Qualifying done at Laser Radial Worlds

Published on February 26th, 2020

Melbourne, Australia (February 26, 2020) – With all six qualifying races completed, the three pre-event favourites have established a clear lead at the 2020 ILCA Laser Radial World Championships after the fourth day of competition.

Rio Olympic champion, silver medallist at London, and three-times world champion, Marit Bouwmeester of the Netherlands, leads the star-studded field on seven points. Bouwmeester won all three races today, not finishing yet below third place in the series.

In second place is 2018 world champion, Emma Plasschaert from Belgium. She trails Bouwmeester by 10 points. In third is Anne-Marie Rindom from Denmark, also a three-time world champion and the bronze medallist from Rio. She trails Plasschaert by a single point.

After the light and stormy conditions allowed for only three races during the first three days, there were no such problems today as winds above 20 knots blew consistently from the south all afternoon. There were big waves, which made things hard for the less experienced sailors, and even the most hardened campaigners were feeling the effects by the end of the third race.

“This regatta is brutal,” was the comment from Marit Bouwmeester on hearing that tomorrow’s racing will start at 11am. “It’s nice to be into the finals, though, with all the top ones in the same fleet.”

When asked what her recovery strategy would be, she replied simply: “Food!”

Anne-Marie Rindom also commented on the effects of three races in cold and testing conditions. “I just ran out of energy,” she said, explaining her higher scores in races 5 and 6. “You definitely have to work for it in these conditions.”

While a small gap has now opened between the three leaders and the rest of the field, there is still just 14 points between third and tenth. After four races had been sailed, everyone was able to drop their worst performance, and this brought some of the fleet back into contention.

One such sailor was Alison Young of Great Britain, who began the regatta with a 21st, which she was able to discard. Her subsequent scores have been 6,4,4,2,5 which moves her into fourth place.

Rio silver medallist, Annalise Murphy of Ireland, also moved up after a poor start to the regatta. She was able to discard her opening day score of 38, which she followed with 9,1,9,7,2 to be fifth overall.

Josefin Olsen (SWE) started with a 36th but today’s scores of 3,1,3 moved her into seventh.

With Olympic selection at stake for many competitors, there are a number of fascinating boat-on-boat battles taking place further down the fleet.

One sailor who is knocking on the door of selection is 20-year-old Australian, Mara Stransky. The young Queenslander moved into the top 10 after race four, had a 14th in race five but recovered to score a fifth in the final race of the day. “I can’t believe I capsized three times today,” she said. “Twice in one race!”

Stransky will need a top 10 finish to win a place on the Australian Olympic team. She is currently fifteenth but only five points from tenth.

Tomorrow the top 53 sailors will go into Gold fleet, which will be the first time all the big names have raced each other at this regatta. Race Director Peter Merritt is hoping to again sail three races.

Olympic Qualification
Sarah Douglas (21st) fell hard today with a 18-13-16 but still leads a Canadian contingent that includes Clara Gravely (56th), Coralie Vittecoq (61st), and Maura Dewey (74th).

Five sailors represent the USA with the event as the final stage of the nation’s selection series. The top three all moved up today, led by Erika Reineke (17th) followed by Paige Railey (20th) and Charlotte Rose (28th). Railey’s day of 7-9-6 now has her leading selection with six points separating the trio.

Men’s Radial
The men were kept on shore to allow the women’s fleets to get their first two races sailed, but when they finally got underway there was no shortage of drama. There were nine black flag disqualifications in the first race and Australian Lawson McAullay managed to break his mast later in the afternoon. His explanation: “I got ran into.”

Russian Daniil Krutskikh consolidated his lead with another good day’s sailing, scoring a second place and a sixth (his discard) to be six points clear of Brazil’s Gustavo Nascimento, who moved two points ahead of Michael Compton (AUS).

Event informationRace detailsResultsFacebook

The racing schedule is from February 23 to 28.

Day Four Results:

Women (Top 10 of 105; 6 races, 1 discard)
1. Marit BOUWMEESTER NED 7
2. Emma PLASSCHAERT BEL 17
3. Anne-Marie RINDOM DEN 18
4. Alison YOUNG GBR 21
5. Annalise MURPHY IRL 28
6. Maud JAYET SUI 29
7. Josefin OLSSON SWE 29
8. Manami DOI JPN 29
9. Line FLEM HØST NOR 31
10. Magdalena KWASNA POL 32

Men (Top 10 of 66; 5 races, 1 discard)
1. Daniil KRUTSKIKH RUS 6
2. Gustavo CORREA NASCIMENTO BRA 12
3. Michael COMPTON AUS 14
4.Brody RILEY AUS 19
5.Frazer BREW AUS 28
6. Stefan ELLIOTT-SHIRCORE AUS 31
7. Zac LITTLEWOOD AUS 32
8. Nik PLETIKOS SLO 37
9. Ethan MCAULLAY AUS 40
10. Mario NOVAK CRO 40

Source: Roger McMillan/Laser 2020 Media

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