Cynthia Goss (East Coast) 203-430-4145
Rich Roberts (West Coast) 310-835-2526 / cell 310-766-6547
U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Team Trials – Sailing
West Coast report Day 4 Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2007
The birthday boys are in a battle to reach their fourth Olympics
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA--- John Lovell of New Orleans and Charlie Ogletree of
Kemah, Tex. have sailed a Tornado catamaran for their country in the last
three Olympics, won silver medals at the most recent Games in Athens in 2004
and are now trying for their fourth in a deadlocked battle with Robbie
Daniel and crew Hunter Stunzi. The teams have been dead even with 1-2
records after each of the four days of racing.
That probably means that even with Wednesday's lay day off Lovell and
Ogletree won't have time to celebrate a special occasion. They both turn 40
on Thursday, but they're less concerned about blowing out candles than how
the wind is going to blow. Yes, they were born on the same day in 1967,
which just about puts them in their primes for a sport where Olympic
medalists tend toward maturity, and their rapport remains strong.
Both are married and Lovell has a 2 1/2-year-old son, Nick. "We've been good
friends for a long time," Lovell said, "and we've been successful."
Ogletree: "We're just a couple of old guys who still get along."
After Monday's flameouts, all five venues enjoyed their windiest days of the
week Tuesday, and there were three perfect days posted. Tim Wadlow and crew
Chris Rast won all four 49er races at San Diego to strengthen their lead,
while Zach Railey in the Finns and Farrah Hall in the women's RS:X
sailboards scored three- and two-race sweeps to take over first place at
Newport Beach and Long Beach, respectively.
At midweek with a lay day due in all classes except Finns, who are one race
behind schedule, it was a time for partial absolution of sailing's sins: the
single throwouts kicked in after seven of 16 scheduled races to tighten some
contests a bit. The 49ers, with 24 scheduled races, already tossed their
worst and will have one more to drop after 17 races.
In the Stars at Marina del Rey, Andy Horton and crew Brad Nichol made a big
leap from sixth to third overall when they tossed their opening 18th-place
finish while winning two of the races with a third in between.
Finn dinghy, Newport Harbor Yacht Club, Balboa / Zach Railey:
Suddenly, with three breezy races following Monday's total dud, strong
performances by 23-year-old Zach Railey (1-1-1) and veterans Darrell Peck
(2-3-4) and Geoffrey Ewenson (3-2-2) turned this 42-boat scramble into a
three-way battle at the top. The next nearest competitor is 21 points back.
The wind arrived early and blew 10 to 14 knots all afternoon. "I like
sailing when it’s windy," said Railey, who has won the last four races and 5
of the 7 overall. He tossed his worst race, a 12. Ironically, Railey, 6-4
and 200 pounds, lost 15 to 20 pounds before the Trials "looking forward to
light winds here at Newport Beach, but it's not so much the weight as it is
being strong enough to hold the boat down." His rivals here range up to 72
years in age. "That says a lot about the class," Railey said. "They have a
lot more experience than I do. You can't buy experience. You have to earn
your stripes." ---Jenn Lancaster reporting
Tornado multihull, San Diego Yacht Club / Daniel/Stunzi and Lovell/Ogletree:
These guys have swapped 1-2 finishes the first four days in as tight a
two-boat contest as possible. John Lovell/Charlie Ogletree won Tuesday's
first race in 8-10 knots of breeze by 29 seconds, and Robbie Daniel/Hunter
Stunzi won the second in 12-14 by 49 seconds. Lovell said, "We're a little
bit frustrated, but Robbie's sailing excellent. The boat speed's about the
same, and it seems like the one that gets off to the favored side on the
first beat can stay in front." Lovell/Ogletree have been match-racing their
rivals for the favored side in the pre-starts, "but they've been good at
getting out of the pins," Lovell said. "We're hoping for stronger wind. The
forecast is for 20 knots [on the day off Wednesday]. That's just our luck."
---Mike Foster reporting
Star keelboat, California Yacht Club, Marina del Rey / Mendelblatt and
Liljedahl: The wind swings daily from low single digits to as strong as
18 knots, as it did Tuesday, but while their closest contenders shuffle
positions daily they haven't found any cracks in Mark Mendelblatt and crew
Magnus Liljedahl's steady performance through 9 of the 16 scheduled races.
Andy Horton and Brad Nichol jumped into third place with 1-3-1 finishes,
while George Szabo and Andrew Scott held onto second with single-digit
finishes in all but one race. But they couldn't stop the Floridians from
increasing their lead to 10 points with a 6-2-5 day. With a lay day
Wednesday, principal race officer Bill Stump has managed a range of
conditions well to remain one ahead of the two-a-day schedule. ---Tom
O'Conor reporting
470 dinghy, Men, Alamitos Bay Yacht Club/US Sailing Center, Long Beach,
Calif. / McNay and Biehl: After no finish worse than second, Stuart
McNay and crew Graham Biehl went 4-1 in the mixed fleet Tuesday, and the
fourth immediately became their throwout. Rivals Mikee Anderson-Mitterling
and David Hughes had worse luck. After winning the first race in winds of 12
knots building to 19 on the day, Anderson-Mitterling said, "We were holding
onto second place [in the second race] and thought we had a good chance to
win when we hit a trash bag"---a big, black plastic trash bag that wrapped
around their rudder. By the time they got it cleared they had lost three
boats and wound up fifth. McNay blamed bad tactics for his first race
result. "We went left because we thought it was the thing to do, but there
was a pretty big [right] shift." They were seventh at the windward mark
before fighting back to fourth. The next race they followed the building
breeze to the right. "The right was better," McNay said. His plans for the
lay day Wednesday: "I'm going go play some Frisbee and relax." ---Rick
Roberts reporting
470 dinghy, Women, ABYC/USSC / Clark and Mergenthaler: Not much
changed on a very windy day as the top two boats logged so-so finishes---2-4
for Amanda Clark and crew Sarah Mergenthaler and 5-3 for Erin
Maxwell/Isabelle Kinsolving---but Clark was satisfied with an eight-point
lead in the mixed men-women fleet. "We wanted to go into the lay day [with a
good lead] and have it going when we come back [Thursday]," she said.
---Rick Roberts reporting
RS:X sailboard, Men, ABYC / Gebhardt and Barger: It was a workout in
big winds from 12 to 19 knots as Michael Gebhardt (1-3) and Robert Willis
(2-1) had the best days, but Ben Barger (3-2) made the biggest gain by
dropping his opening eighth place for sailing the wrong course to move into
a first-place tie with Gebhardt. –-Rick Roberts reporting
RS:X sailboard, Women, ABYC / Kremer and Rios: Farrah Hall was hard
to find after winning both races and jumping into first place. Long after
the racing was done she was still out on the race course practicing. "I
enjoy sailing in big wind," she said. She also picked up some local
knowledge that Long Beach regulars know well: "I learned yesterday that when
the wind starts to blow you want to go right here in Long Beach. Not
everybody did." ---Rick Roberts reporting
49er skiff, Southwestern Yacht Club, San Diego / Wadlow and Rast:
Launched by solid breeze of 12 to 14 knots, Tim Wadlow and crew Chris Rast
won all four races Tuesday to blunt a comeback by Morgan Larson and Pete
Spaulding. They flew into the second half of their 24-race Trials with a
commanding 15-point lead over Dalton Bergan/Zack Maxam, with
Larson/Spaulding at 42 after a 2-2-2-5 day, following Monday's triple-bullet
sweep. Wadlow/Rast have won 8 of 13 races and count no finishes worse than
third. ---Margo Hemond reporting
The leaders:
Tornado (6 boats; 8 of 16 races; 1 discard):
1. Tie between Robbie Daniel (Clearwater, Fla.)/Hunter Stunzi (Charleston,
S.C.), 1-(2)-2-1-1-2-2-1, and,
1. John Lovell (New Orleans, La.)/Charlie Ogletree
(Kemah, Tex.), (2)-1-1-2-2-1-1-2, 10 points;
3. Colin Merrick (Portsmouth, R.I.)/John Sampson (Rumson, N.J.),
4-3-(5)-3-4-4-3-4, 25.
Finn (42 boats; 7 of 16 races):
1. Zach Railey (Clearwater, Fla.), 1-2-(12)-1-1-1-1, 19 points;
2. Darrell Peck (Gresham, Ore.), 4-4-1-3-2-3-4, 21;
3. Geoffrey Ewenson (Annapolis), 2-3-10-4-3-2-2, 26.
Star (19 boats; 9 of 16 races; 1 discard):
1. Mark Mendelblatt (St. Petersburg, Fla.)/Magnus Liljedahl (Miami, Fla.),
3-3-1-(8)-1-3-6-2-5, 24 points;
2. George Szabo (San Diego)/Andrew Scott (Annapolis), 2-1-(1)-1-7-3-4-9-6-2,
34;
3. Andy Horton (Newport, R.I.)/Brad Nichol (Sunapee, N.H.),
(18)-7-7-1-5-11-1-3-1, 36.
470 Combined fleet (13 boats; 8 of 16 races; 1 discard):
1. Stuart McNay (Lincoln, Mass.)/Graham Biehl (San Diego),
2-2-2-2-1-2-(4)-1, 16 points;
2. Amanda Clark (Shelter Island, N.Y.)/Sarah Mergenthaler (New York, N.Y.),
4-3-1-(6)-3-3-2-4, 20;
3. Mikee Anderson-Mitterling (Coronado, Calif.)/David Hughes (San Diego),
5-1-(6)-3-4-4-1-5, 23.
470 Men (8 boats; 6 of 16 races; 1 discard):
1. Stuart McNay (Lincoln, Mass.)/Graham Biehl (San Diego), 2-2-1-2-1-1(3)-1,
10 points;
2. Mikee Anderson-Mitterling (Coronado, Calif.)/David Hughes (San Diego),
(4)-1-3-3-2-2-1-3, 15;
3. Justin Law (Newport Beach)/Michael Miller (Charleston, S.C.),
7-3-(9)-1-4-4-5-2, 26.
470 Women (5 boats; 6 of 16 races; 1 discard):
1. Amanda Clark (Shelter Island, N.Y.)/Sarah Mergenthaler (New York, N.Y.),
1-1-1-(2)-2-2-1-2, 10 points;
2. Erin Maxwell (Norwalk, Conn.)/Isabelle Kinsolving (New York, N.Y.),
(4)-2-3-1-1-1-2-1, 11;
3. Molly Carapiet (Belvedere, Calif.)/Molly O'Bryan (San Diego),
2-3-2-3-3-3-3-3, 19.
RS:X Men (6 boats; 8 of 16 races; 1 discard):
1. Tie between Ben Barger (Tampa, Fla.), (8/RAF)-1-2-1-2-1-3-2, and
1. Mike Gebhardt (Ft. Pierce, Fla.),
2-(3)-1-2-1-2-1-3, 12 points;
3. Robert Willis (Chicago, Ill.), 1-2-5-3-(6)-3-2-1, 17.
RS:X Women (7 boats; 6 of 16 races; 1 discard):
1. Farrah Hall (Annapolis, Md.), (4)-1-4-1-3-3-1-1, 14 points;
2. Lisa Kremer (Worthington, Minn.), 1-2-2-4-4-1-(5)-2, 16;
3. Nancy Rios (Miami, Fla.), 2-(4)-1-3-2-2-4-4, 18.
49er (13 boats; 13 of 24 races; 1 discard):
1. Tim Wadlow (Beverly, Mass.)/Chris Rast (San Diego),
1-2-1-1-3-1-(4)-3-3-1-1-1-1, 19 points;
2. Dalton Bergan (Seattle, Wash.)/Zack Maxam (Costa Mesa, Calif.),
2-4-3-4-1-2-2-2-(14/OCS)-3-3-4-4, 34;
3. Morgan Larson (Capitola, Calif.)/Pete Spaulding (Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.),
(14/OCS)-1-2-2-9-14/OCS-1-1-1-2-2-2-5, 42.
For complete information on the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Team Trials -
Sailing, please visit
www.ussailing.org/olympics/OlympicTrials. Video
from the event with commentary by Gary Jobson will be available daily on the
website of the NBC network at
www.NBCOlympics.com.
About the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Team Trials - Sailing
The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Team Trials - Sailing are managed by US
SAILING and hosted by several sailing organizations. Racing takes place
October 6 through October 14 with a rest day scheduled at each venue. The
highest eligible finisher in each class will be nominated by US SAILING to
the U.S. Olympic Committee (USOC) to the 2008 U.S. Olympic or Paralympic
Team - Sailing. The events on the West Coast are hosted by Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club (470 Men & Women, RS:X Men & Women), California Yacht Club
(Star), Newport Harbor Yacht Club (Finn), San Diego Yacht Club (Tornado),
and Southwestern Yacht Club (49er). On the East Coast, the Rhode Island
Sailing Foundation in Newport (R.I.) is host to the Laser, Laser Radial,
2.4mR, SKUD-18, and Sonar events.
About US SAILING
The United States Sailing Association (US SAILING) is the national governing
body for sailing. Founded in 1897 and headquartered in Portsmouth, Rhode
Island, the organization provides leadership for the sport of sailing in the
United States. US SAILING offers training and education programs for
instructors and race officials, supports a wide range of sailing
organizations and communities, issues offshore rating certificates, and
provides administration and oversight of competitive sailing across the
country, including National Championships and the U.S. Olympic and
Paralympic Sailing Teams. For more information, please visit
www.ussailing.org.