Please select your home edition
Edition
Craftinsure 2023 LEADERBOARD

The storm before the storm

by Andy Rice, World Sailing 8 Aug 2016 07:48 BST 8 August 2016
Finn sailors enjoy the big breeze © Sailing Energy / World Sailing

Sunday saw 40 knots of wind blast out of nowhere and hit the Olympic sailing venue from the south-west. With sand whipping across Flamengo Beach, it was an eye-watering reminder that in Rio, you really do have to be prepared for anything.

An Angolan 470 ventured out for some high-wind practice, but no one else was showing much interest. With less than 24 hours before the RS:X Men and Women kick off the Olympic Sailing Competition, along with the Laser and Laser Radial, this was not the right time in the four-year cycle for putting bodies and equipment in jeopardy.

Chang Hao is representing Chinese Taipei in the RS:X Men. "My plan was to go sailing today but the wind was too strong so I am just relaxing. I'll set up my equipment and go back to the apartment and take some rest. My first Olympics was 2008, when I was 17. This is my third Olympics, so I'm getting old. But I hope I can go to five Olympics, that's my dream. This time the sailing is close to the city, which is great. I hope i can go and watch other sports, the rugby, the cycling maybe."

Later on in the afternoon the breeze dropped away to almost nothing. The calm after the storm. The forecast for Monday and the first day of competition looks favourable, with moderate winds and sunny skies on the cards. It could be a perfect way to get things started and calm the nerves after all the tension, the hype and the build-up to this hotly anticipated contest. For local fans in Rio, they will be watching Robert Scheidt open his campaign in the Laser. Can the poster boy (aged 43) of Brazilian sailing write a new chapter in Olympic history and win a record sixth medal?

Meanwhile, there are those looking to make their first mark on the Olympics, such as Alisa Kiriliuk, helming Russia's entry in the women's 470. "This is my first time at the Games but I am not too nervous. My father, Andrei, went to three Olympic Games in the Laser, Soling and Tornado. He is helping me very much. His message to me is: Don't be afraid, just smile, relax, have fun and do what you normally do."

Arantza and Begoña Gumucio have been sailing together for most of their lives and now the sisters are sailing for Chile in the 49erFX. "It's incredible to be at our first Olympics, and we are loving every moment," said Arantza. Begoña chimes in, "We're staying in the Olympic Village, sharing a room and soaking up the atmosphere. And when we're out on the water, the local fisherman shout out 'Chile, Chile!' This feels like a home Games for us, we have the South American connection with our friends in Brazil, so we are going to enjoy this a lot."

For most teams, the first race can't come soon enough. The Nacra 17 fleet, however, is one of the last to start. One team that might be happy about that is the Greek duo of Sofia Bekatorou and Michalis Pateniotis. "We have been sailing together as a team for just four months, so we are still in our honeymoon period," said Bekatorou of her young partnership with Michalis Pateniotis. Every moment on the water counts for the Greek duo who are being coached by Anton Paz, winner of a gold medal in the Tornado catamaran for Spain, at the 2008 Games. Bekatorou won gold in the 470 at Athens 2004 and bronze in the Yngling at Beijing 2008. Pateniotis has yet to win an Olympic medal. "Working with Sofia it is easy to see how she has achieved so much in her career," says Pateniotis. "When she sets a goal, she goes all out to get it. We would have liked more time to get ready but we have worked hard for the short time we have been sailing together. We are as ready as we are going to be now."

Giles Scott was good enough to win a medal four years ago at London 2012. But the Briton had to bide his time as Ben Ainslie was selected for his fifth Olympic Games. Great Britain has won the gold medal in the Finn going back to Iain Percy's victory in Sydney 2000, so there is a sense of expectation around Scott, the four-time World Champion. "For me this moment has been a long time coming, a long old road. In a way it's odd to be so close to it. We've done a lot of hard work to get to this point, and now I just want it to get started. I've done as much research as I can into what to expect, talking to people who have been to the Games before. As of now, it's been how I expected, with more media interest, the measurement and so on, but it feels quite comfortable. Today we have seen a lot of wind. It's a reminder that you could easily have two weeks of no wind and you could easily have two weeks of 20 knots, so you really do have to be ready for everything."

No matter how much people tell you to try and treat the Olympics is 'just another regatta', Annette Viborg of Denmark believes it's just not possible. Sailing with Allan Norregaard in the Nacra 17 Mixed Multihull, Viborg commented, "The Olympics is even more crazy and mad than I expected. The regulations say that you can only go training at certain times. Everything is very tensed up before the Games. But we know that it's time to bring it on. Game time."

Take a look at our new Rio 2016 section with all the latest news, useful links, the full sailing schedule and more!

Related Articles

Rio 2016 Olympic Sailing Competition day 11
Updates from the final four medal races After the excitement of Super Tuesday, then the disappointment of no-wind Wednesday, it was great to have the breeze back, and then some, for the finale of sailing at Rio 2016 and the last four medal races. Posted on 18 Aug 2016
Sailing at Rio 2016 Day 9
Medals, medals and more medals! It's tricky to know where to begin on a day where so much happened! Four medal races and two other fleets where the gold medallists have won with a day to spare. Posted on 16 Aug 2016
Sailing at Rio 2016 Day 8
From 0 to 30+ knots in 10 minutes Rio's weather is difficult to read... unless your name is Ian Walker. The Medal Race course had no wind whatsoever for most of the afternoon, but the double Olympic silver medallist and Volvo Ocean Race winner had it spot on. Posted on 15 Aug 2016
Sailing at Rio 2016 Day 7
RS:X Medal Races and Gold for Giles Scott Excitement is mounting on day 7 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Sailing Competition as the events work towards their conclusion. The first of the Medal Races, in the Men's and Women's RS:X classes were scheduled. Posted on 14 Aug 2016
Sailing at Rio 2016 Day 6
The battle for Laser & Radial medal race slots To say the Laser sailing at Rio 2016 is tight is an huge understatement. Anyone who watched the live coverage today and saw the windward mark rounding on the Niterói course will have seen just how intense the racing is. Posted on 13 Aug 2016
Sailing at Rio 2016 Day 5
49erFX Olympic debut, Silver for Dempsey The day's racing didn't get off to the best of starts with all the Guanabara Bay courses postponed due to lack of wind and the first ocean races started, but then abandoned due to massive windshifts and holes in the breeze. Posted on 12 Aug 2016
Sailing at Rio 2016 Day 4
Full schedule for Finns, Nacra 17s, 470s and RS:Xs Day four of the Rio 2016 Olympic Sailing Competition with the RS:X Men and Women, the Finns, the 470 Men & Women and the Nacra 17 Mixed Multihulls all in action. Posted on 11 Aug 2016
Sailing at Rio 2016 Day 2
Time to throw the form book into Guanabara Bay? The course area may have changed, and the wind was from the opposite direction, but the performance early on stayed the same for Nick Dempsey. Posted on 9 Aug 2016
Sailing at Rio 2016 Day 1
Windsurfers and Lasers get racing underway The Olympic Sailing Competition started on Monday with racing in the Men's and Women's RS:X classes, the Laser and the Laser Radial classes. Posted on 8 Aug 2016
More flag bearers for sailing at Rio 2016
Than Beijing and London combined Sailing will have more flag bearers than Beijing 2008 and London 2012 combined at the Opening Ceremony of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games in the Maracana Stadium. Posted on 5 Aug 2016