Miami, Fla. (January
26, 2007) – It's down to the wire now at US SAILING's 2007 Rolex
Miami OCR, where 855 competitors from 49 countries have completed the
five-day fleet racing portion of the competition, and the top ten from
the overall standings in each of 11 Olympic classes are
preparing for tomorrow's finals. Following the new Olympic format,
the finals will consist of only one "medal" race for each class, fired
off in rapid succession. Two race circles -- pared down from the eight
used in fleet racing -- will be utilized simultaneously to accommodate
the races, which will take approximately a half-hour to complete.
Points for finish positions in the medal race will be doubled before
they are added to overall scores for the series.
"Because the scores, in effect, count as two races in a sailor's
series, the pressure is really on," said US Sailing Team Head Coach
Gary Bodie. "In addition, the medal race must be counted and cannot be
discarded."
For Yngling sailors Sally Barkow (Nashotah,
Wis.), Carrie Howe (Grosse
Pointe, Mich.) and Debbie Capozzi (Bayport, N.Y.), mathematics will
play as much a part in tomorrow's racing as boat speed and tactics.
After today's three races, the
U.S.
team pulled ahead of Great Britain's Sarah Ayton, Sarah Webb and Pippa
Wilson, but only by two points in overall scoring. The two teams had
been tied on points going into today, and all week they have been
nipping at each other's transoms.
If Ayton wins tomorrow and Barkow follows in second, they will be tied
in points, but Ayton would win the series after tie-breaker rules are
applied. Therefore, the do-or-die reality for Barkow's team is that
they must beat Great Britain, and they must finish no worse than sixth
while doing it.
"We’re going to go at it with full force," said Barkow, whose
world-champion team has been together longer than any other in this
class. "The stakes are high, but it’s important to keep a cool head
on the water. We’re all capable of taking on this kind of pressure and
using it to our advantage."
Barkow added that her team also has to watch the third-place Finnish
team. "It's hard to keep tabs on one boat, let alone two, so we have
to take that into consideration when weighing the risks," said Barkow.
Denmark's Jonas Hoegh-Christensen, the leader in
the 49-boat Finn fleet for the second day in a row, will be equally
challenged to keep his eye on fellow Nordic competitor Peer Moberg
(NOR), who shares the same point score going into tomorrow's finals.
Hoegh-Christensen said it was "very tricky, very shifty" during
today's two races. "The first race was looking good before a big left
shift. I fell into the deep teens, but then I fought back to fourth."
Hoegh-Christensen's second race, a twelfth-place finish, became his
throwout. To win the gold medal tomorrow, he
absolutely must beat Moberg.
"It will be head-to-head racing, of course, tomorrow," said Hoegh-Christensen.
"We will be fighting for this."
One team that has it a bit easier tomorrow is Sweden's Fredrik Loof
and Anders Ekstrom. They are not untouchable, but there are 16 points
between them and the second-place Portuguese team of Afonso Domingos
and Bernardo Santos. "We are starting to come together," said Loof
about his Olympic campaign.
USA's
Erin Maxwell (Norwalk, Conn.) and Isabelle Kinsolving (New York, N.Y.)
are in third place in the 470 Women’s fleet, behind Marcelien de
Koning and Lobke Berkhout of The Netherlands and Ingrid Petitjean and
Nadege Douroux of France. In the 49er class, Athens Olympian Tim
Wadlow (Beverly,
Mass.)
and his crew Christopher Rast (Wake Forest, N.C.) are in second place,
only one point ahead of Morgan Larson (Capitola, Calif.) and Pete
Spaulding (Lafayette, Ind.) in third. For the second day in a row, the
SKUD-18 team of Scott Whitman (Brick, N.J.) and Julia Dorsett (Boca
Raton, Fla.) hold on to first, ahead of David Cook and Brenda Hopkin
of Canada and Karen Mitchell (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) and JP Creignou
(St. Petersburg, Fla.). Sonar skipper Rick Doerr (Clifton, N.J.) and
his crew, Tim Angle (Marblehead, Mass.) and Bill Donohue (Brick,
N.J.), jumped to second after scoring two bullets today.
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 5
Finn (49 boats) -- 12
races
1. Jonas
Hoegh-Christensen (DEN), 9-2-4-5-10-3-1-9-1-4-[11]-1, 49
2. Peer Moberg (NOR), 7-8-2-6-1-5-3-4-7-[11]-4-2, 49
3. Daniel Birgmark (SWE), 5-1-5-4-8-4-10-10-[18]-5-7-4, 63
49er (47 boats) -- 14
races
1. Iker
Martinez de Lizarduy/ Xabier Fernadez (ESP),
1-6-[12]-1-2-3-6-8-12-6-5-6-8-4, 68
2. Tim Wadlow/Christopher Rast (Beverly,
Mass./Wake
Forest, N.C., USA), 5-1-1-3-5-5-11-3-4-9-14-12-1-[15], 74
3. Morgan Larson/ Pete Spaulding (Capitola,
Calif./Lafayette,
In., USA), 4-7-[25/DNF]-2-1-4-1-11-3-10-8-2-4-18, 75
470 Men's (31 boats)
-- 12 races
1. Nick
Rogers/Joe Glanfield (GBR), 2-1-4-[11]-6-2-1-2-7-[20]-7, 43
2. Mathew
Belcher/Nick Behrens (AUS), 6-[13]-8-7-5-10-6-4-2-4-10, 62
3. Gideon Kliger/Udi Gal (ISR), 16-[32/OCS]-3-2-2-9-7-6-9-10-1, 65
470 Women's (18
boats) -- 12 races
1.
Marcelien de Koning/Lobke Berkhout (NED), 1-1-1-8-5-2-[13]-3-2-4-1-8,
36
2. Ingrid Petitjean/Nadege Douroux (FRA),
4-2-8-6-1-[9]-4-1-1-8-3-[14], 47
3. Erin Maxwell/Isabelle Kinsolving (Norwalk, Conn./New York, N.Y.,
USA), 3-4-[11]-3-2-7-1-9-8-1-5-10, 53
Laser (69 boats) – 10
races
1. Tom
Slingsby (AUS), 2-1-7-8-1-13-1-1-3-[23], 37
2. Michael Blackburn (AUS), 2-6-1-3-5-2-6-[35]-21-5, 51
3. Vasilij Zbogar (SLO), 3-3-10-[22]-8-10-7-11-4-6, 62
Laser Radial (69
boats) -- 11 races
1. Sari Multala (FIN),
1-1-[27]-15-3-1-5-2-1-4-2-1, 36
2.
Gintare Volungeviciute (LTU), 3-2-5-6-2-5-2-7-12-6-7-[36/OCS], 57
3. Evi Van Acker (BEL), [35/OCS], 3-7-3-7-3-16-12-8-2-5-4, 70
RS:X Men (44 boats)
-- 11 races
1. Przeymslaw Miarczynski (POL), 1-5-[15]-10-3-2-1-1-3-9-3, 38
2. Joao
Rodriques (POR), [18]-3-6-6-9-74-4-2-10-10, 61
3. Nick Dempsey (GBR), 4-4-[13]-8-6-4-2-6-9-[19]-5, 61
RS:X Women (28 boats)
-- 10 races
1. Bryony Shaw (GBR), 4-5-4-3-[7]-6-6-6-1-3, 38
2. Marina Alabau (ESP), [10]-2-9-2-1-10-10-2-5-2, 43
3. Zofia Klepacka (POL), [13]-10-8-11-2-3-1-1-7-4, 47
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) – 8
races
1. Fredrik
Loof/Anders Ekstrom (SWE), 3-2-2-1-2-4-[17]-2, 16
2. Afonso Domingos/ Bernardo Santos (POR), 1-11-1-[17]-2-1-7-9; 32
3. Ross MacDonald/Mike Wolfs (CAN), 4-4-[19]-7-4-5-4-16, 44
Tornado (43 boats) –
10 races
1. Leigh
McMillan/William Howden (GBR), 4-4-1-[11]-3-2-11-3-2-2, 32
2. Darren
Bundock/Glenn Ashby (AUS), 3-3-6-5-1-[44/OCS]-1-6-11-3, 39
3. Fernando Echavarri/Anton Paz (ESP) 6-2-[10]-2-10-5-8-4-9-6, 52
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) --
12 races
1. Sally
Barkow/Carrie Howe/Debbie Cappozi (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