The
Cayard Chronicles - Olympic Trials Day 8
Short
day at work for us. We got 5th in the first race
of the day and wrapped up the victory. Step one
accomplished.
The
rest of the fleet stayed out there and completed
the last two races. Our training partners Andy
Lovell/Magnus Liljedahl finished second. This
is a fantastic result in light of the fact that
they broke their mast in race one and could not
sail race two. George Szabo/Mark Strube were third.
You can find the full results at: www.ussailing.org/olympics/OlympicTrials/2004/Star/Results.asp
I
want to thank a few people: first my wife and
best friend Icka. Without her support and love
none of this would be possible for me. Secondly,
Phil did an awesome job. Really he saved the regatta
for us on day one when we laid the boat down in
a huge gust and he got the pole off the mast so
it did not break. We sailed a very consistent
regatta and this is definitely a two man boat.
Next, my physical trainer Sam Brovender. When
I decided to get serious about this Olympic campaign,
one year ago, I hired Sam He has gotten me into
better shape than when I won the World Championship
in 1988! Next, John Craig. JC has been our general
operational coordinator, coach, weather man, tender
drive and friend this spring. He was a key ingredient
in us winning these trials and we will miss him
as he goes back to his real job at St. Francis
Yacht Club. I want to thank St. Francis Yacht
Club for their support in my campaign and all
the others through the years! Next, I need to
thank the Diaz family; Gonzo and Maricel. Phil
and I basically lived at their home for 5 months
this winter. They were great hosts and helped
us out tremendously. Thanks to Brad Dallenbaugh
who helped me prepare from a rules standpoint
and was on call for any protest situations this
week. Fortunately none arose. Also, Bret Davis,
our windward mark weatherman did a fantastic job
for us this week. A big THANK YOU to all these
people. This was a big challenge and required
a big team and lot of organization and coordination
to get it done right.
Winning
this regatta means we earned the right to work
extremely hard for the next five months. Now we
have the honor and responsibility of representing
the USA at the Olympics in the Star Class and
living up to the results that have been achieved
by those preceding us. That is no small task.
I
am going on a business trip to Europe tomorrow
so a forced respite from the gym for a week or
so but I will be back at it on April 8th for even
harder workouts than what I have been doing the
past 12 months.
Our
immediate sailing schedule is that the boat is
being shipped to Italy tomorrow for the World
Championship which starts April 23. It will stay
over there until August and we will fly back and
forth doing various regattas and training sessions
in Europe and Athens.
I
am off to dinner now. Maybe more latter in the
week after I digest this a bit more. Thank you
for all your nice emails and good thoughts. It
helps us to know we have some many friends out
there.