Please select your home edition
Edition
Noble Marine 2022 YY - LEADERBOARD

ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami - Day 2

by ISAF 28 Jan 2015 07:40 GMT 26-31 January 2015

If the Chamber of Commerce had stayed up all night working at it, they could not have served up a better day for racing at ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami, presented by Sunbrella.

The second day offered a steady diet of breeze in the teens, the allure of a sun-drenched Biscayne Bay, and the kinetic beauty of boats in ten Olympic and three Paralympic sailing classes being put to their best and highest purpose.

We're still early in a regatta scheduled for six days of racing, including a Medal Race on Saturday for top-ten qualifiers. At stake are qualifying points and slots for the finale of the six-event international series that has become the proving ground of the would-be Olympic sailor.

The finale will take place in Abu Dhabi U.A.E. late in 2015, and after that – After that, an athlete is either ready for Rio and the 2016 Olympic Games, or not.

Nacra 17

In their first trip to Miami, Gemma Jones and Jason Saunders (NZL) have brought their game faces.

The masters of control in the opening day's big breeze backed up their bright start with a 1-2-7 to solidify their position at the top of the fleet.

Their secret in Monday's madness, "Our advantage was to have a much taller and bigger crew on the wire as it was single trapezing," explained Jones. "That was our advantage downwind but we sailed well upwind as well."

With Jones at the helm and the 6'1" Saunders in front of her, it proved to be a winning formula as she continued, "Yesterday we had pretty good speed, we didn't have good starts but we took some pretty huge shifts upwind and that put us in a pretty good position round the top mark and then chipped away for the rest of the racing."

The Kiwis have always been in the top group at Nacra 17 competitions but are yet to back it up with a podium finish. Whilst that may be in the back of their mind, with nine fleet races remaining ahead of Saturday's Medal Race the Kiwis will be sticking to their usual pre-sail routine for Wednesday's trio of races, "We'll just start again, get a nice sleep in, cruise on down, check the boat is good and then launch an hour before racing. It's a really high level fleet and the racing is really good."

The day's other race wins went the way of Renee Groeneveld and Steven Krol (NED) who are 11th overall and Ben Saxton and Hannah Diamond (GBR) who are seven points off the Kiwi leaders.

Laser Radial

With first starts in the afternoon, in decreasing winds, the two divisions of women sailing Laser Radials "hoped to get in three races," said Ireland's Annalise Murphy, "but we just ran out of time."

Long shadows were spreading over the boat park at the Olympic Training Site as Murphy de-rigged. She described the day's competition as, "Pretty difficult. Winds 5 to 15 and really shifty. We saw some 60-degree shifts, and that is rather stressful racing. If you're leading, you can easily drop a lot of the fleet. If you're behind, the lottery just might go your way."

Murphy at 2-2-(5)-3 is presently second in the standings to Denmark's Anne-Marie Rindom, 3-(5)-1-1. Belgium's Evi Van Acker is third with scores of (7)-3-3-5. There are 79 Laser Radials, broken into two divisions.

"On a tricky day," Murphy said, it feels good to get consistent, high finishes. A sixth and a fourth today qualify, and the fact is, the breeze is tricky but slightly predictable. If it goes hard left, it's most likely to go back hard right. The question, is how long do you wait? "The thing is to go up the middle and don't get locked out on either side."

Laser

Brazil's five-time Olympic medalist, Robert Scheidt, owned the course today along with Aussie Matthew Wearn. Sailing in separate divisions of the 107-boat fleet, each won a race.

After five races, Scheidt leads the standings with scores of 2-(4)-2-3-1. Wearn looks good to go the distance at (7)-7-1-1-2 and, being a Western Australian in his twenties, he naturally has a nickname. Try Wearn Dog.

Nick Thompson of Great Britain likewise looks good at 6-4-2-(10)-1, and behind Thompson comes Jean Baptiste-Bernaz, who has burned his throw-out with 37 points in race five.

49erFX

New Zealand's Alex Maloney and Molly Meech were left somewhat disappointed as they returned ashore after four 49erFX races with a handy advantage at the top of the leader board.

For many a 2-2-5-9 scoreline would be a day of work well done. But for the Maloney, the ninth, which they discard, left her visibly frustrated, "We had a good downwind, gybing in pressure," explained Maloney, "but I probably took it a little bit too far and gybed a bit too many times near the finish and we lost a few boats.

"It was a tricky out there, a head out of the boat type of day. We'll learn from the mistakes we made today. Hopefully we'll improve on that but all in all it was a pretty consistent day."

The day prior the Kiwis were one of eight boats to complete the single 49erFX race in the big Miami breeze. With their nearest rivals counting hefty scores, the Kiwis are the only team with single digit scores and subsequently lead Martine Grael and Kahena Kunze (BRA) by 17 points.

That in mind, they're still striving for me, "Tomorrow we are going to improve our starts by getting a good lane. If we do that, our results will improve," concluded Maloney.

The day's victories were spread four ways. Third placed Leonie Meyer and Elena Christine Stoffers (GER) claimed the opening win with Charlotte Dobson and Sophie Ainsworth (GBR), Jena Hansen and Katja Salskov-Iversen (DEN) and Ida Marie Nielsen and Marie Thusgaard Olsen (DEN) all claiming bullets.

49er

Consistency is king in sailing and after two days of racing, Diego Botin and Iago Lopez (ESP) are a fine example of that statement.

From six races they hold a trio of race wins, a pair of twos and a discarded eighth. Their score of seven points leaves them 14 clear of David Gilmour and Rhys Mara (AUS).

With six races down, 49er qualification is done and dusted. The top 29 teams now advance to gold fleet racing where the competition and fight for points will heat up.

Botin and Lopez's advantage is a healthy one but as shown at the 2014 editions of World Cup Mallorca and Hyères, Botin struggles when it comes down to gold fleet racing. Only time will tell.

At the cut of mark Julien d'Ortoli and Noe Delpech (FRA), Yago Lange and Nicolas Aragones (ARG) and Canada's Michael Brodeur and Daniel Inkpen all sneaked in to the gold fleet by a narrow two points.

Men's RS:X

After the conclusion of the six race qualification series, there is very little separating the top Men's RS:X sailors.

France's Louis Giard holds on to his overnight lead but with three days of gold fleet racing ahead of him, he will be under no false pretences that the work is done. Eleven points split places first to eighth with Dorian van Rijsselberge (NED), defending Miami Champion Byron Kokkalanis (GRE) and Nick Dempsey (GBR) breathing down Giard's neck.

One of the biggest smiles of the day on the race course came from youngster Mattia Camboni (ITA). The 2013 RS:X Youth World Champion put in a hard fought performance in the fifth race of the yellow fleet. Working his sail hard on the run to the finish the Italian stormed to the race victory ahead of Ricardo Santos (BRA) and Nimrod Mashich (GBR).

Women's RS:X

Defending Miami Champion Bryony Shaw (GBR) showcased her skillset once again in the Miami sun, advancing to top spot following three top results. A fourth, a bullet and a fifth give her a one point advantage over Russia's Olga Maslivets and a two point advantage over Lilian de Geus (NED).

The leading trio shared the race wins between them but it's Shaw's consistency that ultimately sees her top the billing.

Finn

Giles Scott stumbled all the way to fifth in race four, but that did not alter the Finn class story line. Britain's gold medal hope, who has not lost a regatta in eighteen months, now has scores of 1-1-1-(5) and a lead of three points over Australian Jake Lilley—and Lilley has already used his throw-out.

Having come in as the obvious favourite, Scott is inevitably in the spotlight. But he's a realist. "People ask me about my form," he says. "It was great to go last year unbeaten, but, ultimately is kind of means nothing."

Not when, really, it's all about Rio, 2016.

The World Junior Champion is also faring well in his first year in senior competition. Anders Pedersen of Norway is fourth overall after a 4-9 day. He said, "Today's racing was tough. It was very shifty and up and down in pressure. The first race for me was good. I had a good start and got the flow. The second was difficult. I lost the wind half way up the first beat, and got knocked out of rhythm. The rest of the race was a struggle to hang onto the fleet."

As for the shift from Junior to a Senior, "The perspective hasn't changed that much, really. My goal is to do well in the Olympics. It's good to feel that I am fighting with 'the big guys.' "

At 2-3-(26)-1, Lilley is, yes, three points out of first, but those are a big three points, and another bad race would really hurt. Great Britain's Ed Wright has been consistent at 3-(7)-6-6, but this is a unique fleet where, for the last 18 months, consistent high place finishes have not been enough.

Forty boats. It's lonely at the top.

Women's 470

Jo Aleh and Polly Powrie came to Miami as favourites, and so far, they're living the role. You have to love a pair who meld into Team Jolly. 420 class world champions and gold medalists for New Zealand in the 470 at the London Games in 2012, they are "on track for Rio" as either of them will tell you.

After two days in a fleet of 29, Team Jolly is sitting on scores of 2-2-1-(7) and a three-point lead over Great Britain's Hannah Mills and Saskia Clark. Sophie Weguelin and Eilidh McIntire, also GBR, are another seven points back in a tight grouping with boats from Russia, Japan and Slovenia.

Mills and Clark are a case in point of what it takes to compete at this level, beyond the relentless physical training and hours and days and weeks in the boat. Mills has it that, "I would guess almost a fourth of our time is spent making up ropes, preparing and polishing the boat before any big regatta. And it's not just our boat that needs the love. We make sure we have a spares bag made up with almost anything we can think of that we would be able to change or fix on the water, just in case. If we didn't have spares on the water in the coach boat, we would have to go ashore to sort out problems. And miss races."

At ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami, that wouldn't do.

Men's 470

Panagiotis Mantis and crew Pavlos Kaglias of Greece lead the Men's 470 standings, but the banana peel under their heel takes the form of a throw-out used in the opening race. They look good on scores of (25)-4-1-1 but cannot afford another bad result.

Two hungry teams are only one and two points back, respectively, and they could better afford a bad race in the coming days. Britain's Luke Patience and Elliot Willis wrapped Tuesday with scores of 1-2-(5)-4 followed by Australian's Mat Belcher and Will Ryan at 5-1-2-(12). Behind them, it's an eight-point jump to fourth.

And why don't they ever get the crew's perspective?

They do. Roger Hudson would probably rather have had his talking moment on Monday, when he and his skipper, Jim "Squirrel" Asenathi, placed 4th and 6th – and it was Asenathi's birthday. Two 13ths on Tuesday pulled the South African sailors down to 10th overall, but the experience jelled in Hudson's analysis of the racecourse.

"The defining thing," he said, "is that even though it's breezy, it's really on and off, with a lot of pressure differences. It's quite light in patches, and the wind comes through in big blocks. There are huge gains to be made, and lots of position shifting. It's like sailing in Greece, with the wind coming off the land, broken up by land features, and that's maybe why the Greek guy won two races today."

Racing is scheduled to commence at 10:00 local time on Wednesday 28 January as the regatta nears the midway point.

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

NZL Sailing Team hold the lead in three classes after day two (from Jodie Bakewell-White, Yachting New Zealand)

Three NZL Sailing Team crews have retained their overnight lead after day two of racing at ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami on now on Biscayne Bay in the USA.

The major Olympic class regatta has attracted quality fleets from around the globe and in the Women's 470, Women's 49erFX and the Mixed Nacra 17 multihull New Zealand is leading the way as the regatta moves into day three of six.

Jo Aleh and Polly Powrie are three points clear in the Women's double-hander, Alexandra Maloney and Molly Meech are 17 points out in front in the women's skiff, while Gemma Jones and Jason Saunders are seven points in front of their closest rivals in the Nacra division. A further three New Zealand crews are within the top six in the Laser, Radial and Men's 470 fleets.

Aleh and Powrie started today with a race win; "We had another decent day, rather tricky racing out there, very gusty and shifty. In race one we had a good start but missed out on a rather large right hand shift with pressure, so we had to fight back through the fleet, picking off a few boats each leg to take the lead near the finish and take the race win."

"The next race was much shiftier. We missed the first big shift and were rather back in the pack, with the leading bunch having a rather large jump on us... We once again picked off as many as we could, apart from one mildly annoying downwind leg, where there were a few missed opportunities, the 7th we ended up with was good enough!"

"So overall a consistent enough day in rather trying conditions. Another day tomorrow, with some lighter wind forecast."

It was a big day on the water for the 49erFX fleet sailing four races after just one was possible yesterday. New Zealand's Alexandra Maloney and Molly Meech had a solid day with consistent single-digit results including two 2nd placings which sees them stretch a points lead on the fleet at this early stage.

Current world champions in the class, Martine Grael and Kahena Kunze of Brazil are lying second.

Another three excellent results on day two in Miami in the Nacra racing sees the kiwi duo of Gemma Jones and Jason Saunders retain their overall lead from GBR's Ben Saxton and Nicola Groves.

With a win, a 2nd and a 7th on the water today Jones and Saunders are enjoying good pace in the breezy conditions and will be hoping to maintain their edge over the coming days.

In the Men's 470 Paul Snow-Hansen and Daniel Willcox have improved to 4th overall with an 11th and a 2nd in today's two races.

Meanwhile both Andy Maloney and Sara Winther have slipped from 2nd to 5th in their respective Laser and Laser radial fleets, although points are very close.

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).

US Rises in Finn, 49er, Women's 470 at ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami 2015 (from Will Ricketson, US Sailing)

The rainstorms of yesterday vanished on day 2 of ISAF Sailing World Cup Miami, Presented by Sunbrella, but the excellent wind conditions remained in place on Biscayne Bay. A more conventional day of racing saw US Sailing Team Sperry athletes finish the day in the top 10 in 5 Olympic classes and 2 Paralympic classes.

In the Laser Radial, American sailors continue to populate much of the top 10, with Paige Railey (5th overall), Haddon Hughes (7th) and Erika Reineke (10th) showing speed and tactical adaptability in the physically challenging conditions. "I pretty much stayed the same today in terms of position, but I'm happy with how it's going," said Railey. "It was very shifty out there today, and you needed to pay attention to what was happening on the other side of the course to stay out of trouble."

World ranked #2 Finn sailor Caleb Paine (San Diego, Calif.) started off the event with a bit of misfortune, suffering a broken boom on the first day of racing. Paine bounced back on Tuesday with two keeper scores to jump up to 7th overall. "That boom was probably a bit too old, and the breakdown was tough," said Paine. "Today was much better though. I felt good, and got two decent scores. Equipment failures are difficult to anticipate, but starting slow is a pattern I need to work on. It happened at [the 2014 ISAF Sailing World Championships] last Fall, and even though I recovered to 7th at that event I've been working with my coaches [Olympic silver medalist] Brian Ledbetter and [multiple medal-winning coach] Luther Carpenter on how to address it. We will keep grinding."

In the women's 470 fleet, the US Sailing Team Sperry's Annie Haeger and Briana Provancha rose to 8th overall after a consistent day of top-10 finishes. "Miami is delivering great breeze, that's for sure," noted Provancha. "We are sailing the boat quite well but it's not showing as much in the results just yet. We are excited to keep testing our speed against the best in the world this week!"

In the men's 49er class, Brad Funk (Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.) and Trevor Burd (Marblehead, Mass.) went from 19th overall to 10th on day 2, noting that their added emphasis on heavy-air training was paying off. "We definitely identified it as a weakness after the Worlds, so we've been taking advantage of whatever windy days we can get," said Burd. "We've always been confident in our speed in breeze, so we are focusing on being clean with the boat handling to get where we need to be. We were also happy to make it out of [notably stormy] yesterday with no flips and no damage as well."

In the Paralympic Sonar class, the venerable team of disabled world champion Rick Doerr (Clifton, N.J.) and crew Hugh Freund (South Freeport, Maine) and Brad Kendell (Tampa, Fla.) sit in 4th overall after two days of solid finishes. "A few more top three scores tomorrow will hopefully put us in some leader jerseys," said Freund.

Related Articles

Presentation to Torben Grael in Miami
Awarded World Sailing Hall of Fame Trophy Brazil's Torben Grael has been presented with the World Sailing Hall of Fame trophy at Sailing World Cup Miami presented by Sunbrella. Posted on 31 Jan 2016
Sailing World Cup Miami overall
Fully loaded tension, event wraps up The tension on the water at Sailing World Cup Miami presented by Sunbrella was fully loaded as Medal Races across the ten Olympic fleets drew the first big regatta of 2016, the Olympic year, to a close. Posted on 30 Jan 2016
Sailing World Cup Miami day 5
British and Canadian sailors seal Paralympic Medals Great Britain's 2.4mR sailor Helena Lucas and the Canadian Sonar team led by Paul Tingley snapped up gold in their respective fleets as Paralympic racing concluded at Sailing World Cup Miami presented by Sunbrella. Posted on 30 Jan 2016
Sailing World Cup Miami day 4
Olympic Qualification keeps Miami hot Sailing World Cup Miami presented by Sunbrella acts as the Olympic continental qualification regatta for sailors from North and South America. Qualify here, you'll be representing your country on the grandest of stages, miss out, it's the end of the road. Posted on 29 Jan 2016
Sailing World Cup Miami day 3
Miami satisfies burning racing desires Biscayne Bay provided the 711 sailors from 64 nations with a welcome breeze for Wednesday's racing at Sailing World Cup Miami presented by Sunbrella. Posted on 28 Jan 2016
Sailing World Cup Miami day 2
Keep your head on a screw Sailors opening their curtains in Miami this morning would have been welcomed by a pleasant breeze that was enough to put a grin on their faces. Posted on 27 Jan 2016
Sailing World Cup Miami day 1
Sailors tried and tested in light breeze The first big hit out of Olympic and Paralympic sailing in 2016, Sailing World Cup Miami presented by Sunbrella, opened up with the 711 sailors being tried and tested in a light Miami breeze. Posted on 26 Jan 2016
Olympic Dreams on the line
At Sailing World Cup Miami With the calendar switched to an Olympic year, the intensity on the water at the 2016 Sailing World Cup Miami presented by Sunbrella is a match for the famously bright South Florida sun. Posted on 25 Jan 2016
Olympic sailors gearing up
For Live Miami showdown Sailors from 64 nations are gearing up for the first big showdown of Olympic and Paralympic sailing in 2016, Sailing World Cup Miami presented by Sunbrella. Posted on 21 Jan 2016
Registration Opens
For Sailing World Cup Miami 2016 Online entry to Sailing World Cup Miami 2016 Presented by Sunbrella is open. US Sailing's premier event is set to return to Miami, Fla. for top-level Olympic and Paralympic class racing. Posted on 3 Nov 2015