Please select your home edition
Edition
Selden 2020 - LEADERBOARD

2021 Finn Gold Cup Day 2: Nature wins the day, World's best young sailors speak out

by Robert Deaves 9 May 2021 19:55 BST 8-12 May 2021

Racing was cancelled on the second day of the 2021 Finn Gold Cup in Porto, Portugal, with huge waves battering the harbour entrance in the afternoon and a complete lack of wind in the morning, following overnight storms.

While the start time had been brought forward, at 10.30 the huge ocean swell was breaking over the top of the breakwater and it was still raining hard with no wind on the course area. Local authorities had imposed a 14.00 deadline to be back ashore because of concern the strong ebb tide would cause conditions at the entrance to deteriorate further, so at 11.30, with still no wind at sea the decision was taken to abandon for the day.

On shore, the discussion continued over the future of the Finn.

Here are three more different and personal perspectives on the current challenges facing the class, the sailors and World Sailing, as the Finn argues its case again for its continuance at the Olympic Games as the only option for male sailors over 85 kg.

It is worth reading these individual stories to get the perspective from their side, all potentially facing the end of their Olympic careers.

Facundo Olezza, from Argentina, is 12th overall after three races. He won two races at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games and is one of the most exciting talents that has come out of the Finn class in recent years. However he feels completely let down and ignored.

"To be brutally honest, the last couple of years have been really tough for me psychologically. It's an everyday struggle because I don't like the way we are being treated as human beings. I don't feel that World Sailing care for us. There was not even one single statement for the Finn sailors, from its president or from the Athletes Commission. No one cared to give us the opportunity to keep doing the sport we love.

"When I was a kid growing up in Argentina, I never thought about becoming someone that people look up to and now I see that I inspire a lot of the young generation in Argentina because they follow me on my social media. So I have a responsibility to encourage them the values of the Olympics, to encourage them to excellence and I do I this through the opportunity that my sport gave me; that the Finn gave me. As I have this responsibility to the younger generations, I also feel that World Sailing has a responsibility of giving us the opportunity to compete and to race in a clear, and peaceful environment.

"Instead, I felt in the last couple of years that I was left aside by World Sailing. I felt like they didn't care, like I didn't matter to them. I felt like my all my effort and all my rights were taken from me and that's the thing that makes me most sad about the situation we are going through."

Olezza is well aware that the current process to select events for Paris 2024 could exclude all 85+ kg male sailors from Olympic level sailing. He and many others will have no other class to sail, even though Olympic sailing has 10 events from the IOC to resolve this.

"This Olympics should be a celebration of the fight we are putting against COVID and it certainly is, but in other ways I look at it with sadness as I know that after the Olympics, if the Finn is out, it will be extremely hard for me to compete in another class, and for me to lose 15-18 kg to be competitive for a Laser campaign will not only be challenging psychologically, but it will also not be healthy for me so I am honestly a little bit lost and this Olympics is certainly feeling a little bit bitter, besides the passion I feel for going there. For me, the message that World Sailing is sending is that 'there is not room for you in this sport' and like Bruno de Wannamaker once told me at the World Sailing Conference that I attended in 2018, I should go play basketball. This is the message I am getting.

"Personally it is not only the sport I love, it is also the opportunity that the Finn has given me in life. I come from an honest, working family background in Argentina. We were never very rich, always struggling, and when I arrived in Valencia in the Finn at the Dinghy Academy, the only training facility recognised by World Sailing, it gave me hope, it gave me a perspective of life, an opportunity to give meaning to my life, something important for myself. And that was the Olympics."

Anders Pedersen has been in the class for nearly 10 years. U23 World Champion in 2014, he later qualified for the Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.

With no boat for heavy men at the Olympics, "It means that I have no Olympic class to go to when I am supposed to be at the prime of my career going into my 30s. I am hopefully ready to pick up some medals, but I may have no Olympic class to turn to. The chance of me dropping down to 80 kg is very small.

"Right now I think they are kicking out the most beautiful racing boat we have in the Olympics. It is really hard competition, and the level has never been higher with so much talent at the moment. We lost many of them when they kicked us out the first time and I think we can keep a lot of potential names in sailing by maintaining the Finn as an Olympic class. In my opinion it is the class with the highest level at the Games.

"Finn sailing covers pretty much every aspect of our sport. You get the gear development, physiques, and the Olympic criteria of higher, faster, stronger are all in there and right now I think the level of the competition is so high that to kick this boat out is sad and leave the guys who are too big for the Laser with no options.

"Of course it's a beautiful and amazing boat to sail, and to race in the fleet we have now is the best thing you can do."

Jake Lilley, from Australia is in a similar situation. Aged 27 and standing over 2 metres tall, his Olympic career may be over.

"I am really disappointed and sad for the sport in the direction it is heading. This class obviously has created all these legends over many decades. That is all lost. For me on a personal level my Olympic sailing career is done at 27. Like what can you do? There is nothing else for us to sail. So that's it. And that's bitterly disappointing."

Lying in tenth overall, he has made huge gains in performance since Rio 2016 but knows that Tokyo 2020 will be his last if all options for male sailors over 85 kg are excluded. What would he say to those who have to take some big decisions next week?

"I'd ask them to think bigger and think about the sport in general and catering for everyone. As soon as you start being selective and discriminating against people I think the sport is at a loss and heading in the wrong direction.

"In terms of the impact of all this in Australia, we had five really talented young sailors just disappear and that's only what we see at the top level. There are many people dropping out, as they have nothing to aspire to. They are too big for anything else, so we have this aging population in the sport, and considering the size of the general populous and the way things are going it's just pretty empty.

"I think in Australia it's a no brainer to support the Finn. The Finn fleet is bigger than any other single class and yet we seem to be against it and looking to push other avenues. I think there's just got to be more big picture focus on what's good for the sport and what's good for our youth. The direction the sport is going with foiling is great, but you just can't ignore the heart of the sport."

Racing at the Finn Gold Cup in Porto is expected to continue Monday, assuming conditions outside the harbour have moderated. Results and Online Notice Board at 2021.finngoldcup.org

A full gallery from Saturday's racing can be found at www.flickr.com/photos/finnclassphotos/albums/72157719180042505

Related Articles

Emsworth Slipper Finn Open
Racing with the D-Zeros at the top of Chichester Harbour Emsworth Slipper Sailing Club at the top of Chichester Harbour hosted their first Finn Open on 24th March, as the second event of the British Finn Spring Series, in conjunction with a healthy fleet of D Zeros. Posted on 27 Mar
First Finn World Ranking of 2024
Little change at top as Laurent Hay increases his lead France's Laurent Hay has increased his lead at the top of the latest release of the Finn World Ranking to 200 points following the first regattas in 2024. Posted on 7 Mar
Laurent Haÿ wins International Finn Week
Winning in Cannes for the third consecutive year From 13 to 16 February, the Cannes Yacht Club organised the famous International Finn Week. More than 70 competitors, the majority of whom were foreigners, raced in the harbour of Cannes. Posted on 17 Feb
International Finn Week in Cannes preview
70 competitors from 10 nations expected From 13 to 16 February, the Cannes Yacht Club is organising the famous International Finn Week. More than 70 competitors will race in the harbour of Cannes, with an exceptional line-up. Posted on 10 Feb
29er Euro Cup at Valencia Day 3
Sara and Isa Momplet continue to lead in 29er Sara and Isa Momplet continue to lead in 29er, after the third day for the class, while Terol leads in the Finn, Bermúdez de la Puente and Pumariega in the Snipe and the tandem Fracés-Gil in Vaurien, with three and two races completed in these classes. Posted on 4 Feb
Entry open for 2024 Finn Open Europeans in Cannes
Late season racing in one of the most attractive Mediterranean destinations The 2024 Finn Open Europeans (incorporating the U23 and Masters Europeans) will return to the Yacht Club de Cannes in October. Entry is now open and the Notice of Race is published on the event website. Posted on 16 Jan
The Wise Man of the Solent
Osprey and Moth champion Tony Blachford passed away in December Although nominally a single-hander, Tony Blachford was also known for going afloat with the family dog as crew, which must have been interesting in the cramped cockpit of a Moth. Posted on 12 Jan
2024 Finn Gold Cup returns to Aarhus
The class was last in Aarhus for the 2018 World Sailing Championships The 2024 Finn Gold Cup will be held in Aarhus, Denmark. Hosted by Sailing Aarhus it will be sailed out of the Aarhus International Sailing Centre. Entry opened on Jan 1 and entries are already coming in fast. Posted on 4 Jan
Happy New Year from the Finn Class
75th Anniversary for the class with the Gold Cup set for Aarhus Happy New Year from the Finn Class. 2024 is going to be rather special for many reasons, but chiefly because it is the classes 75th anniversary. The Finn class is buzzing right now and it's an exciting time to be involved. Posted on 1 Jan
Finns flying at HISC
Celebrating a major milestone for one sailor and looking ahead to an exciting 2024 The Finn fleet met at HISC on the 10th December to recognise the top three sailors for the season in club racing, celebrate a major milestone for one sailor and look ahead to an exciting 2024 season at the club. Posted on 24 Dec 2023