Sailors
Revel In Multiple-Race Conditions At Rolex Miami
OCR: Event Serves as Formidable Preview for Upcoming
U.S. Trials
MIAMI,
FLORIDA (January 28, 2004)—After weathering
a severe squall on opening day, the Rolex Miami
OCR benefited from a fresh, though shifty, westerly
breeze today, allowing the 11 Olympic and Paralympic
classes to sail multiple races and solidify positions
at the event's halfway mark. The event, which
continues tomorrow and concludes Friday, has attracted
503 sailors from 39 nations.
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Photo
© Scott Kozinchik / Rolex
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Some
of the athletes competing here have already been
chosen for their nation's Olympic teams and have
traveled to Miami for the traditionally intense
competition the event offers. U.S. athletes in
six of the classes--Europe, Finn, 49er, Star,
Tornado and Yngling--are using the regatta as
a tune-up for Olympic Trials that will take place
in South Florida over the next two months, determining
who goes to Athens.
USA's
team of Tim Wadlow and Pete Spaulding embraced
the good fortune of today's five races in the
49er class. After posting a ninth place after
yesterday's single race, they rose through the
ranks to first overall today on the merit of a
first, three seconds and a third. "We were
the most consistent team out there today,"
said Spaulding, "but we're seeing that different
people are having good races at different times.
The other U.S. teams are in the hunt in every
race, so, yes, it's a very good tune-up for the
Trials."
Also
making it to the top of the scoreboard today were
USA's Mark Reynolds/Steve Erickson in Star class,
while USA's Laser sailor Mark Mendelblatt rose
to second behind Norway's Per Moberg. "Moberg
seems to be the man to beat this week," said
Mendelblatt, who has already secured his position
on the U.S. Olympic Sailing Team. "The competition
gets better and better every year. There are 5-6
guys here who have a chance to medal in the Olympics."
In
Ynglings, six U.S. teams are competing, and the
current Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year Hannah Swett
sits in third behind yesterday's leader Sally
Barkow, who allowed New Zealand's Sharon Ferris
to sneak by her in overall standings to lead.
"Everyone
was up and down, because it was really shifty,"
said Swett. "It sure kept it interesting.
It gave us a chance to check out the other American
teams' speed. It's replicating the Trials plus
adding five or six foreign boats."
Another
Olympic hopeful, USA's Kevin Hall, who qualified
the U.S. for its Finn Olympic berth at the Finn
Worlds in '03 (finishing 27th), posted a 1-3-5-4
today to take a position in third place behind
Denmark's defending champion and fleet leader
Jonas Hoegh Christensen and 1996 Finn Gold medalist
Mateaus Kusznierewicz, currently in second place
overall. Hoegh Christensen and Kusznierewicz finished
fourth and sixth, respectively, at the '03 Worlds.
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Photo
© Dan Nerney / Rolex
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"Since
the Finn Trials will be in Ft. Lauderdale in February,
I have been training there since October,"
said Hall, who only announced his campaign last
May after finishing his job with the OneWorld
America's Cup campaign. "The conditions aren't
the same here, but it's the quality of the racing…the
benefit is that I'm sailing against some of the
world's top Finn sailors." Right behind Hall
in fourth is USA's Geoff Ewenson, who also plans
to compete in the Trials.
Racing
continues tomorrow through Friday, January 30.
Regatta Headquarters are located at the US Sailing
Center in Coconut Grove. Other Hosts for the event
are the Coral Reef, Key Biscayne and Miami Yacht
Clubs; the Coconut Grove Sailing Club; and Shake-A-Leg
Miami.
2004
ROLEX MIAMI OCR
RESULTS DAY 2
Place, Name, Hometown/Country, Finish Positions,
Cumulative Score
Europe (20 boats)
1. Smidova, CZE, 1-4-1-1-1-1, 5
2. Gaillard, USA, 2-2-2-(4)-3-2, 11
3. Blanck, AUS, 3-(14)-6-3-2-3, 17
Finn (35 boats)
1. Christensen, DEN, 1-2-4-3-1, 11
2. Kuszinerewicz, POL, 2-4-2-1-2, 11
3. Hall, USA, 4-1-3-5-4, 17
470 Men (6 boats)
1. McNay/Kinsolving, USA, 1-1-2-1-2, 7
2. Anderson-Mitterling/Biehl, USA, 2-2-1-2-4,
11
3. Noakes/Beaudoin, CAN, 3-7-6-7-3, 26
470 Women (5 boats)
1. Grobe/Kussatz, GER, 11-3-3-3-1, 21
2. Carapiet/Besse, USA, 4-5-11-4-5, 29
3. Jolly/Reischmann, USA, 5-4-7-5-8, 29
49er (20 boats)
1. Wadlow/Spaulding, USA, (9)-2-2-3-2-1, 10
2. Rast/Steiger, SUI, 2-6-1-1-4-(15), 14
3. Fitzpatrick/Brown, IRL, 5-3-4-7-1-(11), 20
Laser (63 boats)
1. Moberg, NOR, 5--1-4-2-2, 14
2. Mendelblatt, USA, 2-13-2-4-5, 26
3. Goodison, GBR, 4-18-1-6-3, 32
Mistral Men (24 boats)
1. Rodrigues, POR, 1-1-1-2-2, 7
2. Santos, BRA, 3-5-3-5-3, 19
3. Guyadr, FRA, 5-2-2-4-9, 22
Mistral Women (14 boats)
1. Konstantinova, BUL, 23-20-22-20-15, 100
2. Frey, GRE, DNC-19-18-15-20, 111
3. Borges, BRA, 28-22-25-22-25, 122
Sonars (14 boats)
1. Hessels/Van De Veen/Rossen, NED, 3-16-2-8,
20
2. Doerr/Wilson/Ross, USA, 1-2-9-5-7, 24
3. Mackie/MacDonald/Tingley, CAN, 8-7-2-1-6, 24
Star (58 boats)
1. Reynolds/Erickson, USA, 2-6-18-3, 29
2. Loof/Ekstrom, SWE, 17-3-4-15, 39
3. Beashel/Giles, AUS, 13-14-6-10, 43
Tornado (29 boats)
1. Figueroa/Hernandez, PUR, 8-4-6-1-5, 24
2. Johansson/Curtis, CAN, 6-10-13-2-2, 33
3. Guck/Farrar, USA, 4-1-15-3-11, 34
2.4 Metres (18 boats)
1. Madrigali, USA, 5-1-1-3-2, 12
2. Berlin, SWE, 3-4-3-8-4, 22
3. Brown, USA, 1-2-4-6-11, 24
Yngling (17 boats)
1. Ferris/Jameson/White, NZL, 3-2-4-1-4, 14
2. Barkow/Capozzi/Howe, USA, 1-12-7-3-6, 29
3. Swett/Purdy/Touchette, USA, 2-11-1-5-14, 33
For
more information: www.ussailing.org/Olympics/RolexMiamiOCR/