Miami, Fla. (January
27, 2007) – It
was a tooth-and-nail day as sailors competing in the finals of US
SAILING's 2007 Rolex Miami OCR fought it out on Biscayne Bay for
medals in 11 Olympic classes. The sun shone brilliantly and the winds
blew 8-10 knots, providing a perfect wrap-up for the competition,
which hosted more sailors -- 855 from 49 countries -- than it ever has
in its 18 annual runnings. After five days of fleet racing, which
concluded yesterday, medalists were determined in three Paralympic
classes. The top ten overall finishers in the Olympic classes advanced
to today's single medal race, replicating the new Olympic format that
will debut in Qingdao, China in 2008.
U.S.
Sailors took home three medals in Olympic classes and three in
Paralympic classes. Three of them were gold.
For
49er sailors Morgan Larson (Capitola, Calif.) and Pete Spaulding
(Lafayette, Ind.), who were in bronze-medal position going into
today's races, it took some impressive plays to make the top step of
the podium theirs. When yesterday's leaders, Spain's Iker Martinez de
Lizarduy and Xabier Fernandez, started prematurely and failed to turn
back, the gold medal was wide open. Larson/Spaulding quickly covered
Tim Wadlow (Beverly, Mass.) and Christopher Rast (Wake Forest, N.C.),
fellow US Sailing Team members who were one position ahead of them in
overall scoring, and forced them to the course's far right corner.
However, the left side of the course paid off, resulting in the two
teams rounding the first mark in next-to-last and last positions.
Larson/Spaulding, however, went on to recover, picking off several
boats before using a left shift on the last beat to pass the British
team of Stevie Morrison and Ben Rhodes, who seemed to be the gold
medal's heir apparents. Final race positions were third for
Larson/Spaulding and fourth for Morrison/Rhodes, who had to settle for
the silver medal. France's Lagraviere Morgan and Christidis Stephane
took the bronze. Wadlow and Rast finished fourth overall.
"Going into this event, our ultimate goal was to be the top American
and to be on the podium," said Spaulding, who crewed for Tim Wadlow in
this class at the 2004 Olympics. "Given the short amount of time we
have sailed together in the last six months, we didn't expect to win
the fleet. We were very happy."
In
the Yngling class, playing the numbers game became critical in the
USA's battle for gold. "We had to play with points, play with the
competition and try to control everybody," said Sally Barkow
(Nashotah, Wis.), who with Carrie Howe (Grosse Pointe, Mich.) and
Debbie Capozzi (Bayport, N.Y.) finished fourth to edge out their
biggest threat -- Great Britain's Sarah Ayton, Sarah Webb and Pippa
Wilson -- in the overall standings.
"When we started, we had two boats to deal with: Great Britain and
Finland," said Barkow. "We were in a vulnerable position. We got
pinned, so we jibed out and they passed us in the first run. Then we
went into attack mode. We got on their breeze and did three or four
jibes, rounded the gate we wanted and extended from there. It was a
lot of fun. It was one of the best medal races we’ve had in a while."
Great Britain finished seventh to take the silver while France's Anne
Le Helley, Marion Deplanque and Catherine Lepesant finished second for
the bronze.
"It
was really tough here this week - the whole fleet has increased its
skill in the Ynglings," added Barkow. "There are new team players and
new ways to sail the boat; we have to make sure we stay one step
ahead."
The
USA's third gold medal was won by Paralympic sailors in the SKUD-18
class, which completed the Rolex Miami OCR competition yesterday,
along with the Sonar and 2.4mR classes.
The
SKUD-18 will make its debut at the 2008 Paralympic Games, where Rolex
Miami OCR winners Scott Whitman
(Brick, N.J.)
and Julia Dorsett (Boca Raton, Fla.)
hope to be. The duo is as new to Paralympic
sailing as the SKUD-18 is to the Paralympic sailors.
"I've been sailing all my life but only started Paralympic sailing
back in March," said Whitman. "The SKUD-18s were available to sailors
in this country in June, which at least puts us all on somewhat equal
footing. It's a brand new boat -- everyone is learning it."
Whitman and Dorsett won four of their 13 races and counted top-five
finishes the rest of the time and throughout a variety of wind
conditions. "Every regatta we keep getting better tactically," said
Dorsett. "Scott and I just really clicked this time."
Winning the silver medal in the SKUD-18 class was Canada's David Cook
and Brenda Hopkin, while taking home the bronze was another USA team,
that of Karen Mitchell (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) and JP Creignou (St.
Petersburg, Fla.).
In
the 470 women's event, Amanda Clark (Shelter Island, N.Y.) and Sarah
Mergenthaler (Aberdeen, N.J.) finished ninth in the medal race to win
the bronze medal. They had been in fourth place going into today.
In
Sonars, the USA's Rick Doerr (Clifton, N.J.), Tim Angle (Marblehead,
Mass.) and Bill Donohue (Brick, N.J.) won the silver medal. "We're
proud to represent the U.S. Team," said Doerr. "It was a good year
here; everyone's ramping up for the Games and starting to take their
campaigns seriously, so this regatta was a good benchmark."
(end)
(Top-Three Finishes Follow)
US SAILING's Rolex
Miami OCR
Day
6 -- Final Series Results (Top-Three), Final Medal Race Counts Double
Finn (49 boats) --
13 races
1. Peer
Moberg (NOR), 7-8-2-6-1-5-3-4-7-[11]-4-2-2, 51
2. Jonas Hoegh-Christensen (DEN), 9-2-4-5-10-3-1-9-1-4-[11]-1-6, 55
3. Daniel Birgmark (SWE), 5-1-5-4-8-4-10-10-[18]-5-7-4-4, 67
49er (47 boats) --
15 races
1.
Morgan Larson/ Pete Spaulding (Capitola, Calif./Lafayette, Ind., USA),
4-7-[25/DNF]-2-1-4-1-11-3-10-8-2-4-18-6, 81
2. Stevie Morrison/Ben Rhodes (GBR), 1-6-3-1-1-7-[25/BFD]-1-9-8-17-7-6-12-8,
87
3. Morgan Lagraviere/Stephane Christidis (FRA),
2-7-2-9-3-9-4-[25/OCS]-10-4-1-21-5-1-10, 88
470 Men's (31
boats) -- 13 races
1. Nick
Rogers/Joe Glanfield (GBR), 2-1-4-[11]-6-2-1-2-7-[20]-7-4, 47
2. Mathew Belcher/Nick Behrens (AUS), 6-[13]-8-7-5-10-6-4-2-4-10-6, 68
3. Gustavo Martinez/ Dimas Wood (ESP), 4-3-13-3-10-1-14-11-[18]-5-9-2,
75
470 Women's (18
boats) -- 13 races
1.
Marcelien de Koning/Lobke Berkhout (NED),
1-1-1-8-5-2-[13]-3-2-4-1-8-4, 40
2. Ingrid Petitjean/Nadege Douroux (FRA),
4-2-8-6-1-[9]-4-1-1-8-3-[14]-12, 59
3. Amanda Clark/Sarah Mergenthaler (Shelter Island, N.Y./Aberdeen,
N.J., USA), 2-5-6-9-3-1-[15]-4-4-2-13-6-18, 73
Laser (69 boats) –
13 races
1.
Gustavo Lima (POR), 1-2-13-[21]-12-8-2-12-12-1-3-2-12, 80
2. Tom Slingsby (AUS), 2-1-7-8-1-13-1-1-3-23-7-[58/DNC]-14, 81
3.
Michael
Blackburn (AUS), 2-6-1-3-5-2-6-[35]-21-5-19-4-2, 86
Laser
Radial (69 boats) -- 13 races
1. Sari Multala (FIN), 1-1-[27]-15-3-1-5-2-1-4-2-1-10, 46
2. Gintare Volungeviciute (LTU), 3-2-5-6-2-5-2-7-12-6-7-[36/OCS]-2, 59
3. Evi Van
Acker (BEL), [35/OCS], 3-7-3-7-3-16-12-8-2-5-4-12, 82
RS:X Men (44
boats) -- 12 races
1.
Przeymslaw Miarczynski (POL), 1-5-[15]-10-3-2-1-1-3-9-3-10, 48
2. Joao Rodriques (POR), [18]-3-6-6-9-74-4-2-10-10-2, 63
3. Samual Launay (FRA), [45/DNF]-9-2-7-13-5-8-6-15-9-12, 77
RS:X Women (28
boats) -- 12 races
1.
Marina Alabau (ESP), [10]-2-9-2-1-10-10-2-5-3-2, 45
2. Flavia Tartaglini (ITA), [29/DNS]-13-2-6-5-2-8-5-3-1-6, 51
3. Bryony Shaw (GBR), 4-5-4-3-[7]-6-6-6-1-4-16, 55
SKUD-18
(10 boats) – 13 races
1. Scott
Whitman/Julia Dorsett (Brick, N.J./Boca Raton, Fla., USA),
4-[6]-4-4-1-1-1-1-2-5-3-2-2, 30
2. David Cook/Brenda Hopkin (CAN), 2-4-3-1-5-2-[11/DNF]-3-3-2-4-4-4,
37
3. Karen Mitchell/JP Creignou (Deerfield Beach, Fla./St. Petersburg,
Fla., USA), 6-2-1-2-[11/RAF]-4-3-2-5-11/DSQ-5-3-1, 45
Sonar (14 boats)
-- 13 races
1. Dan
Parsons/Tom Pygall/Guy Draper (GBR),
3-3-2-[15/OCS]-1-2-3-8-9-5-2-4-10, 52
2. Rick Doerr/Tim Angle/Bill Donohue, (Clifton, N.J./ Marblehead,
Mass./ Brick, N.J., USA), 6-1-9-2-8-[13]-8-2-7-7-1-1-1, 53
3. John Robertson/Hannah Stodel/Stephen Thomas (GBR),
2-4-1-3-7-1-4-6-4-3-3-[15RAF]-[15RAF], 53
Star (67 boats) –
9 races
1.
Fredrik Loof/Anders Ekstrom (SWE), 3-2-2-1-2-4-[17]-2-16, 32
2. Hamish Pepper/Dave Giles (NZL), 4-1-[27]-2-13-14-11-3-2, 50
3. Afonso Domingos/ Bernardo Santos (POR), 1-11-1-[17]-2-1-7-9-20, 52
Tornado (43 boats)
– 11 races
1.
Darren Bundock/Glenn Ashby (AUS), 3-3-6-5-1-[44/OCS]-1-6-11-3-4, 43
1. Leigh McMillan/William Howden (GBR), 4-4-1-[11]-3-2-11-3-2-2-20, 52
3. Fernando Echavarri/Anton Paz (ESP) 6-2-[10]-2-10-5-8-4-9-6-12, 64
2.4 mR (25 boats)
-- 13 races
1.
Stellan Berlin (SWE), 1-5-[9]-7-7-1-1-2-5-2-2-2-4, 39
2. Megan Pascoe (GBR), 3-1-2-8-2-6-8-6-1-5-[13]-4-5, 51
3. Helena Lucas (GBR), 5-[7]-5-3-1-7-6-7-2-7-5-[10]-6, 61
Yngling
(18 boats) -- 13 races
1. Sally
Barkow/Carrie Howe/Debbie Capozzi (Nashotah, Wis./Grosse Pointe,
Mich./Bayport, N.Y., USA) 3-1-4-6-4-2-[7]-6-1-2-1-2, 32
2. Sarah Ayton/Sarah Webb/Pippa Wilson (GBR)
1-3-[6]-5-6-6-3-1-2-4-2-1, 34
3. Silja Lehtinen/ Maria Klemetz/Livia Varesmaa, (FIN),
2-2-2-1-[12]-7-9-3-3-3-6-6, 44