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Rooster 2023 - LEADERBOARD

World Sailing Championships at Aarhus, Denmark - Day 4

by Matthew Pryor 5 Aug 2018 21:12 BST 2-12 August 2018
Zofia Noceti-Klepacka (POL) on day 4 of Hempel Sailing World Championships Aarhus 2018 © Sailing Energy / World Sailing

Zofia Noceti-Klepacka started the day skateboarding with her children and finished it with a masterclass in high-speed windsurfing on Super Sunday at the Hempel Sailing World Championships Aarhus 2018.

In a World Championships full of mothers, the RS:X fleet is particularly blessed and Noceti-Klepacka has been at the vanguard of making less exceptional what was once seen as impossible in more antediluvian times. One day it will be so normal no one will write about it.

At least six of the 64 women windsurfers competing are mothers: Noceti-Klepacka, Blanca Manchon (Spain), Marina Alabau Neira (Spain), Tuuli Petäjä-Sirén (Finland), Charline Picon (France) and Bryony Shaw (Great Britain). Shaw, 35 carried her 14-month old son, Jaddek, in front of her as the flagbearer in the opening ceremony last Thursday. She has cited the way Jessica Ennis-Hill came back from having a child to take silver at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games as her inspiration.

Serena Williams is the latest high-profile sportsmum. But there are great examples are closer to home. Noceti-Klepacka, 32, had her son Mariano, 8, before the London 2012 Olympics and then went on to take the bronze medal. She is in Aarhus with her husband Michael and Mariano and her five-year-old daughter, Maria.

"They are staying here with me because it's summer and they have a break from school," she said. "I'm really happy and more relaxed when family is with me in competition and they support me. They are my fans and they always believe I can be the best.

"It was very hard to come back after my second baby, I needed to work very hard to get my body back and to be fully ready on the water. It took like one year If you want to come back and be a professional athlete my kids are not the problem. They give me motivation and energy. This morning we were watching how the men (windsurfers) sailed and I went skateboarding with them, and my daughter had her roller-skates."

It also means the discussions about gear have broadened for the fleet. "Of course we (the mothers) talk about it," she said. "Tuuli is here breastfeeding her daughter, who is nine weeks old. I spoke with her and told her about a special belt that I used to help carry my daughter and how it helped me a lot."

With the prevailing offshore westerlies continuing to build over 20 knots, gusting 30 on the furthest courses out in the Bay of Aarhus. It was a good day to go flying and the kind of conditions in which Noceti-Klepacka, who trains in similar conditions on the Zegrze Reservoir just north of Warsaw, lights up. After three races today she was third overall.

"There was more wind with every hour," she said. "Today was perfect conditions for the sailors, especially for me, I like planing conditions. In the third race, I had a crash. It wasn't my fault and there's a protest and I hope the jury will give me a redress because my sail went in the water and I lost a lot of time. But I'm happy, I wish it could be like this everyday. It's shifty conditions and I grew up on a lake and I enjoy it."

She would have been even less happy when news came through later that Principal Race Officer had abandoned the second race (because a mark was out of position), where she finished fourth.

Men's RS:X windsurfing

Some of the usual suspects dominated day one of the men's RS:X with France's Louis Giard continuing his dominant 2018 form to top the leaderboard. But two more familiar Flying Dutchmen are breathing down his neck. Kiran Badloe won his last race to take the yellow bib from his friend and the king he would depose – double Olympic champion, Dorian van Rijsselberghe. The surprise was Italy's Daniele Benedetti in second after just two months training following eight months out with a knee injury. And China's class world champion, Bing Ye, was lying 73rd overall after finishing 34th, 34th and 33rd. A Chinese men's team that had been so dominant in Enoshima, Japan was dispersed on the winds.

Men's Kiteboarding

A momentous World Championship debut saw France's Nicolas Parlier underlined exactly why he is the red-hot favourite by winning all six of his races. His compatriot, Theo de Ramecourt was almost as dominant in the second fleet.

Women's Kiteboarding

Likewise, USA's Daniel Moroz showed why she is the red-hot favourite in the women's kite by winning the last two of her three races. She will have been furious to finish second in her first one.

Nacra 17

Italy's Ruggero Tita and Caterina Marianna Banti underlined the pre-boat park consensus that "there are the Italians and everybody else" by winning all three of their races in choppy conditions that were too hot for handle for many in the fleet.

49er

Yesterday, it was one New Zealand crew ahead of two French ones, it is now the reverse. Two third places took France's Lucas Rual and Emile Amorol top of the leaderboard, ahead of the two New Zealand crews in this huge 86-boat class with three fleets. But two powerful crews have moved ominously onto their shoulders, Croatia's Sime Fantela (Rio 2016 Olympic champion in the 470) and his brother, Mihovil Fantela, and Australia's William Phillips and Iain "Goobs" Jensen (Olympic gold medallist in 2012 and silver medallist in 2016 with Nathan Outteridge) who is standing in for Phillips's injured brother Sam.

49er FX

Local favourites Ida Marie Baad Nielsen and Marie Thusgaard Olsen, who have grown up racing in the Bay of Aarhus and cheered the return of the westerlies as other quivered, moved to the top of the leaderboard with a solid third and fourth. Great Britain's Charlotte Dobson and Saskia Tidey had a second place and a win to move into second overall with the Olympic and Volvo legends all hovering on their shoulders.

Laser

Despite a thirteenth and fourth place, New Zealander Sam Meech (bronze in the Rio 2016 medallist), stays top but the field of Olympic and world champions is now bunched much more closely behind him.

Laser Radial

Two second places from Anne-Marie Rindom saw Denmark claim another top spot. The surprise is that Netherland's Olympic champion, Marit Bouwmeester is still back in ninth after a 16th place in her first race of the day.

Finn, Men's 470s, Women's 470 were on a lay-day and will recommence in gold and silver fleets tomorrow.

They said:

Charline Picon (France) – Women's RS:X (Rio 2016 Olympic champion)

"This Olympic cycle is different because I had a baby nine months ago. So this year it will be hard to go for the highest spot in the podium, but I will do everything to train the best I can and show that people can have confidence in me over the next years and Tokyo 2020.

"The comeback is definitely hard after a baby. I really tried to take advantage of the first few months, no exercise. You had to build up muscle again and that was really difficult because it's a lot of work for small gains.

For organisation at the moment, I have to depend a lot on my family. My parents were with me during the World Cup in Hyères to look after the baby, because when you compete or train, it's one, two or three weeks sometimes. For a mum, with her first baby, it's hard to leave them for that long.

So for me to feel good in my life as an athlete, I need to feel good in my life as a mum and for that, it means having my daughter by my side."

Yunxiu Lu – China – Women's RS:X

"It was hard conditions and I just tried to do my best. I hope so (that China can dominate like in last year's class World Championships). The conditions are really unknown to us, we are trying our best and I really hope the Chinese team can have some good results this time.

"We've been here since July 16. (Food has been an issue for the Chinese team) Sometimes we eat Chinese food, sometimes sandwiches. All the high-level sailors we just have not make any stupid mistakes. I hope I can finish in the top three."

Ruggero Ttia – Italy - Nacra

"There is plenty of training behind this and it's also about feeling the boat and the conditions. As our coach says, 'foiling is an art'. Strong winds are what we work well with and today we showed it.

We had an average of 20 knots today with choppy waves and it was really tricky to sail downwind fast, but we managed to do it pretty good.

We don't do anything different form everybody else. It's about the training and having a good communication. The competition here is high and you can feel it in the boat park but it's great that we are getting in the Olympic mode.

Thomas Zajac – Austria - Nacra

"Today was challenging. We had steep waves on our course, but we got a pretty good result. We saw some teams breaking some stuff, so we are actually quite happy that nothing happened to us in these conditions. We had big choppy waves and gusts in the 20s and it was also shifty.

"For us, it was about putting a bit of risk on downwinds, so we will pick up speed by foiling, but you don't want to risk it too much. We found the right balance."

Louis Giard – France – Men's RS:X

"It's a nice start. The wind was shifting a bit and also the pressure from 10-12 knots gusting to 20. For us windsurfers that's a big difference. I managed to make some good choices today. Dorian was really strong. It's the first time I've seen him at this level since the last Olympics."

Full results for each fleet can be found here.

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