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Poland claim first gold before Medal Races begin

Poland’s Agata Barwinska took the first gold of the 53rd Semaine Olympique Française de Hyères - TPM with a mastery of light winds, match racing and mathematics in the women’s ILCA 6. Dominik Buksak and Szymon Wierzbicki, who lead the 49er by 17 points should make it two golds for Poland tomorrow. The men in the ILCA 7 will have a very different time in what promises to be the tightest Medal Race on Saturday. It was another glorious day of unending blue skies in Hyères, but the shift right from 6-8-knot offshore northeasterlies to a bigger south-southwesterly breeze did not materialise and many struggled for consistency as they watched their podium places disappear. Everyone in the Medal Races tomorrow will be eyeing the weather nervously with strong westerlies forecast for the afternoon after very light conditions in the morning, will they arrive in time for the racing?

ILCA 6 and 7 - (women’s & men’s solo dinghy)

An early Gold for Poland

Women’s ILCA 6

Poland’s Agata Barwinska has won gold a day early! Leading France’s Marie Barrue by 21 points she is uncatchable in the Medal Race. Barwinska, starting the day with a 35-point lead, finished 20 & 14 in the two races of the day but was covering her rivals in both and did what she needed to do. Belgium’s Emma Plaaschaert, 4th at the Tokyo Olympics, was 21st in the first race and Sarah Douglas, the winner in Palma,  30th. Then Barwinska moved on to Barrue.

Agata Barwinska (speaking before the overall ranking has been confirmed): “I’m very much looking forward to tomorrow!

“It was an average day of results for me, but for me it was more about keeping an eye on the others because I had a big lead. In the first race I kept an eye on Belgium and Canada and in the last race it was all about keeping an eye on Marie Barrue. We finished very close, so that should be good, but for the final ranking.”

Four boats, three points or The British are coming!

Men’s ILCA 7

After a tumultuous day in light winds, the leaderboard dramatically concertinaed with just three points separating four boats. It is a winner-takes-all battle for top three of Philip Buhl, Pavlos Kontides, level on points and Michael Beckett, two points behind.

Following  his dispiriting Thursday, Britain’s Beckett bit back in fine fashion winning both of his races and leaving some big names in his wake. And his fellow Briton, Elliot Hanson, finished 3 & 2 and is very much in striking distance, one point behind Beckett.

Philipp Buhl, Germany’s 2020 World Champion had his toughest day of the regatta so far, finishing 29 & 19. But Australia’s Olympic champion, Matt Wearn, could not take advantage and was 14 & 15. He is in sixth place, 16 points behind Buhl. But if the front four get involved in a match race, do not write Wearn off getting on the podium. Kontides, the first Cypriot to ever win an Olympic medal (silver at London 2012), and the most experienced of the quartet, will fancy his chances.

Michael Beckett: “I didn’t feel like I was doing anything particularly badly yesterday, I was just making small mistakes that turned out to be really costly. Today, I managed to get rid of those small mistakes and suddenly everything fell into place and it was fantastic.

“I was starting a bit better, I got to the windward mark in the top 10 both times. In the first race I think I was ninth and in the second I led the whole way round.

“It’s just so much easier at the front; worst case scenario you lose a few and you’re still coming fifth, whereas a couple of mistakes in 20th can see you in 40th literally just like that. It’s ruthless.  

“I’m looking forward to tomorrow’s medal race. Elliott (Hanson) my team mate had an awesome day as well. I’ve been racing round with him all day.”

Philipp Buhl: “It wasn’t a great day, especially if your errors were right at the start. It helps to keep your lane for five minutes, or even two minutes.

“If you look at the results during the week it looks like I’m dominating, but you know there’s another two races which are exactly as much value like the ones before. Knowing how quickly it can go wrong and you can do one and then two average to bad races, I was always quite realistic. Obviously, I was hoping to do better than one discard and one average.

But I guess I’m still having a good week and still in the game.”

470 (mixed double-handed dinghy)

With only one race possible as the wind dropped off, Sweden’s Anton Dahlberg (silver in the Tokyo Olympics last year) and Lovisa Karlsson held onto their lead but saw it cut to just three points ahead of France’s Hippolyte Machetti and Aloise Retornaz going into the Medal Race. The Swedes were fifth in the race, the French third and Austria’s Lara Vadlau and Lukas Mahr won it to move into third place, seven points behind the Swedes. The big losers of the day were Germany’s Luise Wanser & Philipp Autenrieth who after finishing 13th in the last race on Thursday night were also 13th on Friday. Very unlucky for some. They are now 14 points behind the Swedes.

49er (men’s and women’s high-performance double-handed dinghy)

Women’s 49er FX

Everyone has been looking over their shoulders saying: “The Brazilians are coming!” Well, on Friday they arrived to seize control of the leaderboard, finishing 2, 1, 2 in their three races, as their rivals splintered around them in the light conditions.

Brazil’s double Olympic gold medallists (Rio 2016 & Tokyo 2020(21), Martine Grael and Kahena Kunze, look fully in control of their boat and the regatta now after the capsizes of the big winds on day one.

They lead by nine points from the Swedish duo of Vilma Bobeck and Rebecca Netzler, the overnight leaders, who finished 8, 5, 8 today and rather thank looking ahead will probably have a bigger battle to keep silver. America’s Stephanie Robe and Margaret Shea (6, 9, 7) are three points behind the Swedes in third, with Wednesday’s leaders, Norway’s Helene Noess & Marie Ronningen eight points further back.

Martine Grael:The Medal Races are normally a little bit tricky because when it’s double points it’s normally not just the first one behind you, you have to worry about the other ones as well. So, we have two boats that can still get us. It’s tricky, but we’re so happy because today was such a good day for us.

“We had a combo of good starts and good boat speed and that gave us choices on the race course, which today was quite important because it wasn’t fixed on one side. There were big pressure differences on both sides.

“We arrived the day before the race with no training at all. And we didn’t have a training sail so for us the first day with strong winds was a bit of a sufferance, because a first sail on fresh breeze is really challenging. So, we had a few capsizes and our morale was not so high. Then, slowly we had a good race here and there and were getting confidence as we climbed up the leaderboard.”

Men’s 49er

Poland should claim a second gold tomorrow with Dominik Buksak and Szymon Wierzbicki maintaining a 17-point lead over USA’s Nevin Snow and Maximiliano Agnello, with the Danish unable to maintain their charge from Thursday.

The Polish finished 9, 23, 9 in the three races, but because they have had such a solid week they were able to discard the 23. The Americans were third and fourth in the first two in the light, tricky winds, but the Buksak said they were watching them more closely in the in the last race where they finished 14th to leave them a mountain to climb. France’s Erwan Fischer and Clement Pequin finished the last race in 2nd, three points behind the Americans and should battle for the other two places on the podium as they are 16 points ahead of their fellow Frenchmen in fourth.

Dominik Buksak: “We didn’t want any fireworks today, but just to sail properly and we managed to be twice in the top 10 and we have a really low discard so it was enough to stay in the lead with the gap we had.

“During the first upwind we just wanted to be ahead of the fleet because it’s most important in these conditions. But on the last upwind we were looking around at our main opponents and especially in the last race we tried to stay between them.

“It’s a comfortable lead and we are feeling really good in all conditions. We’re feel very confident.”

Kitefoil  (men’s and women’s foiling kitesurfing)

Men’s

Singapore’s 15-year-old European champion, Maximilian Maeder, finished top of the leaderboard after finishes of 3, 2, 1, 2 in his four races on Friday and needs just one win in the Final Series tomorrow to take gold (see format below). France’s Axel Mazella (1, 1, 2, 3), silver medallist in the world championship last year, finished 15 points behind, but also qualifies straight to the final race.

Women’s

USA’s five-time and reigning world champion, Daniela Moroz, underlined her dominance before the Final Series with four wins out of four on Friday to make it 11 out of 20 this week. She finished 21 points ahead of France’s Laurianne Nolot, who was second in the last three races. That took her above fellow Frenchwoman Poema Newland and straight into the last race of Final Series tomorrow.

Final Series format:
The top 14 in the overall ranking go through.
Semi-finals: Two separate races for the riders ranked 3-14. They carry more points into the race depending on where they finished (1pt for the 3rd and 4th place in the overall ranking; 6pts for the 13th and 14th). The riders with the lowest score from the overall ranking added to their ranking in the semi-final race will go through to the final.

Final Series: 4 riders. The two winners of the semi-finals will face the two highest in the overall ranking. The semi-finalists, start with 0 points. The second place in the overall starts with 1 point and overall leader starts with 2 points. Riders get one point for each win in the Final Series. The winner is the first to three points. So, if the overall leader wins the first race they will take gold and the Final Series is over.

Nacra 17 (mixed double-handed hydrofoil catamaran)

Italy’s Olympic champions, Ruggero Tita & Caterina Banti, the coolest cats on the Cote D’Azur, look to have another gold in the bag with a 14 point lead over Britain’s John Gimson & Anna Burnet going into the Medal Race. Even the Italians found the conditions tricky and finished 1, 6, 4 in their three races, but the British duo could only close the overall gap slightly with 3, 5, 1.

Finland’s Sinem Kurtbay and Akseli Kiskenin struggled with 9, 1, 10 and are 16 points behind the British. But the podium is set with the New Zealand boat in fourth 27 points behind.

Ruggero Tita: “We will try to do our best, have a good start and be on top. It’s doesn’t feel easy [always being in the lead], as you can see today, we made some mistakes at the start and of course we paid for it. It’s a competitive fleet, for sure we have a little advantage in the foiling upwind, but this is going to disappear soon because everyone’s training hard and will find their speed.”

iQFOiL (men’s & women’s - new Olympic windsurfing class)

Men’s

France’s World and European champion, Nicolas Goyard, is has been completely dominant all week and is guaranteed a medal tomorrow but only gold will interest him. He added two more wins (in the only two races possible in light winds) on Friday to make it 11 wins in a row, finishing 29 points clear of fellow Frenchman Clémont Bourgeois. The Final Series (see format below) gives everyone in the top 10 a chance to fight their way through to one grand winner-takes-all final with three riders.

Women’s

Hélène Noesmoen, has been as dominant as her compatriot and fellow World and European champion, Goyard, and won both her races yesterday, making it 12 wins out of 16 this week, to finish 24 points clear of Poland’s Maja Dziarnowska, herself 17 points clear of third.

Final Series format:
The top 10 in the overall ranking go through
Quarter-final: One race. The seven riders ranked 4-10 overall compete. Top two go through.
Semi-final: One race. Four riders. The top two from the QF compete against 2nd and 3rd overall. top two go through
Final: One race, three riders. The top two from the SF compete against the 1st overall to decide the podium places.