Please select your home edition
Edition
Henri-Lloyd - For the Obsessed

Sailing at Rio 2016 Day 7: RS:X Medal Races and Gold for Giles Scott

by Mark Jardine 14 Aug 2016 21:51 BST 8-18 August 2016

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.

Men's RS:X Medal Race

The RS:X Men's Medal Race started at 14:35 on the Pão de Açúcar in a 9 knot southerly breeze. While the gold and silver medals had already been decided, the bronze could be won by any of 3 sailors, Poland's Piotr Myszka on 86 points, France's Pierre Le Coq on 89 points and Greece's Byron Kokkalanis on 91 points.

Dorian Van Rysselberghe and Nick Dempsey weren't taking things easy even though their medals were wrapped up, and they both flew out of the starting blocks - Dempsey getting the better start, but Van Rysselberghe going straight into a low mode and blasting away from the fleet at pace. As it was, Spain's Ivan Pastor Lafuente rounded the top mark first with Van Rysselberghe 2nd and Hong Kong's Cheng Chun Leung rounding at the same time as Dempsey.

Van Rysselberghe proved to be in a class of his own as he charged downwind to take the lead from Spain's Ivan Pastor and he charged on to take the medal race win from Pastor with Hong Kong's Cheng Chun Leung third. Nick Dempsey finished the race 4th to finish his 20 years of Olympic sailing and a silver medal to add to his bronze from Athens in 2004 and his silver at London 2012.

In the battle for bronze France's Pierre Le Coq finished just ahead of Greece's Byron Kokkalanis and Poland's Piotr Myszka, handing the medal to the Frenchman.

Women's RS:X Medal Race

Points were super-tight in the Women's RS:X class, with just 6 points separating the top six sailors. With double points and the Pão de Açúcar being so close to the shore, anything could happen.

France's Charline Picon and China's Peina Chen battled it out at the front of the fleet in the patchy conditions. At times the planing at 15 knots only to fall into windless patches and dropping to under 2 knots.

The pair went toe-to-toe all the way round the course in an exhausting battle of pumping. While the Netherlands' Lilian De Geus went on to win the race, Picon held off Chen on the line to take the gold medal with silver going to the Chinese sailor. Behind them it was crucial where Russia's Lilian De Geus finished, as she could still take gold, but she couldn't make her way through the fleet and had to settle for bronze.

It was heartbreak for Italy's Flavia Tartaglini who had been leading the Women's RS:X fleet for 6 races. An 8th in the medal race dropped her to 6th overall.

Finn

Out on the Finn course, Facundo Olezza from Argentina won race 9 from Croatia's Ivan Kljakovic Gaspic, but crucially event leader Great Britain's Giles Scott finished 8th, just ahead of Slovenia's Vasilij Zbogar, to extend his overall lead to 18 points.

In the final race of the main series, ahead of the Finn medal race, Giles Scott showed his class to round the windward mark 4th, the leeward mark 2nd and then take the lead on the final windward mark. While Scott dropped back to 2nd on the final run, Vasilij Zbogar finished 8th, so Giles Scott confirmed his gold medal early by taking a 24 point lead into the medal race, and keep up the amazing Olympic streak that Great Britain has had in the Finn class, stretching back to Iain Percy's win at Sydney in 2000 and of course Sir Ben Ainslie's gold medals at Athens 2004, Beijing 2008 and London 2012.

Women's 470

After a 50 minute delay out on the Copacabana course, the 470 Women started proceedings. The big news at the start of race 6 was the Brazilian, New Zealand and Singapore teams being called over the line early and hence being disqualified from the race. This is a massive blow to the London 2012 Gold Medallists Jo Aleh & Polly Powrie from New Zealand as they already had a disqualification in race 1 on their score sheet. To add insult to injury, they went on to cross the finish line first in the race.

The big gainers could have been overall leaders Great Britain's Hannah Mills & Saskia Clark who held 2nd position for the first 1.5 laps, but then dropped down the fleet to finish 8th, but keeping their lead overall. The USA's Anne Haeger & Briana Provancha capitalised by finishing 4th, moving up to 2nd overall.

Race 7 saw victory for Great Britain's Mills & Clark followed by the USA's Haeger & Provancha, consolidating the two teams positions at the top of the leaderboad. New Zealand's Jo Aleh & Polly Powrie finished 3rd, leaving them in 7th position overall, and Australia's Carrie Smith & Jaime Ryan are in 11th.

Men's 470

A big blow to Luke Patience & Chris Grube's medal charge as they were called over the start line in 470 Men's race 6. The super-consistent Croatian pair of Sime Fantela & Igor Marenic finished 3rd in the race to extend their lead over the Australian team of Mathew Belcher & William Ryan to 17 points.

The Croatian team then finished 4th in race 7 to push their advantage over the Australians to 11 points. The USA's Stuart Mcnay & David Hughes are in 6th with New Zealand's Paul Snow-Hansen & Daniel Willcox ninth. Patience & Grube's day didn't finish well with a 20th dropping them to 10th overall.

Nacra 17

Argentina's Santiago Lange & Cecilia Carranza Saroli lead into the Nacra 17 Medal Race after a stunning final two races in the main series, posting 2,1 results. Five points behind are Italy's Vittorio Bissaro & Silvia Sicouri with Austria's Thomas Zajac & Tanja Frank a further 2 points back.

Long-time class leaders, the Australian pair of Jason Waterhouse & Lisa Darmanin, dropped to 4th after a 12th & 17th in the final two main series races and New Zealand's Gemma Jones & Jason Saunders are in 5th.

It has been a regatta of two halves for Great Britain's Ben Saxton & Nicola Groves. A stunning first 6 races saw them tied at the top of the leaderboard, but all their results then on were between 12th & 16th, dropping them to 8th and sadly this popular team is out of medal contention in Tuesday's medal race.

Read all the Rio 2016 news, see the schedule and find useful links at www.yachtsandyachting.com/rio2016

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 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
The storm before the storm
Be prepared for anything in Rio 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. 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