Finn Class at the Olympic Games - Preview
by Robert Deaves 24 Jul 2008 10:40 BST
24 July 2008
Have a look at the full list of Olympic Finn sailors (as seen to the right) and see how see who might be going for gold in China.
If all goes according to plan, on August 16 the 15th set of Olympic
Finn
medals since 1952 will be decided on the waters off Qingdao, China. The
Finn
class has the distinction of being chosen for the Olympic regatta more
times
consecutively than any other class. First sailed in 1952 in Helsinki
when
Paul Elvström won the second of his four gold medals, 2008 marks the
class's
15th appearance on the Olympic stage.
Qualification
For most Finn sailors competing in China, the campaign trail started at
the
ISAF Sailing World Championships in Cascais, Portugal in July last
year. In
Cascais the first 19 countries qualified for a place in Qingdao. Many
of
those assembled in Cascais had recently finished sailing in the 32nd
America's
Cup, just across the border in Valencia and had been training hard on
their
days off to prepare for what turned into a challenging week of racing.
Rafael Trujillo (ESP), silver medalist in 2004 in Athens went on to win
his
first major championship, after a thrilling medal race. The depth of
the
fleet was underlined by the fact that the other 18 places for China all
came
from with the top 26 overall, making it very difficult to qualify at
the
first try.
One man who was absent from Cascais was the 2004 Olympic champion Ben
Ainslie. Ainslie didn't reappear on the Finn scene until the Olympic
Test
Event in Qingdao a few months later after he was able to put in enough
training to be confident with his performance. He needn't have worried
as he
won the event, although perhaps not as decisively as he had the year
before,
when he won with an almost unbroken string of first places. But Ainslie
was
back and the other sailors were set the challenge of raising their game
if
they were to stand half a chance.
Six months after Cascais, on the other side of the world at Black Rock
YC on
Port Phillip Bay in Melbourne, Australia, the final six places were
decided,
while China, as host got a guaranteed place to make up the 26 starters.
In
the run up to the 2008 Finn Gold Cup, Ainslie took the Sydney
International
Regatta, the Australian Nationals and Sail Melbourne before going on to
win
an unprecedented fifth Finn Gold Cup as well as his berth for China.
Following Melbourne, two countries whose sailors had technically
qualified
for a place failed to confirm their participation in China. First
Germany
turned down their place and this was offered to India. In the past two
year,
this fledging Finn nation has produced two Finn sailors, both
challenging
for an Olympic berth. Trials were organised in India with a two boat
race
off between Nachhatar Johal and Nitin Mongia. Each day they won one
race
apiece. On the final day, Johal took the race win and with it the
ticket to
Qingdao. Johal was the first of two sailors who received assistance
from the
IFA's FIDeS development programme as part of his campaign for China.
The other sailor in Qingdao whose place wasn't confirmed was Florian
Raudaschl (AUT). He had to wait until his 9th place at the Delta-Lloyd
Regatta in Medemblik to assure himself a place. However after finishing
18th
in Kiel, his national Olympic Committee reversed the decision. Only as
late
as 23 July did the final place out of the 26 get allocated. It finally
went
to Johnny Bilbao (VEN) on the basis of his performance at the Finn Gold
Cup
in Melbourne. Bilbao also received help from FIDeS in attending the
Olympic
qualifier in Melbourne.
Back in Europe, Ainslie took Palma, Jonas Høgh-Christensen (DEN) took
Hyeres, Trujillo took the Delta Lloyd Regatta while Ed Wright (GBR)
took
Kiel Week. Ainslie returned for the European Championship, which he won
after a thrilling medal race to reverse an eight point gap between
himself
and Guillaume Florent (FRA). If ever there was an indication of
Ainslie's
complete competence in the Finn, this was it, overcoming what seemed
like an
impossible task.
About the Finn
The Finn came into being as the result of a 1949 design competition to
produce a singlehanded dinghy for Scandinavian and Olympic competition.
It
was then first used at the Olympic Games in Helsinki in 1952. The Finn
used
to be one of the few classes that had supplied gear at the Olympics. Up
until 1976 the Olympic organisers supplied all the gear, but from 1972
onwards sailors were allowed to bring their own rigs, and since 2000
their
own hulls as well. While hulls are largely standard production models
these
days, the key to developing speed in the Finn has always been for
careful
selection of masts and sails as sailors tailor their rigs to their own
weight and individual sailing styles.
Rumours coming out of Qingdao so far indicate that a few sailors are
testing
new gear for the Olympic competition, though whether any of it will
actually
be used in anger remains to be seen. Also with many sailors having
reduced
weight for Qingdao, they have also had to modify the response of their
rigs
to match - and this is much harder to do in practise than in theory.
However
the weight loss is more often an attempt to be more physical around the
boat
than for any advantage by being lighter in the boat.
Conditions
While many pundits are predicting light, shifty and current focussed
racing
in Qingdao, the sailors know anything can happen and most are prepared
for
whatever the conditions happen to be and expect at least one or more
days of
significant breeze. The wind has been over 20 knots on more than one
occasion in the past month, so the sailors should get a good mix of
conditions.
The Sailors
Of all the 26 sailors heading for Qingdao, only 12 have already tasted
the
Olympic arena, while 16 have won races at major championships, 18 have
placed top ten in major regattas, and 11 have picked up a medal in the
past
four years either at the Finn Gold Cup, European Championship or
Qingdao
regattas. In addition, all except three of the top 20 in the world
rankings
will be in Qingdao. It could well prove to be one of the toughest
Olympic
Finn competitions of all time.
While the clear, clear favourite is the five times and current World
Champion, four times and current European Champion, three times Olympic
medalist and current Olympic gold medalist Ben Ainslie, the rest of the
fleet is sure to have something to say on the matter. And while the
conditions in Qingdao could best be described as tricky, a fourth medal
for
Ainslie is by no means a foregone conclusion, but perhaps it could be
argued
that he has the best chance of medaling than any other sailor across
all of
the other classes heading for China.
Have a look at the full list of Olympic Finn sailors (as seen in the image above right) and see how see who might be going for gold in China.