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Ovington 2021 - ILCA 2 - LEADERBOARD

Dragon World Championships, Hornbæk, Denmark Overall

by Julian Isherwood 22 Jul 2001 20:12 BST

Malte Phillipp new Dragon World Champion

Germany’s Malte Phillipp sailed home a convincing victory Sunday in the bi-ennial 2001 Dragon World Championships, coming first in today’s race and first overall.

After just over 2 hours of sailing in moderate, 3-5 metres per second southwesterly winds, Phillipp and his crew of Torsten Imbeck and Enver Adakan finished Sunday’s race ahead of Denmark’s Frank Berg in second place and Holland’s Fred Imhoff in third place.

In the overall standings, Phillip came first, and thus wrested the Dragon title from Denmark’s Claus Høj Jensen. Second overall was another German crew skippered by Werner Fritz and third Denmark’s Frank Eriksen.

“Phillipp was a clear winner. He sailed a very good regatta and seemed like a winner from the start “ said Chairman of the Race Committee John Gunn. “It has been an exciting World Championship and, in the main, it seems to have gone extremely well“, he added.

“For the most part it has gone extremely well,” said Chairman of the Jury Lars Grande. “Some of the boats who didn’t do very well didn’t think so – but that may be for other reasons,” he said.

“In general it has been an extremely fair and sportsmanly regatta, with few protests. We are all very happy with the way things have gone,” said Grande.

The regatta was thankfully free of too many protests from participating boats: ”In all we received about 8 protests. They were easy to handle and the number of protests, given that this was a world championship regatta, was quite light,” said Gunn.

Sunday’s race, although relatively academic for Phillipp unless he had been black flagged on the final day, went off without incident.

“There is no doubt, Phillipp is an extremely good sailor,” said Principal Race Officer Christian Lerche. He added that the new World Champion had been consistent in his sailing. “It doesn’t matter what conditions were like out there on the water, he came in among the top group. An impressive performance,” he said.

He said Sunday’s final race of the regatta had been interesting to watch, with changeable southerlies particularly on the final leg changing positions throughout the field. “Malte Phillipp, for example, was able to capitalise on the luck of the wind and his ability to use the final leg to move up from a sixth place in the field to a first place,” Lerche said.

Phillipp received the Royal Hellenic Cup – the Epathion Vassileus - at a prize-giving ceremony in Hornbæk, which has hosted the 2001 Dragon Worlds. He will hold the trophy until the next World Championships, due to take place in Hobart, Tasmania in 2003.

Apart from the cup, Phillipp and his crew, as well as those in second and third places received gold, silver and bronze medals awarded by the International Dragon Association.

“We are extremely happy,” said Phillipp as he came into harbour after a week’s convincing and consistent sailing that gave him the gold medal. The 2001 Dragon Worlds have been dogged by weather problems, with little wind on several occasions, and a lot of current on others, giving highly technical races.

Denmark’s Frank Eriksen, who came in second, said he was happy with his position. “We started without any great hopes, and although we kept along with the Germans all along, we decided to sail our own race – and it seems to have paid off,” said Eriksen, who praised the Principal Race Officer.

“He had a difficult job, and there were several difficult situations, but he managed the race very well,” Eriksen said.

“It’s been a good regatta. The fact that there was too little wind on some occasions – well you know, that’s par for the course. All sailors have to be ready for too little wind as much as too much wind. That’s sailing for you,” said Hong Kong’s Phyllis Chang. Chang was uncertain whether she would be participating in the next Dragon Worlds.

Winds were light for Sunday’s course, like most of the other days of the 2001 Worlds. “We managed to hold seven races out of the seven we had planned, in Denmark, in July – that in itself is something of a feat. Sometimes the wind was on the border of what can be sailed in – but we sailed when we could, and most believe we made the right decisions,” said Lerche.

“It was a good race, but we went up the wrong side and lost what wind there was,” said one Australian crew. “But we’ve had a good regatta and ended up quite happy with our position,” he said.

Ireland’s Peter Bowering said there had been little doubt even from the first day, that Phillipp looked a champion. “He was up there from the start. The Germans split the field. It was a tough race, with a lot of flukey winds and a very high standard of sailing,” said Bowering, whose boat – skippered by John Lavery – came in an overall 12th position – one of only three boats in the top 15 that was not either German or Danish. Dutch Fred Imhoff came in overall fourth and British Martin Payne overall 11th.

Bowering said there had been some discussion among foreign sailors as to whether currents had been tidal or otherwise. “We now know that the currents were a question of water being sucked in and out of the Baltic Sea. That threw us a bit,” he said.

Denmark’s Crown Prince Frederik, whose boat Nanoq was christened a week ago at the start of the regatta came in an overall 24th, while his father Prince Henrik, who was Protector of the 2001 Worlds, came in 74th overall. “I was satisfied with the race– and happy with my new boat,” said Crown Prince Frederik as Nanoq was being hoisted from the water.

Overall Results: (Olympic scoring)

PosSail NoHelmR1R2R3R4R5R6R7Pts
1GER956Malte Phillipp123BFD38128.4
2GER947Werner Fritz31826254763.7
3DEN317Frank Eriksen361323116569.7
4NED247Fred Imhoff2310154427387.7
5DEN66Frank Berg83741BFD5292.7
6DEN298Lars Jensen16811038161595
7GER933Thomas Müller152051471314103
8GER842Ortwin Semmerow122616624159117.7
9GER892Achim Kadelbach521348251111119
10GER950Harm Müller-Spreer10994BFD1055131
11GBR656Martin Payne24BFD107321812139
12IRL157John Lavery13191120152734141
13DEN324Jesper Bendix552925212527142
14DEN334Claus Høj Jensen727522817328142.7
15GER928Erich Hirt9142830331DNF144
16CAN140Hans Fogh41412DNF26238148
17GER905Michael Erhard19231919144219149
18GER628Michael Schattan4233133184322163.7
19GER852Udo Pflüger1164565231431165.7
20GER795Holger Tollmien264767236286171.4
21GER915Marcus Brenneche17543731161920176
22AUS167Ian MacDiarmid5159813103626180
23SWE320Leif Carlsson29325516341229188
24DEN336HKH Kronprins Frederik14DNF668203217192.7
25SWE194Johan Palmquist38243234194013196
26DEN318Peter Holm2BFD3126BFD237202
27DEN333Claus Olsen34176029402923208
28DEN257Mogens Nielsen2039247443150214
29USA311Jan Soderberg50302152571710216
30FIN48Erkki Koponen44222093057BFD218
31HKG40Karl J. Grebstad655163219374219
32GBR662Rory Bowman21BFD7218132636222
33SWE311Thomas Olrog18356440223544230
34FIN50Henrik Dahlman6BFD422BFD9DNF230.7
35AUS134Carl Ryves25216627632141234
36IRL167Robin Hennessy481639482820DNC235
37FRA300Louis Urvois27342555BFD3924240
38DEN266Ebbe Elmer2250487184040244
39GER833Dirk Schröder491222366133DNF249
40GBR623Patrick Gifford451162424DNF51249
41GER909Jens Helms57312737365032249
42HKG38Phyllis Chang60285866114516254
43AUS179Matthew Whitnall46383662353035256
44DEN330Peter WarrerDSQ251472454439275
45FIN69Timo Lampén56524943412238281
46GER939Walter Berhens43373533495357286
47DEN3Kim Christensen715683555DNFDNC294
48DEN319Henrik Jansen4BFD65DNF1224DNC295
49NOR270Terje OlssonDNSDNS3338474918299
50GER929Wolfgang Rappel30BFD5356463842301
51DEN321Peter JohansenDNS3642115152DNF306
52DEN233Lars Broen58435712BFD5647309
53FIN53Erkki Hintsanen7057595606033309
54FIN74Mikko Saarela35484149546153316
55EST1Jengeni Kazakov53DNEDNF59294125321
56NED278Wilco Veerman39463015BFDDNCDNC322
57GER914Peter Koch40446146BFD4649322
58SWE308Thomas Rosén55BFD171743DNFDNC324
59AUS156Trish FordDNS427432375754332
60SWE301Björn Unger54415664394859333
61DEN297Jens Løppenthin68607524565140335
62NOR267Poul Mortensen374954455066DNF337
63DEN305Lars Pedersen62624670276343339
64SWE306Peter Hjörne4729246958DNFDNC341
65DEN248Bernd GrieseDNF637153423446345
66SWE303Hans-Åke Book32738BFDDNFDNCDNC347
67EST3Rein Raud63534361594748347
68NED316Pieter Heerema31404450DNCDNCDNC357
69FIN71Tuomas Rytikangas61564754526558364
70FIN70Timo Pajunen595550BFDBFD6721366
71DEN332David Holm28BFD1851BFDDNFDNC367
72EST2Alexander KarboinovDNS586957485456378
73SWE281Per Skoglund67DNE51395362DNC386
74DEN313HKH Prins Henrik64457063DNF6445387
75JPN46Bocci A. Aoyama6661DNF60645552394
76SWE273Esbjörn Bruske69BFD7367625730394
77NOR272Henning BullDNFDNS405831DNFDNC399

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