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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Barby MacGowan, +30 6936693595 (on-site),
barby.macgowan@mediapronewport.com
Foerster and Burnham Win 470 Gold
Star and Tornados Start Strong
ATHENS, GREECE
(August 21, 2004) -- The 470 men’s team of Paul Foerster (Rockwall,
Texas) and Kevin Burnham (Miami, Fla.) won a gold medal today for the
USA at the 2004 Olympic Regatta, adding to their country’s current
harvest of medals at the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad. It came down to
one race, one chance for Foerster and Burnham to secure their fleet lead
from yesterday, and only one other country--Great Britain--that could
mathematically push them back to a silver-medal position. That last fact
became fiction, however, more than two minutes before the start, when
the British team’s positioning went horribly wrong and the Americans
trapped them.
"They were set up in a good spot," said Foerster, a two-time Olympic
silver medalist (470 Men in 2000, Flying Dutchman in 1992), "but we were
lucky enough to recognize that the breeze had dropped down to 5 or 6
knots. We knew if we took their air they couldn’t get to the starting
line on time. Then it was a case of not letting up or letting them get
past us." USA and Great Britain trailed the fleet around the course, but
always with USA leading. Their final finish positions were 22nd and
23rd, which both teams counted as a worst-race throwout.
"Whenever we were in trouble we concentrated on boat speed and pulled
out ahead," said Burnham about the match-racing moves he and Foerster
employed, tacking eight times before the start and 20 or more times up
the first leg of the course to cover the British whenever they tacked to
escape. Mark roundings between the two teams were eight seconds apart at
the first mark, and the team managed to extend the margin to 27 seconds
by the finish.
When the finish horn blasted for the duo, Burnham, also a silver
medalist (470 Men in 1992), performed a back flip off his boat, leaving
skipper Foerster alone to douse the spinnaker and round up to retrieve
him.
"It’s a real honor to win a gold medal," said Burnham. "It’s something
I’ve been dreaming of since I first started sailing. And it’s just such
a privilege to sail with Paul."
"For me, the journey has been 25 years or so," said Foerster. "I didn’t
realize how much I wanted it until a few days ago when I knew we had a
shot at it. I had to let it go, though. The tension would come and go,
and I just said “you have to believe in yourself and your teammate."
Behind Great Britain, which settled for the silver medal after the
11-race series, was Japan taking the bronze.
While today’s shootout on the 470 course garnered massive attention from
spectators and press, the Star and Tornados did not go unnoticed as they
began their series for the Olympic Regatta. Both are high profile
classes, the Stars boasting some of the best-known sailors in the world
and the Tornados having gone from simply fast at the last Olympics to
ridiculously fast this time due to a massive amount of added sail area.
In the Star class, the USA’s Paul Cayard (Kentfield, Calif.) and Phil
Trinter (Lorain, Ohio/Port Washington, N.Y.) took the day with 1-6
finish positions. In the first race, the team led at all marks of the
course, while in the second, it had to make a comeback. "We had a bad
start," said Cayard. "At the top mark, we were in about fifth but had to
almost go downwind to avoid a wall of guys on starboard. We rounded
pretty deep, probably around 12th. Overall, we sailed well, we’re going
fast. It was just a good first day."
Tornado sailors John Lovell (New Orleans, La.) and Charlie Ogletree
(Houston, Texas/Columbia, N.C.) also had a splendid first day, taking
seconds in both races to tie on points with Austria and land in second
overall behind them due to tie-breaker rules. "We sailed fairly
conservatively," said Lovell, "and tried not to make big mistakes and
avoided tight situations. A couple of times we could have gone for
first, but it was too risky. We’e happy with the second-place finishes."
Sailing their final medal races today along with the 470 Men’s class
were athletes in the Yngling, 470 Women and Finn
classes. The gold medals in Yngling and 470 Women were secured yesterday
by the British and the Greek teams, respectively, so the battles in both
classes for silver and bronze ensued today, but without the USA in
contention.
Yngling sailors Carol Cronin (Jamestown, R.I.), Liz Filter
(Stevensville, Md.) and Nancy Haberland (Annapolis, Md.) finished their
Olympic Regatta in tenth overall after starting prematurely in today’s
single race and failing to restart. The 17th they suffered from it was
counted as their worse score and throwout. It dropped them two positions
from yesterday. "I’m disappointed," said Cronin about her series, which
had some brilliant moments including two victories in an 11-race lineup.
"But would I have stayed away if I knew I wouldn’t win a medal? No way."
Taking the silver and bronze medals were the Ukraine and Denmark.
In the 470 Women’s division, Katie McDowell (Barrington, R.I.) and
Isabelle Kinsolving (New York, N.Y.) turned in an excellent last-race
performance of fourth to move them up a notch from yesterday to fifth
overall. "There is a disappointment about missing a medal," said
McDowell, "but we were 15th after the first day, so fifth is a whole lot
better. I’m pleased we ended strong. We had a couple of days that were
great and two days where we had some tough luck, but generally we sailed
pretty well. I am proud of how we did. I am proud of us." Winning the
silver medal in this class was Spain, while Sweden took the bronze.
Finn sailor Kevin Hall (Bowie, Md./Ventura, Calif.) finished seventh
today after leading at several marks and rose from 14th on the
scoreboard yesterday to tenth today. Great Britain won the gold, while
Spain and Poland took the silver and bronze medals. "My goal is always
to sail well," said Hall. "I was happy with all my preparation and
training, and I went into this feeling good, but somehow after it
started it was like I got up on the wrong side of the bed, and I didn’t
sort it out until today. It has been my childhood dream since I was five
to go to the Olympics. If there is one thing I would take away from this
as a lesson it would be that it’s harder than it looks. You can say it’s
about participation, but for those who can really put it together, my
hat’s off."
The Mistral fleets (men and women) continued racing today, with
the USA’s Lanee Butler Beashel (Aliso Viejo, Calif.) adding a 6-14 to
her scores to move up a spot to 16th overall. Peter Wells (La
Canada/Newport Beach, Calif.) remains in 25th overall with finish
positions of 28-24. Each class has three races to go.
What’s Next – Tomorrow, Sunday, August 22, Europe and Lasers will sail
their medal rounds, while 49ers resume racing, Star and Tornados
continue, and Mistrals observe a reserve day. On Monday, August. 23, the
Mistral class resumes racing while Tornado and Star classes continue
their series and 49ers take a reserve day.
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 (after ten
races)
13. Meg Gaillard (Jamestown, R.I./Pelham, N.Y.),
9-11-13-9-3-13-11-16-9-(19); 94
Finn (FINAL -- after eleven races)
11. Kevin Hall (Bowie, Md./Ventura, Calif.),
11-6-13-(17)-16-14-13-9-9-17-7; 115
470 Men (FINAL -- after eleven 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 -- after eleven 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 nine races)
3. Tim Wadlow (San Diego, Calif.) and Pete Spaulding (Miami, Fla.),
7-8-5-(OCS/20)-9-9-8-3-1; 50
Laser (after ten races)
10. Mark Mendelblatt (St. Petersburg, Fla.),
2-14-20-6-6-10-(29)-22-16-6; 102
Mistral Men (after eight races)
25. Peter Wells (Newport Beach/La Canada, Calif.),
22-20-23-16-22-(29)-28-24; 155
Mistral Women (after eight races)
16. Lanee Butler Beashel (Aliso Viejo, Calif.), 13-16-9-(18)-17-14-6-14;
88
Star (after two races)
1. Paul Cayard (Kentfield, Calif.) and Phil Trinter (Lorain, Ohio/Port
Washington, N.Y.), 1-6; 7
Tornado (after two races)
2. John Lovell (New Orleans, La.) and Charlie Ogletree (Houston,
Texas/Columbia, N.C.), 2-2; 4
Yngling (FINAL -- 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);
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