US Sailing
Team Members Move Into Medal Contention
ATHENS, GREECE (August 19, 2004)
- Today's two races in the 470 men's class determined that
the USA's team of Paul Foerster (Dallas, Texas) and Kevin
Burnham (Miami, Fla.) will win at least a silver medal at
the 2004 Olympic Regatta for sailing. The duel for gold between
Foerster/Burhham and Great Britain's team of Nick Rogers and
Joe Glanfield, which the USA decisively toppled today from
its top spot on the scoreboard, will take place Saturday,
Aug. 21. There are only two points that separate the two teams
and both are untouchable by Sweden and Japan, which are tied
for bronze.
Oddly enough, Foerster and Burnham sailed their throwout today,
an 18th in race one, but followed it up with a fourth, while
Great Britain turned in race finishes of 10-19, the latter
of which they, too, took as a discard in their score line.
"We finally had a good start," said Foerster, a
two-time Olympic silver medalist (470 men's in 2000, Flying
Dutchman silver in 1992) about today's second race. "We
were ahead of the Brits there. Going up the beat we had a
spot where it was a life or death situation and we were able
to eek through, get the next shift and round in a decent spot.
On the next beat, Kevin hit the shift and we picked off four
more boats. That was great."
"In the first race there was a 30 degree shift to the
left that just never came back," said Burnham, who at
47 is the oldest member on the U.S. sailing squad and won
a 470 men's Olympic silver medal in 1992. "We waited
and waited and pretty soon we were running out of race track."
Foerster added that they'd been playing the middle because
"all of our practice here has said it doesn't pay to
go to the corners."
On Saturday, the key to gold for Foerster and Burnham will
not be winning the race over the 27 boats competing, but rather
finishing no worse than two boats behind the British no matter
where they are on the course. "It will be a good thing
to watch," said Burnham, "and it will show Paul's
ability to match race, which most people don't know about."
As Burnham watched the Greek 470 women's team sail into the
harbor to a cacophony of boat horns and flag waving (they
had just clinched the gold), he was asked if the spectacle
motivated him for the finals. "I don't need any extra
motivation," laughed Burnham, "Paul and I both have
silver medals. We want gold!"
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Photo
by Daniel Forster
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By an impressive margin, the
USA's 470 women's representatives Katie McDowell (Barrington,
R.I.) and Isabelle Kinsolving (New York, N.Y.) won their second
race of today after an eighth in race one to make huge gains
on the scoreboard. They are in sixth overall, with one race
to go on Saturday.
"There is no day like any other day here," said
Kinsolving, who said her team made a solid comeback in the
first race and had great upwind and downwind speed in the
second. "It's really exciting sailing against the best
competitors in the world and at moments being the best in
the world yourself. Saturday, we're going out to win the last
race."
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Photo
by Daniel Forster
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Finns and Ynglings also will have
their medal rounds on Saturday, but the Yngling gold already
has been claimed by Great Britain's Shirley Robertson, Sarah
Webb and Sarah Ayton. The USA's team of Carol Cronin (Jamestown,
R.I.), Liz Filter (Stevensville, Md.) and Nancy Haberland (Annapolis,
Md.) have a shot at sixth after moving themselves up to eighth
today from 12th yesterday. Today they finished seventh in the
first race and won the second. "We climbed up big; I just
wish we would have started that climb sooner," said Cronin.
After ten races in the Finn class, USA's Kevin Hall (Bowie,
Md./Ventura, Calif.) is in 14th place. He finished ninth and
17th today to climb up one position on the scoreboard from yesterday.
Europes and Lasers are well into their 11-race series now with
two races held today for each class. Meg Gaillard (Jamestown,
R.I./Pelham, N.Y.) fell to 11th today after finishing 11th in
the first race and sailing her throwout, a 16th, in the second.
Laser sailor Mark Mendelblatt (St. Petersburg, Fla.) had a disappointing
day, falling from fifth to 10th after posting a throwout 29th
and a 22nd. Both classes have three more races to sail.
Two ninth-place finishes helped 49er sailors Tim Wadlow (San
Diego, Calif.) and Pete Spaulding (Miami, Fla.) improve their
overall position from 13th yesterday to eighth today. With six
of 16 scheduled races under their belts, they were allowed the
first of two throwouts, which meant the 20 points from a premature
start yesterday were eliminated from their point total.
In Men's Mistrals, a single race today brought Peter Wells (La
Canada/Newport Beach, Calif.) up one notch on the scoreboard
to 24th with seven races to go, while in the women's division
Lanee Butler Beashel (Aliso Viejo, Calif.) fell two spots to
18th overall after two races. Wells finished 24th today. Beashel
posted finishes of 18-17. The 18th she uses as a throwout after
five races.
What's Next - For tomorrow, Friday, Aug. 20, racing continues
for Europes, Lasers and 49ers. The Mistral class will use what
was originally scheduled as a reserve day to catch up by two
races in men's division and one in women's. Saturday, Aug. 21,
will feature the medal rounds for 470 (men's and women's), Finn
and Yngling classes, while Tornado and Star classes newly kick
off their series. As well, the Mistral (men's and women's) class
will sail again, while Europes, Lasers and 49ers observe reserve
days.
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