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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Barby MacGowan, +30 6936693595 (on-site),
barby.macgowan@mediapronewport.com
Olympic Regatta: Mistrals Conclude,
Stars and Tornados Remain Solidly Positioned
ATHENS, GREECE
(August 25, 2004) - Just yesterday it seemed there were plenty of races
left at the Olympic Regatta for Star and Tornado sailors to easily make
up for lost points. But now with two more races from today behind them
and only three left to go in their 11-race series, the tension is
building.
USA's Star team of Paul Cayard (Kentfield, Calif.) and Phil Trinter
(Lorain, Ohio/Port Washington, N.Y.) still sit in bronze-medal position
after today, having made yet another amazing comeback in today's first
race. The duo went from 14th to first on the next-to-last leg of the
course, then turned in a disappointing 15th in the second race, when
their best mark rounding had been a sixth.
"We sailed poorly in a race and finished first, then sailed a good race
and finished badly," said Trinter. "That's just the way it is out there.
It's witchcraft."
Trinter thought going left when the right paid would be their downfall
in the first race. " We treaded water until the second leeward mark.
There was a huge shift and we were sailing straight to the mark. I just
didn't want to jinx it. We could see what was happening." Trinter added
that Brazil was right behind them. "Paul did a great job of fending them
off."
"In the second race," Trinter said, "there were islands of breeze, and
we missed them all." Studying the scores, Trinter conceded that there is
still a lot of work to do to catch Canada, which sits in second, never
mind Brazil who leads. "We're in great position. There are a lot of
others here that have done more training and spent more money on their
campaigns than Paul and me, and they don't even have that chance."
For Tornado sailors John Lovell (New Orleans, La.) and Charlie Ogletree
(Houston, Texas/Columbia, N.C.), today's races-in which they finished
sixth and seventh--were good only for knocking them down one spot on the
scoreboard. Fortunately, that spot is second overall. "We were up in the
front pack for both races and seemed to have a bad last lap each time,"
said Lovell. "That was the story of the day."
Like the Star sailors, Lovell and Ogletree feel they are somewhat
dependent on luck to navigate the "random" shifts and pressure zones
that come with the seabreeze. "Today we didn't have any luck, but a
couple of teams were buried and came out of the corners on a few shifts,
including Australia, which moved up to third overall." Lovell said he
plans to "just sail two really good races" tomorrow. "The way these
conditions are, you can't cover another team," he surmised, thinking
about the mere seven points that separate him from the Austrians in
first place. "If you do, you could miss some critical shifts. We trained
here for over a month and never saw this kind of breeze."
Concluding their series today were the Mistral sailors. With Israel's
Gal Fridman taking the gold in the men's division, the Agios Kosmas
Sailing Center was swarmed with journalists, reporting on that country's
first-ever gold medal at any Olympic Games.
For the USA's Peter Wells (Newport Beach/La Canada, Calif.), today's
final race, in which he finished 31st, left him in 28th overall and
disappointed. "I wasn't considered a medal contender, so top-10 was my
big goal," said Wells. "I had my moments a couple of times but never was
able to put a race together. My boat speed wasn't great upwind. The
first half of the regatta, I wasn't finishing well but I was sticking to
my game plan. Past the mid-point, I started banging the corners and that
cost me. I lost discipline tactically, which didn't bode well in the
last few races.
Asked how the Olympics differ from regular regattas, Wells explained,
"In the end, once the gun goes off, it's just sailing. The biggest
difference is length, but our Trials were long, too. The experience was
wonderful, though. I was floating every day. There were great things to
do and see, and all the pomp and circumstance was great, but it didn't
affect me."
For Lanee Butler Beashel (Aliso Viejo, Calif.), now a four-time
Olympian, today's final race was her swan song and she was happy to
finish fifth. It was her best score in an 11-race series that left her
in 16th overall.
"We waited for the men's race to end and then the wind completely died
before the seabreeze kicked in," said Beashel. "There was a huge battle
for gold and silver, which was nice to watch." (France's Faustine Merret
snagged the gold while China's Jian Yin took the silver.)
When asked to decide which Olympic experience she has enjoyed most,
Beashel said, "I can't really compare them. "Barcelona ('92) was special
because it was my first experience; Savannah ('96) because it was in my
home country; Sydney ('00) because it was in my new home country of
sorts, since I married an Australian; and Greece because it was here
where I competed in my first-ever international sailing competition--the
Youth Worlds when I was 16. If I had four medals around my neck I'd be
happier, but I feel as rich as that because of all the countries I've
been to and the people I've met."
What's Next - Tomorrow, Thursday, August 26, the 49ers finish
their series with a medal round, while Stars and Tornados continue
racing. Friday the Stars and Tornados are scheduled for a reserve day
before their medal rounds on Saturday, August 28.
Additional background information on the events, and the U.S. athletes,
is available online at
www.ussailing.org/Olympics/OlympicGames/2004/
(end)
Current Standings
of U.S. Sailors: (for full results
http://www.sailing.org/olympics2004/)
Europe (Final
Results--after 11 races)
14. Meg Gaillard (Jamestown, R.I./Pelham, N.Y.),
9-11-13-9-3-13-11-16-9-(19)-19; 113
Finn (Final Results --after 11 races)
11. Kevin Hall (Bowie, Md./Ventura, Calif.),
11-6-13-(17)-16-14-13-9-9-17-7; 115
470 Men (Final Results --after 11 races)
1. Paul Foerster (Rockwall, Texas) and Kevin Burnham (Miami, Fla.),
1-8-2-15-9-4-3-7-18-4-(22); 71
470 Women (Final Results --after 11 races)
5. Katie McDowell (Barrington, R.I.) and Isabelle Kinsolving (New York,
N.Y.), 12-16-3-12-9-2-(18)-17-8-1-4; 84
49er (after 15 races)
4. Tim Wadlow (San Diego, Calif.) and Pete Spaulding (Miami, Fla.),
7-8-5-(OCS/20)-9-9-8-3-1-(13)-7-3-10-11-1; 82
Laser (Final Results--after 11 races)
8. Mark Mendelblatt (St. Petersburg, Fla.),
2-14-20-6-6-10-(29)-22-16-6-9; 111
Mistral Men (Final Results -- after 11 races)
28. Peter Wells (Newport Beach/La Canada, Calif.),
22-20-23-16-22-29-27-24-30-28-(31); 241
Mistral Women (Final Results -- after 11 races)
16. Lanee Butler Beashel (Aliso Viejo, Calif.),
13-16-9-(18)-17-13-6-14-(19)-15-5; 126
Star (after 8 races)
3. Paul Cayard (Kentfield, Calif.) and Phil Trinter (Lorain, Ohio/Port
Washington, N.Y.), 1-6-(15)-10-3-6-1-15; 42
Tornado (after 8 races)
2. John Lovell (New Orleans, La.) and Charlie Ogletree (Houston,
Texas/Columbia, N.C.), 2-2-1-6-(9)-9-6-7; 33
Yngling (Final Results --after 11 races)
10. Carol Cronin (Jamestown, R.I.), Liz Filter (Stevensville, Md.)
and Nancy Haberland (Annapolis, Md.), 2-10-16-9-15-10-1-15-7-1-(OCS/17);
86
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