Buckingham returns to Olympic Games

Published on February 16th, 2020

Sandringham, Australia (February 16, 2020) – The 2020 Laser Men’s Laser Standard World Championships marked the conclusion for the US Team in their athlete selection for the Men’s One Person Dinghy event at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. Utilizing both the 2019 and 2020 Worlds, Charlie Buckingham (Newport Beach, Calif.) earned nomination for the team.

Overall, Buckingham had an up and down final event, and ultimately finished the 2020 Worlds in 18th place, but he did what was needed to win selection over fellow competitor Chris Barnard (Newport Beach, Calif.).

This will be Buckingham’s second time representing Team USA at the Olympics. He also competed at the Rio 2016 Games, where he finished 11th. “I’m super happy and proud to be able to represent the U.S. again and honestly a bit relieved,” he said.

Buckingham entered this regatta with an 18-point lead in the trials over Barnard, thanks to their results at the 2019 World Championship. Still, despite the comfortable gap, he’s grateful to be officially through the selection process.

“Olympic selection is a big step towards the main goal,” he shared. “Now that I’ve achieved that, I can focus on the real thing. So, I’m relieved I can start focusing on the Games”

With this event and Olympic selection under his belt, he’s looking forward to improving his lead-up and performance in Tokyo,

“I feel way more prepared this time. I’ve been to one Olympics already and that experience counts for a lot. I also feel that I’ve improved a lot as a sailor over the past four years, so I’m super excited for this Olympics.”

Though Chris Barnard had some impressive highlights throughout the quadrennial, he fell short of where he needed to be to beat Buckingham for the Games spot and finished this event in 30th.

“It was a tough week overall,” noted Barnard. “I had some really good moments, but I just couldn’t quite string the top scores together the way I wanted to. This event was always going to be an uphill battle with the deficit of the trials and just tried to give it my best effort. Unfortunately, the last two Worlds just didn’t go my way.”

Even though the two events that dictated selection weren’t Barnard’s strongest, he’s grateful to have some other notable accomplishments to look back on.

“There is a lot to be proud of,” said Barnard. “I’ve come a long way. I had some other good World results and winning Palma has been a good trophy to have on my bookshelf. That win will always be something I’m really proud of, looking back. I wanted to punch that Olympic ticket and represent Team USA at the Games, but that’s sport.”

US Sailing’s Olympic Head Coach Luther Carpenter (Cypress, Texas) agrees that both athletes have a lot to be proud of, “Charlie and Chris have turned a real corner in performance this quad, honing the magical combination of fitness, technique, and racing savvy, in an incredibly difficult discipline.

“Both of these U.S. Laser sailors have finished top-ten in multiple events this quad and have shown to themselves and other Americans what can be done with hard work, focused training, and determination. The Olympic Laser fleet is surely the definition of dinghy sailor excellence, and I’m proud of the progress Charlie and Chris, along with their coaches Diego Romero (GUA) and John Bertrand (San Mateo, Calif.), have accomplished.”

Carpenter looks forward to watching and supporting Buckingham as he prepares for the Games, “This final road to Enoshima presents more opportunity for Charlie, and I know he’s focused on his goal and dream – to win a Medal at the Olympics.”

In just one week, three more classes will face the final event of their trials. Racing at the 2020 Women’s Laser Radial World Championships will run February 23-28. Simultaneously, the Men’s and Women’s RS:X World Championships will run February 25-29.

Final Results (Top 10 of 124; 12 races, 1 discard)

Event detailsResultsFacebook

Source: US Sailing

In total, 124 boats from 43 countries competed on February 11 to 16 in which the field was split into three fleets for six qualifying races before another six races were held for Gold, Silver and Bronze fleets.

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