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Ainslie headline act for Finn Gold Cup in Melbourne

One of the
greatest showdowns in Olympic history is set to take place when the Finn
Gold Cup (world championship) gets underway at Sail Melbourne from January
20-29 on the challenging waters of Port Phillip.
To be held
simultaneously with the Finn Silver Cup (the Finn Youth World
Championship) and hosted by Black Rock Yacht Club, one of the world’s most
outstanding Olympic sailors will feature in a showdown for a place in the
British Olympic team for Beijing in 2008 and for the prize of the Gold
Cup.
Ben Ainslie, gold medallist in the
Laser at Sydney 2000 Games and in the Finn at the 2004 Athens Games, will
take on fellow British sailor Ed Wright, who feels he can defeat the
double medallist for selection.
Currently holding
a world ranking of No. 5 in the Finn, Wright’s feats include victory at
Skandia Go for Gold, third at the Breitling Regatta, fourth at Hyeres and
sixth at the ISAF Worlds, against Ainslie’s gold medal haul and four
successive Finn Gold Cup wins and match racing trophies.
With Ainslie tied
up at the America’s Cup, and therefore missing the 2006-07 Gold Cups, gold
still eluded Wright, who finished third in 2006 and sixth this year.
Whichever way it goes, it will be a huge stoush and not to be missed
viewing.
The Royal
Yachting Association has indicated Olympic selection between the two will
place at either the Sydney International Regatta or at the Finn Gold Cup
in January.
Olympic selection
is the main aim, but the two 30 year-old sailors will be keeping their
eyes on winning both events as well. And this is where the difficulty
lies. We have seen it all before in elite competition; combative tactics
that can leave both out of the running for the Championship prize.
To that end, the
gifted Ainslie says: “I’ll be sailing how I normally do and keeping my eye
on the whole competition.” He will face some talented sailor; defending
Gold Cup champion,
Rafael Trujillo Villar (ESP), along with second to fifth
placegetters, Pieter Jan Postma (NED), Gasper Vincec (SLO), Jonas Hoegh-Christensen
(DEN), Emilios Papathanasiou (GRE).
There’s also
Australia’s double Olympian Anthony “Nocka” Nossiter. The Sydney sailor
has put in Finn practice between America’s Cup commitments. New
Zealander, Dan Slater, has been putting in the hard yards for some good
results this past year.
John Bertrand,
Sail Melbourne Patron, America’s Cup winning skipper and double Finn
Olympian with a bronze medal from the 1976 Montreal Games says: “Ben is
an extraordinary sailor – two Olympic gold medals across two classes.
“He reminds me of
Paul Elvstrom (the Danish sailor dominated
Olympic Finn class sailing between 1948 and 1960, winning four consecutive
gold medals, competing at the Olympics as late as the 1988 Games and
considered the greatest sailor in Olympic history), and he
can read the wind
well and sails beautifully.”
However, Bertrand
grants, “Anyone can be beaten. Ben is a phenomenon, and those competing
against him have to make small gains. You need to be able to sail the
boat without constantly looking at your sails, by reading winds; having
some finesse, confidence and poise.”
Nossiter, already
selected for the Beijing Olympics, agrees that while Ainslie will be hard
to beat, he is beatable. “You have to be fast, accurate and bloody good
at match racing to beat Ben – and he’s great in all conditions; the
complete package.”
“I would have to
say that anyone who has previously won the Gold Cup has the capacity to
beat him. People like Raffa (Trujillo
Villar) and Jonas who won in 2006 – and both will be in Melbourne.
“The rest of us
are working on our weaknesses. I’m practicing my downwind work. I’m
getting my feel for it back. Downwind performance is important now that
we have the unlimited pumping rule, so that’s where I’m putting most my
energies at the moment.”
Bertrand says
there are noticeable differences since his heyday in the class. “Sailors
are stronger and much more athletic than when I was sailing a Finn. We
carried two weight jackets that weighed nearly 40 kilos. Because of them,
we couldn’t hike like they do today.
“Technology-wise,
they now have carbon fibre masts and better sail material. Finns have
moved a long way forward. ”
Keen to see the
Finns in action, Bertrand says: “It should be a memorable event; in fact
I‘m looking forward to watching all of the world championships at Sail
Melbourne.
The Finn Gold Cup
is one of five world championship events to be held at Sail Melbourne in
2008. To be hosted by Black Rock Yacht Club, which also hosted the Cup in
1995 and 1999; it will be sailed from 20-29 January on challenging Port
Phillip.
Only six Beijing
Olympic berths remain in the Finn, giving those nations that are yet to
qualify a final opportunity to do so in Melbourne and like Ainslie and
Wright, others will be vying for selection to their Olympic squads.
The race format is fleet racing on
offshore windward/leeward and windward/leeward-triangle courses. The 10
boats ranked highest in the series at the end will contest the
double-points medal race for the Championship medals.
Yachting Victoria
is the organising authority of the ISAF Grade 1 Finn Gold Cup. Nine race
days are scheduled from January 23, with one day reserved for re-sails,
following days for registration, measurement and a practice race.
Special thanks go
to sponsors:
State Government of Victoria; Parks
Victoria; Mercedes Benz; Helly Hansen; Bayside City Council; Mornington
Peninsula Shire Council; City of Kingston; Schenker Australia; Yachting
Australia; Ronstan International; Ribsport; Silver Marine
For all
information on the Finn Gold Cup, including current entry list, go to:
www.sailmelbourne.com.au
Di Pearson
Sail Melbourne media manager
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