Paris 2024: Austria on top after 20 years

Published on August 8th, 2024

Marseille, France (August 8, 2024) – The Mixed Dinghy is one of 10 Sailing events held at the Paris 2024 Olympics. Using the 470 equipment, 19 nations completed a 8-race Opening Series on August 2-6, with the top 10 advancing to the Medal Race on August 7. When light air prevailed that day, the double-point Medal Race was postponed to today to finalize the cumulative results. Here’s the final report:

For all competition reports, click here.

Event detailsResultsNotice Board

Lara Vadlau and Lukas Maehr put in the performance of their lives to win gold. The Austrian pair impressed throughout the Opening Series, winning two races on their way to carrying a seven-point advantage into the decisive Medal Race.

Vadlau and Maehr lagged at the back of the fleet at the start of the final race, but recovered to move up the standings and cross the line in seventh, which was enough to secure Austria’s first Olympic gold in sailing since 2004.

“It feels very unrealistic still to have won a gold medal,” said Maehr. “We are still not ready to show all the emotions, we are still in racing mode a bit. It’s a big medal for us to give back to our country because we have a long sailing tradition and we’ve had wonderful sailors, successful sailors who are all cheering for us and helped us a lot in our last campaigns.”

The 470 boat has been in the Olympic Games since 1976, originally as an Open event before splitting into a Men’s and Women’s event in 1988. Change occurred again for Paris 2024 when it became a Mixed event.

Japan – Silver
Keiju Okada and Miho Yoshioka topped the rankings early on in the regatta, but were unable to sustain their success, entering the Medal Race in third place overall. Knowing they needed a strong race, the Japanese crew sailed impeccably and crossed the line in third, securing a silver after Spain’s Jordi Xammar and Nora Brugman dropped out of medal contention entirely with a ninth placed finish.

“This is a super medal,” shared Okada. “Our families, our coaches and all Japanese sailors cheered for us and every day it was midnight in Japan so the fans had no sleep, but they kept cheering for us. That gave us power in our sailing.”

Sweden – Bronze
Anton Dahlberg and Lovisa Karlsson also benefited from the Spanish crew’s result, moving up to take a memorable bronze after finishing fourth in the Medal Race.

“We are nothing but happy,” Dahlberg offered. “We kept it together when it mattered most and we are a strong team together. We trust each other and we managed to pull off a great Medal Race, but then we had a very important round in the second upwind.

“We’ve performed really well into the strong breeze and we knew the light wind would be challenging for us, but we just managed to do enough.”

Karlsson added, “We’ve been fighting so hard for this. We’ve been fighting all week and we’re so proud of what we did.”

To watch video replay, click here.

Final Results:
1. Lara Vadlau/ Lukas Maehr (AUT)
2. Keiju Okada/ Miho Yoshioka (JPN)
3. Anton Dahlberg/ Lovisa Karlsson (SWE)
13. Stuart McNay Lara Dallman-Weiss (USA)

Event detailsResultsNotice Board

Medal Count (G-S-B) – Eight of 10 events completed
Netherlands: 2-0-1
Italy: 2-0-0
Australia: 1-1-0
Israel: 1-1-0
Austria: 1-0-0
Spain: 1-0-0
New Zealand: 0-1-1
Sweden: 0-1-1
Argentina: 0-1-0
Cyprus: 0-1-0
Denmark: 0-1-0
Japan: 0-1-0
Great Britain: 0-0-1
France: 0-0-1
Norway: 0-0-1
Peru: 0-0-1
USA: 0-0-1

Source: World Sailing

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