New Zealand sailors claim three medals in Palma
New Zealand sailors claim three medals in
Palma
New Zealand sailors made a successful start
to the European season, winning three medals at the Princess
Sofia regatta in Palma, the third-most of any nation at the
event.
Sam Meech collected
silver in the Laser, Alex Maloney and Molly Meech were
second in the 49erFX and Andy Maloney won bronze in the
Finn. Josh Porebski and Trent Rippey finished just outside
the medals, having to settle for fourth in the 49er.
Sam
Meech and Andy Maloney were virtually assured medals going
into the double points top 10 medal race and Meech capped
off his week by winning the final race. But Maloney and
Meech were in a dogfight with a handful of other crews for
the minor medals in the 49erFX and handled the pressure well
to claim silver - the same colour they won at the Rio
Olympics.
The pair started the day in third but moved up
a position on the back of a fourth to finish two points
ahead of Odile Van Aanholt and Marieke Jongens of the
Netherlands. Another Dutch combination, Annemiek Bekkering
and Annette Duetz, dominated the week, finishing 48 points
ahead of Maloney and Meech to win gold.
"Today was pretty
good," Maloney said. "We sailed pretty well upwind but went
from third to 10th on the first downwind. It was quite
shifty out there and difficult to get into pressure but
we've done really well backing ourselves and trusting our
instincts and managed to move up to second overall. There's
an element of luck in sailing and we felt a bit lucky to
finish where we did.
"We were a bit frustrated during the
week because we know what we are capable of but to have
these feelings and come away with second is a good start to
the season. We know we can do even better."
It was an
encouraging week for Andy Maloney, especially as it was just
his second major regatta since switching from the Laser to
the Finn. He won two races during the week and banked six
top-10 results which wasn't easy in a fleet of 73
boats.
Olympic champion Giles Scott of Great Britain was
a model of consistency to win gold, finishing ahead of
former Laser world champion Nicholas Heiner of the
Netherlands who also recently switched to the heavyweight
dinghy.
Maloney tried to mix things up with Heiner today,
given he still had an outside chance of winning silver, and
started well but made one mistake near the top mark to allow
Heiner to sneak ahead of him.
"I was stoked to come away
with a bronze, my first medal at a big event since making
the switch," he said. "I definitely made some mistakes,
especially early in the regatta when I wasn't sailing that
well. I learned a lot from those couple of days and managed
to get off to good starts, which I wasn't doing [at the
European championships] in Cadiz, and had good boat speed
and sailed smartly.
"It's definitely shown me that I can
mix it up with the top guys in the Finn fleet. It's proved
that, sailing at my best, I can win races and that's cool to
know."
Sam Meech has continued to prove he's one of the
world's top Laser sailors and highlighted that with a win in
the medal race. It was his third race win of the regatta and
he backed that up with nine top-10 finishes in 11 races but
it still wasn't enough to topple Australia's Matthew
Wearn.
The pair were standouts this week in the large
(183 boats) and competitive Laser fleet and handled the
difficult and shifty conditions the best.
Fellow Kiwi Tom
Saunders was seventh in the medal race and eighth
overall.
The 49er class came to a dramatic conclusion
with the top three teams all within four points of each
other. Porebski and Rippey couldn't quite get themselves
into that equation and were fifth in the medal race and a
very encouraging fourth overall.
Liv Mackay and Micah
Wilkinson were the only other New Zealand crew in action
overnight, finishing 10th in the Nacra 17 medal race and
10th overall.
Most of the 26-strong New Zealand
contingent who sailed in Palma will also compete at the
World Cup regatta in Hyeres in a fortnight and most will go
encouraged by what they produced at the first multi-class
European regatta of the season.
Great Britain's sailing
team collected the biggest haul of medals with five (one
gold, four silver), followed by the Netherlands (two gold,
one silver) and New Zealand (two silver, one bronze). The
Princess Sofia regatta is usually the biggest of the
European season in terms of numbers and attracted 870 boats
from 62 different and more than 1200
sailors.
Results and standings after the sixth
and final day of the Princess Sofia regatta in Palma
overnight (NZ
time):
Men's 470 (79
boats)
1st: Mathew Belcher /
William Ryan (AUS) 2 (13) 3 1 1 1 9 1 3 2 - 23
points
2nd: Deniz Cinar / Ates Cinar (TUR) 4 10 (UFD) 16
5 6 5 3 7 6 - 62 pts
3rd: Tetsuya Isozaki / Akira
Takayanagi (JPN) 4 (18) 2 1 18 11 12 4 10 4 - 66
pts
13th: Paul Snow-Hansen / Daniel Willcox (NZL)
9 12 14 2 (21) 17 20 12 1 - 87
pts
Wome's 470 (48
boats)
1st: Ai Kondo Yoshida /
Miho Yoshioka (JPN) 2 4 7 (12) 4 5 8 1 2 7 16 - 56
pts
2nd: Hannah Mills / Eilidh McIntyre (GBR) (19) 9 2 2
2 3 4 2 4 16 14 - 58 pts
3rd: Linda Fahrni / Maja
Siegentahler (SUI) 3 2 4 8 (16) 8 15 6 6 3 4 -
59
Silver
Fleet
29th: Courtney
Reynolds-Smith / Brianna Reynolds-Smith (NZL) 15 13 9 12 8 8
5 (DNC) 1 12 - 82
pts
49er (91
boats)
1st: Yago Lange / Klaus
Lange (ARG) 7 7 10 4 2 3 1 2 13 3 3 (15) 14 10 8 6 - 93
pts
2nd: Dylan Fletcher-Scott / Stuart Bithell (GBR) 12 1
5 1 1 2 19 4 1 6 9 1 (25) 17 3 14 - 96 pts
3rd: Mathieu
Frei / Noé Delpech (FRA) 95 4 1 8 18 3 8 2 3 12 1 2 10 11
(UFD) 12 2 - 97 pts
4th: Josh Porebski / Trent
Rippey (NZL) 10 8 13 4 3 12 6 5 3 10 7 17 1 1 (20) 10 - 110
pts
Silver
fleet
27th: Logan
Dunning Beck / Oscar Gunn (NZL) (15) 13 15 3 12 1 2 4 6 8 1
2 10 7 3 - 87
pts
49erFX (54
boats)
1st: Annemiek Bekkering
/ Annette Duetz (NED) 1 1 8 1 3 1 4 1 1 8 8 1 (15) 1 6 2 -
47 pts
2nd: Alex Maloney / Molly Meech (NZL) 2 13
1 3 12 7 12 6 4 9 (19) 9 2 4 3 8 - 95 pts
3rd:
Odile Van Aanholt / Marieke Jongens (NED) 3 5 5 9 2 12 16 7
7 2 5 5 1 (20) 4 14- 97 pts
Finn (73
boats)
1st: Giles Scott (GBR) 6
3 8 11 3 6 2 5 (17) 3 10 - 57 pts
2nd: Nicholas Heiner
(NED) 18 (21) 13 16 2 12 6 3 2 4 8 - 84 pts
3rd:
Andy Maloney (NZL) 16 (48) 19 6 7 1 13 14 1 6 12 - 95
pts
29th: Josh Junior (54) 38 37 24 4 9
29 17 43 31 - 232 pts
51st: Brendan
McCarty (NZL) 63 50 (BFD) 55 42 46 39 57 18 64 - 414
pts
63rd: Raymond Hall (NZL) (60) 17 54 57 48 60 39 57
(66) 64 STP STP - 481 pts
Laser (183
boats)
1st: Matthew Wearn (AUS)
5 2 6 (24) 2 1 5 4 4 14 12 - 55 pts
2nd: Sam
Meech (NZL) 1 2 5 8 4 1 22 (31) 9 10 2 - 64
pts
3rd: Tonci Stipanovic (CRO) 6 12 2 (20) 3 5
15 8 16 13 18 - 98 pts
8th: Tom Saunders (NZL)
(30) 6 1 9 25 14 19 1 24 1 14 - 114
pts
20th: George Gautrey (NZL) 27 8 19 7
36 6 35 (44) 20 5 - 163 pts
24th: Andrew McKenzie (NZL) 5
7 (43) 1 17 26 39 27 19 27 - 168
pts
Silver
fleet
165th: Matthew
Kempkers (NZL) 43 27 46 47 (DNC) DNC 43 18 18 41 - 327
pts
Laser Radial (113
boats)
1st: Anne-Marie Rindom
(DEN) 9 8 3 2 3 2 2 (22) 10 8 12 - 59 pts
2nd: Alison
Young (GBR) 6 7 9 4 7 1 23 (27) 11 2 4 - 74 pts
3rd:
Maria Erdi (HUN) 1 11 14 13 12 6 5 10 (DNC) 11 8 - 91
pts
20th: Susannah Pyatt (NZL) (40) 4 36 7 29 26
38 15 7 19 - 172 pts
44th: Olivia Christie (NZL) 12 40 14
28 8 45 33 35 42 (53) - 257
pts
Nacra 17 (47
boats)
1st: Ruggero Tita /
Caterina Banti (ITA) 1 1 3 6 1 3 2 2 1 (12) 5 2 1 4 3 16 -
51 pts
2nd: Ben Saxton / Nicola Boniface (GBR) 2 1 3 1 1
2 10 8 15 1 1 4 (18) 5 15 8 - 77 pts
3rd: Fernando
Echavarri / Tara Pacheco (ESP) 10 13 2 1 2 1 8 23 4 23 10 6
3 1 2 4 - 90 pts
10th: Liv Mackay / Micah
Wilkinson (NZL) 17 3 9 4 4 18 1 1 2 (20) 12 11 13 2 16 20 -
133 pts
13th: Gemma Jones / Jason Saunders (NZL) 5 14 4
10 3 8 6 13 16 5 16 1 20 11 (22) - 132
pts
Men's RS:X (118
boards)
1st: Pawel Tarnowski
(POL) 2 3 4 7 2 2 8 (18) 2 2 2 - 34 pts
2nd: Louis Giard
(FRA) 3 3 3 3 3 1 4 (7) 3 1 12 - 36 pts
3rd: Sebastian
Fleischer (DEN) 3 4 3 6 4 4 3 14 1 (21) 6 - 48
pts
Silver
fleet
83rd: Antonio
Cozzolino (NZL) 27 21 33 23 9 12 (UFD) 1 10 3 - 139
pts
Full results here