Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Yachting. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Yachting. Mostrar todas las entradas

domingo, 9 de septiembre de 2012

Stephen Park backs GB sailors - Yachting World

RYA Olympic team manager Stephen Park believes Team GB's Paralympic sailors will be on the podium

Stephen Park, RYA Olympic team manager, is backing Team GB's sailors to forget about the disappointment in China and claim Britain's first ever full Paralympic sailing medal at the London 2012 Games.

Helena Lucas (2.4 Metre one-person keelboat), Alexandra Rickham and Niki Birrell (SKUD two-person keelboat) and John Robertson, Hannah Stodel and Steve Thomas (Sonar three-person keelboat, all pictured) make up the six-strong team - the same six sailors who represented Britain at Beijing four years ago.

In 2008 the crews had high hopes of winning medals. In the run-up they had won major titles, including World Championships, but it was not to be in China.

Stephen Park explained: "The sailors came back after Beijing really quite disappointed they hadn't managed to come home with a medal. When we came back, everyone sat down and said 'This is just not good enough', both from a sailors' perspective, let alone a World Class programme and RYA perspective.

"Immediately we set out on that four-year journey to try to re-establish what was required at the Paralympics and particularly that is about performing under pressure.

"The sailors have done a huge amount of work with the coaches and support staff over the last four years to put themselves in a stronger position where they feel more confident with what they are going to have to deal with at London 2012.

"One of the things with Paralympic sailing is you tend to have smaller fleets than at the Olympics and you don't have a double-points medal race, so you need to come fairly quickly out of the blocks and get some good results on the board.

"You can't afford to have any high scores and hope it all evens out over the course of the week because there could be one or two performers who are performing so far ahead of the rest of the field that they never have a bad day and you can never catch up."

Between them, Britain's sailors have won nine World Championship medals since 2008 - Rickham and Birrell clinched four world titles in the SKUD. On the final day of racing at the ISAF World Cup event for Paralympic classes in Weymouth and Portland (June 2012), the British Team won two gold and one silver medal.

"The way we look at it is our Paralympic sailors have got special needs, our Olympic sailors have all got special needs; the only difference is the needs are different," continued Park.

"Our point is sailing is a sport for all, a sport for life and the fact some people have got some disability is a side aspect to the performance itself. We regard them all as elite athletes, that is what they are, and we therefore provide them with the same level of service and we expect the same level of sacrifice, commitment and dedication from our Paralympic sailors as we do our Olympic sailors."

More information:

The first Paralympic sailing demonstration event took place at Atlanta 1996 in the Sonar three-person keelboat (plus reserve). The British crew of Andy Cassell, Kevin Curtis, Tony Downs and Ian Harrison won gold. But a Paralympic medal has eluded Britain since sailing joined the full Paralympic programme at Sydney 2000.

The London 2012 Paralympic Sailing Regatta runs from Saturday 1 September to Thursday 6 September.

Each class completes a series of 11 races. The sailors accrue points depending on where they finish in a race (ie: 1st = 1 point, etc). The boat with the lowest overall score at the end of the series wins gold.

Two races per day are scheduled for each class from 1 to 5 September, with one race for each class on the final day (6 September). Racing is scheduled to start at 11:00 daily.

Paralympic Sailing Day 3 round-up - Yachting World

After six races, GBR Helena Lucas leads the way

2.4mR

Two race wins propelled Helena Lucas into gold medal position in the 2.4 Metre one-person keelboat class at the halfway point of the London 2012 Paralympics. She holds a nine-point advantage over nearest rival Heiko Kroger (GER) as her back-to-back race victories, coupled with the fact that the sailors have now completed five races and can eliminate their worst score of the series, saw her manoeuvre into pole position at the head of the fleet with five races to come.

After a two-hour postponement waiting for the breeze to arrive in Portland Harbour, triple World Championship medallist Lucas, who has lived in Portland in preparation for this event, made the most of the light breezes in the harbour today. But she insists she had a valuable lesson in taking nothing for granted reinforced at this summer's Olympics when the Star team of Iain Percy and Andrew Simpson saw a gold medal - and a seven-point lead - disappear in a crushing final race flash.

Lucas said: "I couldn't have asked for more than that today, I'm just really, really pleased. But I'm absolutely not thinking about where that has left me. I've managed to get a nine point lead having done six races so with five races to go it would be quite easy to lose that nine point lead. I'm certainly not getting carried away.

"You look at what happened to Perce and Bart at the Olympics, when they led the whole regatta. Anything can happen. You can easily have a bad day or something goes wrong. It is great to have a bit of a cushion at the moment but I'm fully aware that that can get eroded very quickly."

SKUD18

Alexandra Rickham and Niki Birrell insist consistency will be key as they sit just a point off gold in silver medal position as the event enters the business end.
They picked up a stunning race win and a solid third in the light conditions to put themselves a point behind the Australian leaders, Dan Fitzgibbon and Liesl Tesch, and with a point advantage over the Americans, Jen French and J-P Creignou.

The Brits, who have won the last four World Championships, have prided themselves on their consistency across all conditions in recent years, something that definitely helped today, as light fluky breeze provided the sailors with the double test of keeping the boat going fast while contending with big swings in wind direction.

Rickham said: "Over the last couple of years consistency has been our strength so we like regattas where we get a mix of conditions because where other boats may excel in certain conditions we try to keep it going steadily in all of them. We enjoy a bit of a play in light winds and it served us well today."

Birrell added: "A lot can go right and wrong but it's vital that we stay within a point of the leaders because we don't want to be starting Thursday any more than a point behind, we need to keep it in our own hands until then and if we can do that we will be happy. We have done four years of continuous hard work so we are not going to change anything now. There is a lot of concentration needed but winning is definitely possible and while it is possible I'll still have a smile on my face."

Sonar

The British Sonar team insist it is "Game on!" as they sit just four points outside the medal zone at the halfway point despite a tricky day three on the water. John Robertson, Hannah Stodel and Steve Thomas started the day confidently with a solid fourth place but admit they did not meet their own high standards in the second race of today, coming 13th.

With the discard kicking in after the first race of today, the Sonars do not currently count that 13th. With everyone bar the Dutch leaders seemingly struggling for consistency in the opening half of the event, the Brits are certainly not about to start panicking about sitting seventh overall at this stage.

Thomas said: "We are only halfway through the regatta and if you look at the last two day's results they are all over the place with everyone up and down so it's just all about keeping sane, keeping logical and keeping on fighting. Our boat speed is good, we are starting well, we just need a break or two and we will be there."

Robertson added: "It's tough; it's a Paralympic Games so it's not going to be easy. We always try our best but it is hard work and we will keep working hard. The Dutch boat could have two 12ths tomorrow then we could be right back in the mix for gold."

Popular Posts