Miami, Fla. (January
23, 2007) – Like a bratty sister of yesterday's
perfect conditions, light air slipped in this morning to tease the 855
sailors from 49 countries who were anxious to start their second day of
racing at US SAILING's 2007 Rolex Miami OCR. The nuisance imposed by
the "postponement ashore" for 14 one-design classes was understandable,
since for many, this regatta -- in its 18th year and sailed on Biscayne
Bay -- plays a critical role in fulfilling Olympic and Paralympic
dreams. As the only International Sailing Federation (ISAF) Grade-One
regatta in the United States for Olympic and Paralympic hopefuls, the
Rolex Miami OCR helps determine national and world rankings and, for
some countries, the actual teams that will attend the 2008 Games in
China.
By early afternoon,
most classes had been sent out or put on standby to go racing, but the
Tornados, with a circle several miles down the bay, were told to stay
put. Their cancelled racing left yesterday's standings intact, with
Australia's four-time Tornado world champion and two-time ISAF World
Champion Darren Bundock and crew Glenn Ashby leading the 43-boat fleet.
The team faces stiff competition from such top players as 2005 Rolex
ISAF World Sailors of the Year Fernando Echavarri and Anton Paz from
Spain, currently fourth; Austria's two-time Olympic gold medalist Roman
Hagara and crew Hans Peter Steinacher, currently sixth; and the USA's
silver medalists John Lovell and Charlie Ogletree (New Orleans,
La./Kemah, Texas), currently 14th.
The Star class' pool
of talent also runs deep, with an even more overwhelming number of world
champions and Olympic medalists competing. At the top of his game--and
the scoreboard after one race today in 5-6 knots of wind--was Sweden's
two-time World Champion Fredrik Loof and crew Anders Ekstrom. Finishing
second today, they soared past current world champion Hamish Pepper and
crew David Giles, who were second overall yesterday after two races and
fell to 16th today when they had to count a 28th-place finish.
Plummeting and rising are actions typical for this class, where today's
lag-behinds may be tomorrow's leaders.
Even though
competition is equally world-class in Lasers -- Australia's Olympic
bronze medalist Michael Blackburn is leading, followed by fellow
countryman Tom Slingsby, the runner-up
at the 2006 Laser Worlds -- there is still enough elbow room for
underdogs to learn from top dogs. "You can't sail anywhere else against
competition like this," said the USA's Kyle Rogachenko
(Collegeville,
Pa.), a teenage
college student ranked fourth on the US Sailing Team and currently in
32nd overall. "This year is definitely tougher because the top 20
world-ranked teams are here, but I'm still young and the 2012 Olympics
are really my goal."
Jesse Fielding (North
Kingstown, R.I.), another teen crewing on one of the speedy and wildly
exciting 49er skiffs, shares Rogachenko's sentiment. "Competing in this
event is like playing on the PGA Tour without having to qualify," said
Fielding, who is also a member of Disney's Morning Light Team of
youngsters being trained for the Transpac Race.
While Fielding and
skipper Mike Coe (Annapolis,
Md.) are humbly
fighting for position at the back of the fleet, another U.S. team --
comprised of third-ranked US Sailing Team members Tim Wadlow (Beverly,
Mass.) and Christopher Rast (Wake Forest, N.C.) -- rose from second to
first overall today after finishing third in their one race today. "We
were really fast; we had good upwind boat speed," said Wadlow, who won
two of yesterday's three races. Echoing the refrain heard in every
class, Wadlow added, "The competition is incredible. There are 20 boats
who can win a race, so it’s hard to narrow down who the toughest
competition is."
Online
Information and Resources Updated Daily
For complete and
up-to-the-minute regatta news and results, visit
www.RolexMiamiOCR.org.
Nightly video reports from America's Cup Hall of Fame inductee, author
and sailing broadcaster Gary Jobson (Annapolis, Md.), will appear on
www.NBCSports.com;
for expanded video coverage, including more interviews and outtakes,
visit
www.RolexMiamiOCR.org
or
www.jobsonsailing.com.
About US SAILING's
2007 Rolex Miami OCR
The Rolex Miami OCR is
the only International Sailing Federation (ISAF) Grade-One ranking event
in the U.S. for competition in all 14 Olympic and Paralympic classes
selected for the next Olympic and Paralympic Games: 49er, 470 (Men &
Women), Finn, Laser, Laser Radial, Neil Pryde RS:X (Men & Women), Star,
Tornado; Yngling; 2.4mR, SKUD-18, and Sonar.
The regatta is
especially important as a ranking regatta for American sailors hoping to
qualify for the US Sailing Team and the US Disabled Sailing Team, which
distinguish the top three sailors in each Olympic or Paralympic class.
Scheduled are five
days of fleet racing through Friday, January 26, and one day of medal
racing (for Olympic classes only) on Saturday, January 27. Saturday's
medal races follow the new Olympic format, lining up the top 10 teams in
each class on the starting line on the
final day of racing.
Regatta Headquarters
for the 2007 Rolex Miami OCR are at the US Sailing Center, with classes
hosted by other area sailing organizations and parks, which include:
Coral Reef Yacht Club, Key Biscayne Yacht Club, Miami Yacht Club,
Coconut Grove Sailing Club, Shake-A-Leg Miami,
and Crandon Park Marina. The City of Miami and the Miami Dade Sports
Commission also support the event.
In addition to title
sponsor Rolex Watch U.S.A., the 2007 Rolex Miami OCR is also sponsored
by all the partners that support the US Sailing Team: Nautica, Vanguard
Sailboats, Zodiac, Gill, Harken, Sperry Top-Sider, Nikon, New England
Ropes, Extrasport, and McLube. Rolex is also a sponsor of the US Sailing
Team. The City of Miami has partnered with regatta organizers this year
to help with the expansion of the sailing venues.
(end)
(Results Follow)
US SAILING's Rolex
Miami OCR Top-Three Results (Provisional)
Day 2
Finn (49
boats) -- 4 races
1. Dan Slater (NZL),
3-8-3-2, 16
2. Daniel Birgmark (SWE),
6-2-5-4, 17
3. Pieter-Jan Postma
(NED), 1-6-1-10, 18
49er (47
boats) -- 4 races
1. Tim Wadlow/Christopher
Rast (Beverly, Mass./Wake Forest, N.C., USA), 5-1-1-3, 10
2. Ben Rhodes/Stevie
Morrison (GBR), 1-6-3-1, 11
3. Pietro Sibello/Gianfranco
Sibello (ITA), 8-2-1-2, 13
470 Men's (31
boats) -- 4 races
1. Nick Rogers/Joe
Glanfield (GBR), 2-1-4-11, 18
2. Gustavo Martinez/Dimas
Wood (ESP), 4-3-13-3, 23
2. Alvaro Marinho/Miguel
Nunes (POR), 1-7-7-10, 25
470 Women's
(18 boats) -- 5 races
1. Marcelien de Koning/Lobke
Berkhout (NED), 1-1-1-[8]-5, 8
2. Erin
Maxwell/Isabelle Kinsolving (Norwalk, Conn./New York, N.Y., USA),
3-4-[11]-3-2, 12
3. Ingrid Petitjean/
Nadege Douroux (FRA), 4-2-[8]-6-1, 13
Laser (69
boats) -- 4 races
1. Michael Blackburn
(AUS), 3-6-1-3, 13
2. Tom Slingsby (AUS),
2-1-7-9, 19
2. Paul Goodison (GBR),
2-1-1-18, 22
Laser Radial
(69 boats) -- 3 races
1. Paige Railey
(Clearwater, Fla., USA), 5-2-6, 13
2. Gintare
Volungeviciute (LTU), 3-3-7, 13
3. Tania Elias Calles
(MEX), 4-5-4, 13
RS:X Men (44
boats) -- 3 races
1. Byron Kokkalanis
(GRE), 9-7-3, 19
2. Ivan Pastor (ESP),
2-8-10, 20
3. Przeymslaw
Miarczynski (POL) 1-5-15, 21
RS:X Women (28
boats) -- 3 races
1. Bryony Shaw (GBR),
4-5-4, 13
2. Antonia Frey (GRE),
7-4-6, 17
3. Marta Hlavaty (POL),
2-1-17, 20
SKUD-18 (10
boats) – 5 races
1. David Cook/Brenda
Hopkin (CAN), 2-4-3-1-[5], 10
2. Karen Mitchell/ JP
Creignou (Deerfield Beach, Fla./St. Petersburg, Fla., USA), 6-2-1-2-[7],
12
3. Allan Smith/Jackie
Gay (GBR), 1-1-[11/OCS]-7-4, 13
Sonar (14
boats) -- 5 races
1. Dan Parsons/Tom
Pygall/Guy Draper (GBR), 3-3-2-[15/OCS]-1, 9
2. John
Robertson/Hannah Stodel/Stephen Thomas (GBR), 2-4-1-3-[7], 10
3. Rick Doerr/Tim
Angle/Bill Donohue, (Clifton, N.J./ Marblehead, Mass./ Brick, N.J.,
USA), 6-1-[9]-2-8, 17
Star (67
boats) -- 3 race
1. Fredrik Loof/Anders
Ekstrom (SWE), 3-2-2, 7
2. Robert Stanjek/Frithjof
Kleen (GER), 2-8-2, 12
3. Afonso Domingos/
Bernardo Santos (POR), 1-11-1, 13
Tornado (43
boats) -- 2 races (no racing today)
1. Darren Bundock/Glenn
Ashby (AUS), 3-3, 6
2. Olivier Backes/Paul
Ambroise Sevestre (FRA), 2-5, 7
3. Andrey Kirilyuk/Valery
Ushkov (RUS), 7-1, 8
2.4 mR (25
boats) -- 4 races
1. Megan Pascoe (GBR),
3-1-2-7, 13
2. Helena Lucas (GBR),
5-7-5-2, 19
3. Stellan Berlin (SWE),
1-5-9-6, 21
Yngling (18
boats) -- 4 races
1. Silja Lehtinen/
Maria Klemetz/Livia Varesmaa, (FIN), 2-2-2-1, 7
2. Sally Barkow/Carrie
Howe/Debbie Cappozi (Nashotah, Wis./Grosse Pointe, Mich./Bayport, N.Y.,
USA) 3-1-4-6, 14
3. Sarah Ayton/Sarah
Webb/Pippa Wilson, (GBR), 1-3-6-5, 15