most of his opportunity to sail with the experienced Jensen:

"Its a really great opportunity I'm able to compete in Miami with Goobs", Turner said. "Obviously for me, I just want to achieve the best result possible for two reasons; A, to make Goobs feel good and not feel like he is sailing with someone inferior, and B, if I sail to my best, I will be able to clearly define some goals for myself and Lewis as a team for the rest of this year."

"The racing so far has been very intense. We have had some really full on conditions and very tight racing which means you have to work well together as a team. Goobs and I have bonded really well as a team and I think if we had a few more days in the boat together before the regatta we would have had a lot less mistakes on day one when we had 20kts and nasty waves."

"For the next three days, hopefully we can continue to post good results at the front of the fleet. Some lighter breezes to come might make it pretty interesting with some very good teams competing at this event. At the moment it's all about the learning for me as well as being the best skipper that I can be."

For Turner and Jensen, their short-term partnership, is a one off for Miami with Jensen's usual helm Nathan Outteridge missing out for personal reasons, but nonetheless Jensen is very complimentary of his new skipper. "It's the first time I've sailed the 49er without Nathan for a long time." Jensen said. "Joel's doing great and he's picking some clever shifts out there and we're doing a lot better than we expected considering we only had three days in the boat together before this."

Seven years after forming, three 49er world titles and an Olympic gold medal later, Miami is the first time Jensen has been without his helm in the Men's Skiff, "If you sail with someone for years, like I have with Nathan, you get stuck in your routine. It's always the same but if you sail with someone else it forces you to problem solve differently and that's beneficial for when you go back with the other person.

"The roles are still the same with Joel as with Nathan. There are subtleties with the way he [Turner] sails and the way Nathan steers and approaches things. Neither is right or wrong, it's just the individual style."

Whilst the partnership is flourishing in Miami, when teased with the question – reckon you'll stick with Turner? – Jensen replied, "Joel's doing an awesome job and I think he'll be a force in the 49er for years to come, he's 19-years-old and got a bright future but in the next couple of years I might just stick with what I know."

Outteridge will be flying in on Thursday, ensuring his crew sticks to what he knows and to enjoy the Miami racing from the coach boat.

Australian Sailing Team's David Gilmour (WA) and Rhys Mara (NSW) dropped to 12th after sitting

Laser – Men's One Person Dinghy

Western Australian Matt Wearn has also been making the most of his opportunities at Miami and managed to move into the lead of the 126-boat Laser fleet after six races. Wearn had a few ups and downs on day three but these did not stop him from taking the lead by one point ahead of Britain's Nick Thompson and five-time Olympic medallist from Brasil Robert Scheidt.

"Racing has been great so far. Today (Wednesday) was been the shiftiest day," Matt Wearn said. With racing as close as it is in the laser it was extremely important to be on top of the shifts. Any small mistake was costly. I found this out in the first race of the day to score the 20. But I managed to get my head around the shifts in the second race to finish with a fourth."

"With four more races over the next two days and the medal race on Saturday, it's still wide open for anyone in conditions like these", Wearn is realistic about the caliber of the fleet. "I will just need to sail smart and take it as it comes and I'm looking forward to the challenges."

Current Laser World #1 Tom Burton (NSW), Sail Melbourne winner and recent national champion, has slowly been moving up the ranks after a virus had weakened him considerably at the start of the event:

"I got quite ill post moth worlds and was sick for over a week with a bad virus. I was contemplating whether to come to Miami or not but despite a temperature I decided to come and compete. I started to feel better on day one but have been struggling with low energy and lacking fitness. The windier conditions just haven't been ideal for no preparation in the laser."

Burton, who competed at the Moth World's in Sorrento mid-January, contributed his performance also to a lack of practice over the last few weeks: "It's been a while out of big regatta competition and the difference in style of racing from the moth has taken a bit of adjustment to the close racing in the laser. All the small things have added up and it was a slow start to the regatta but hopefully I'll be a little better each day and be sailing well by the end. I'm still pleased with some of my results with how bad I was feeling just a week ago."

2012 London Paralympic champions Daniel Fitzgibbon and Liesl Tesch are the third Australian Sailing crew on top of the points table – a strong performance after the week started out with a bit of bad luck for the pair when they had to miss due to technical issues with Fitzgibbon's seat set-up.

"We have had quite an up and down week so far. We started with a bullet and then suffered some gear failure with my canting seat" Fitzgibbon explained. "The next two days have followed this trend with a good and not so good race. But luckily we still hold the lead by two points to the Italian team with two days to go. We will be aiming for a bit more consistency to finish off the week."

Competitors in the Paralympic events have a total of five days of fleet racing and will finish the regatta on Friday, 30 January 2015 (Saturday, 31 January 2015 AEDT).

Medal Races across the ten OIympic events will bring the regatta to a close on Saturday 31 January where medals will be awarded to the top three boats.

The Sailing World Cup Miami on Biscayne Bay sees world-class fields in ten Olympic and three Paralympic events including 599 boats and featuring 768 sailors.

Australian Sailing Team and Squad athletes are represented in eight Olympic and two Paralympic classes.

US Sailing Team Sonars Take the Lead, Women's 470 Chips Away (from Will Ricketson, US Sailing)

Day 3 of ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami, Presented by Sunbrella marked the midpoint of North America's biggest Olympic and Paralympic classes regatta. With bright sunshine and fresh breeze in abundance, the world's top athletes in 13 classes were treated to the conditions that exemplify why Miami is a preferred international sailing destination.

In the Women's 470, Annie Haeger (East Troy, Wisc.) and Briana Provancha (San Diego, Calif.) improved to 6th overall. "Our speed is as good as it's ever been," said Provancha. "We just need to finish more consistently." Dave Ullman, the three-time 470 class world champion ('77, '78, '80) who has been coaching the world #2 ranked pair since last April, noted that he's been enjoying getting back to his roots as a sailor through working with the US Sailing Team Sperry. "The boats have not changed, but the game certainly has," said Ullman. "It is more professional now than when I sailed the 470, and teams train much harder."

The men's 49er team of Brad Funk (Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.) and Trevor Burd (Marblehead, Mass.) remained in the top 10 despite an offshore breeze that brought radical shifts and puffs throughout the day. "We didn't have any really bad races, and did a pretty good job of being consistent," said Burd. "If we sail as well as we know we can, we can definitely jump higher in the standings. Many boats ahead of us have at least one deep score."

The best US Sailing Team Sperry performance of the day came from the Paralympic Sonar team of Rick Doerr (Clifton, N.J.), Brad Kendell (Tampa, Fla.) and Hugh Freund (South Freeport, Maine) who notched a 1,2 scoreline today and moved into the overall lead. "There is no margin for error in the fleet," said Freund. "Yesterday we did pretty well with a 4th and a 2nd, but actually dropped a place. Our mindset definitely won't change now that we're in first." US Sailing Team Sperry Paralympic Coach Betsy Alison (Newport, R.I.) said she was proud of her sailors today. "They were definitely not conservative, and took some smart risks that paid off," said the 5-time US Sailing Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year and longtime national team coach. "Brad and Hugh had a great day tactically, and Ricky kept the boat going fast."

In the Laser Radial, US Sailing Team Sperry's Paige Railey (Clearwater, Fla.) dropped slightly to 7th, with US Sailing Development Team standout Haddon Hughes (Houston, Texas) sitting right behind in 8th. Hughes continues to have an impressive scoreline for an athlete competing in her first World Cup event against elite competition.

The US Sailing Development Team's Raoul Lopez (Miami, Fla.) had a nice moment today in the Men's RS:X fleet when he recording a bullet in race 9, becoming the second American board sailor to win a race after Marion Lepert (Belmont, Calif.) in the women's fleet. "I had a bad start, but figured out that the strongest puffs were coming down the center of the course, and stuck with that strategy," said Lopez. "Downwind I worked hard as well, and it's nice to see that maybe some of my training is paying off."

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