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ISAF Sailing World Cup Hyeres: Finals underway, snakes and ladders for NZL

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Image Alex Maloney and Molly Meech in action on day three
© Thom Touw Photography 
http://photo.thomtouw.com

Day three at ISAF Sailing World Cup Hyeres brought champagne sailing with nice waves, sun and good easterly breezes returning some excellent results from most of the New Zealand contingent.

Four kiwi teams remain in the top five of their fleet, with a further four placed within the top ten as they head into day four of the six day regatta (and day two of finals).  

Alex Maloney and Molly Meech had their best day of the regatta yet opening the finals series with a race win, and backing that up with a 3rd and a 4th. The young skiff sailors move up the ranks again and now sit 2nd overall four points adrift of the leaders Dobson and Rook of Great Britain.

“Epic day on the water with three intense races in crazy waves,” reports Alex Maloney. “We had a good day, moving up the leader board, but there is definitely room for improvement. Pretty excited for similar conditions tomorrow.”

Paul Snow-Hansen and Daniel Willcox took a slide from 2nd place to 7th in the Men’s 470. Their coach Hamish Willcox describes how things unfolded;

“The boys made a couple of basic mistakes and paid dearly,” says Hamish Willcox. “Race one they were in 6th place around top mark and gained a place each leg of the course to be 3rd before the final run to the finish. Then, disaster as they capsized and lost nine boats and finished 11th.”

After a great start in race two Willcox and Snow-Hansen then chose the wrong side of the track, losing ground, and places to their rivals, to collect a 19th; “Still there is tomorrow to redeem themselves,” says their coach.

The kiwis are on 13 points, equal to the French crew in 6th position, and with three more days of racing they are well within reach of the leaders.

New Zealand has three representatives sitting top ten in the hotly contested Laser fleet including Sam Meech in 4th (13 points), Thomas Saunders in 5th (18 points) and Andy Maloney moving up to 10th (25 points).

While the top two places in the 113-strong fleet are unchanged after today, beyond that there was some serious shuffling in the standings with nearly all the top placed Laser sailors having at least one average result on the water coupled with the transition in scoring from qualifiers to finals.

While Meech lost one position (to Brazil’s Robert Scheidt), both Saunders and Maloney improved at least two places up the leader board. Maloney now enters the top ten as the regatta hits the midway mark and the points on offer really make a difference.

Super consistent so far Josh Junior continues to hold 4th place in the Finn class after placing 8th and 5th in today’s racing. On nine points he is just four adrift of the overall leader Pieter Jan Postma of the Netherlands.

The points behind Junior are tight and just three back, and in 7th place, is team-mate Andrew Murdoch.

Marcus Hansen and Josh Porebski have just had their best day of the regatta also, colleting their first race win, plus another top five finish in the 49er skiff event. The NZL Sailing Team duo rocket up the board; after lying 16th at the outset of day three Hansen and Porebski are now in 10th place as the pressure starts to mount.

Gemma Jones and Jason Saunders have opened the finals stage in fine form racing the Nacra 17 mixed multihull. The pair, who were lying 26th heading into today, clocked up a 5, 9, 6 scorecard and jump up to 13th overall.

Like the 49erFX the Nacra 17 is new to the Olympic programme marking the return of the multihull and offering a mixed female, male combination.

Both Jones and Saunders have represented New Zealand at ISAF Youth World Championships, and Saunders was one half of New Zealand’s Men’s 470 pair who finished 5th at the 2012 London Olympic Games. 

Jason Saunders, along with Sam Meech and Andy Maloney competing in the Laser fleet, will sail an AC45 as part of the NZL Sailing Team with Emirates Team New Zealand at September’s Red Bull Youth America’s Cup. 

Racing continues in Hyeres tomorrow with an increase in wind forecast. Each fleet has two more days of finals racing before the Saturday’s medal races and prize-giving.

ISAF Sailing World Cup Hyeres, 2013
New Zealand’s standings after day three

FINN
4th Josh Junior (4, 8, 5)
7th Andrew Murdoch (NZL Sailing Team) (5, 7, 8)

49ER
10th Marcus Hansen and Josh Porebski - 49er (NZL Sailing Team) (19, 17, 5, 1)

49ERFX
2nd Alexandra Maloney and Molly Meech - 49er FX (3, 1, 3, 4)

LASER
4th Sam Meech (NZL Sailing Team) (3, 18, 10)
5th Thomas Saunders (7, 11, 46)
10th Andy Maloney (NZL Sailing Team) (13, 12, 19
54th Andrew McKenzie (2013 NZL Yachting Trust Youth Team) (48, 52, 50)
99th Michael Cate (47, 35, 35)
111th Jack Collinson (50, 59, 54)
 

MEN’S 470
7th Paul Snow-Hansen and Dan Willcox (NZL Sailing Team) (2, 11, 19)
29th Francisco Lardies and Luke Stevenson (18, 32, 30)

NACRA17
13th Gemma Jones and Jason Saunders (26, 5, 9, 6)
21st Tomer Simhony and Nicole van der Velden (19, 28, 25, 15)

About ISAF Sailing World Cup Hyeres

The 2013 ISAF Sailing World Cup – Hyeres is set to take place 22-27 April where more than 800 sailors across ten Olympic and two Paralympic events will sail. After regattas in Melbourne, Australia, Miami, USA and Palma de Mallorca, Spain, the ISAF Sailing World Cup Hyères will bring the 2012-13 series to a close and will feature the world’s top sailors.

To reflect lessons and sailor feedback from ISAF Sailing World Cup Palma modifications have been made to the scoring format in Hyères. The Qualifying Series for ISAF Sailing World Cup Hyères has been shortened to two days. The first race of the Final Series shall be a non discardable carry forward race with points equal to a boat’s final rank in the qualifying series. Three days of Final Series racing then culminates in the Medal Stage where the 49er and 49erFX will sail three Stadium Races and the remaining eight fleets will sail two Medal Races.

About the NZL Sailing Team

NZL Sailing Team includes New Zealand’s top Olympic campaigners who share the ultimate goal to win Olympic medals for New Zealand at the Rio Games in 2016.

NZL Sailing Team sailors all started out at grass roots yacht clubs around the country and with commitment, dedication and drive have risen to be world class athletes; they work hard in the gym, train long hours on the water and are supported by great coaches.

Links

Yachting New Zealand website
ISAF Sailing World Cup Hyeres regatta website
NZL Sailing Team on Facebook

For more information contact

Jodie Bakewell-White
Communications Manager, Yachting New Zealand
E. jodie@yachtingnz.org.nz
M. 021 709 065

Image © Thom Touw Photography
http://photo.thomtouw.com