|
|
Light
Wind And A Freak Storm At Youth Olympic Sailing Competition
Sunday 24 August will be used
for the final races of the Nanjing 2014 Youth Olympic Sailing Competition
after light wind, a freak storm and further light breeze forced a third day
of postponements.
After a day of waiting for wind to materialise the breeze suddenly picked up
late in the afternoon. Those on shore away from the windows could have been
forgiven for thinking that was that for the day when they heard the horn
sound around the sailing venue but upon looking outside a consistent breeze
around 10-15 knots was blowing. As the Byte CII sailors launched things
started to get a bit fruity on the water as the winds picked up and started
gusting up to 30 knots.
The Race Committee did not hesitate in sending the sailors back ashore to
wait for the storm to pass through and once it did, the breeze dropped
considerably and the decision to cancel the day was made at 16:30.
The competition was scheduled to conclude on Saturday 23 August with a non discardable,
single race for all fleets on the agenda. The pre-planned reserve day will be
utilised to ensure the completion of the regatta. Sunday's outlook is
positive with 4-5 knots predicted from three sources with gusts of seven,
nine and even up 12 knots possible. Moderate to heavy rain is also on the
forecast.
Regardless of what happens on Sunday, four new Youth Olympic champions will
be crowned in the Boy's and Girl's Byte CII and Techno 293 fleets.
Racing is scheduled to commence at 11:00 local time. The Girl's Byte CII
fleet will be up first followed by the Boy's Byte CII, Boy's Techno 293 and
Girl's Techno 293.
China's Linli Wu is perfectly primed to take gold for her nation in the
Girl's Techno 293 fleet. The Chinese sailor is seven points clear of Russia's
Mariam Sekhposyan and France's Lucia Pianazza and needs to finish seventh or
better to claim gold. Wu has yet to finish outside of the top seven and has
mastered the light winds of Lake Jinniu so she will be hard to overthrow on
the final day.
Behind Sekhposyan and Pianazza, who are tied on 16 points, Aimee Van't Hoff
(NED) has 22 points and Duangkamon Phongern (THA) has 31 points. The Dutch
sailor will need to put in a good performance to take a medal whilst the Thai
racer would need to win the race and hope the others finish at the back of
the pack.
It is all to play for in the Boy's Techno 293 with eight points separating
the top seven. As it stands, Russia's Maxim Tokarev is at the top of the pack
on 16 points but that will count for very little on the final day with
Argentina's Francisco Saubidet Birkner a point behind and Dutch sailor Lars
van Someren on 19 points.
Israel's Yoav Omer sits on 22, France's Tom Monnet and Hong Kong's Tsz Kit
Chan have 23 and New Zealand's Finn Croft has 24 points. The top racers have
shared the victories over the six race period and it will be game on for gold
on the final day.
Four points separates the leaders and second place in the Boy's and Girl's
Byte CII. Odile van Aanholt (NED) tops the pack in the girl's whilst Bernie
Chin (SIN) sits in the medal position in the boy's fleet.
The Dutch sailor leads Singapore's Samantha Yom who has worked her way up the
field following a 21st in Race 4. Van Aanholt and Yom have a considerable
advantage at the top of the Girl's Byte CII leader board with Italy's
Carolina Albano 23 points off Van Aanholt in third.
Albano is only a point ahead of Jarian Brandes (PER) in fourth with Kateryna
Gumenko (UKR), Caroline Rosmo (NOR), Nur Shazrin Mohamad Latif (MAS), Celeste
Lugtmeijer (DOM) and Cecilia Wollman (BER) all in with a shot of the podium.
In the Boy's Byte CII, Chin took the lead from Pedro Correa after a solid
third day of racing that saw him take a 1-5-3, the best performance of the
day. Going into the last race Chin, on 33 points, has a slender lead over
Correa who has 37.
Nine points splits third to ninth with Rodolfo Pires (POR), Apiwat Sringam
(THA), Pavle Zivanovic (CRO), Alastair Gifford, Jonatan Vadnai (HUN), Justin
Vittecoq (CAN) and Henry Marshall (USA) all in with a shout of at least
bronze.


Attention Sailing Organizations & PR Agencies:
Add us to your distribution list, contact us today
|
|