US Sailing's Rolex Miami OCR Preview

US Sailing Center, Coral Reef YC, Biscayne Bay YC, and Lauderdale YC  ⋅  Miami, FL, US  ⋅  Jan, 24 2010  |   Coverage created by Chris Love


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The Miami Olympic Classes Regatta, or Miami OCR, is the US stop on the ISAF World Cup circuit, a seven month tour that takes the world's elite Olympic-hopefuls through Melbourne, AUS; Palma de Majorca, ESP; Hyeres, FRA; Medemblik, NED; Kiel, GER; and Weymouth, GBR, site of the 2012 Games.  In the US, it's a chance for developing sailors to test their skills against the world's best, and a chance to qualify for US Sailing Team AlphaGraphics.

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News & Updates

January 20, 2010

National Pride at Stake for World’s Best Olympic and Paralympic Sailors

by Marni Lane

 

Portsmouth, R.I. (January 20, 2010) – The world’s best Olympic and Paralympic sailors are counting down the days to US SAILING’s 2010 Rolex Miami OCR, the second of seven stops of the 2009-2010 International Sailing Federation (ISAF) Sailing World Cup and this year’s first showcase for the major talents looking to represent their countries at the 2012 Olympic/Paralympic Games in Weymouth, England. The event kicks off Sunday, January 24, with six days of racing beginning on Monday. This event annually draws elite sailors from around the world, and this year is no different: Approximately 640 registered sailors from 44 nations are ready to battle for medals on Miami’s Biscayne Bay.

 

“Our athletes on the US Sailing Team AlphaGraphics (USSTAG) have spent a lot of hours training and competing over the winter leading up to this event, and I know their hard work will pay off,” said High Performance Director Kenneth Andreasen (Tampa, Fla.). “We’ll see some tough competition across the fleets, so this will be a good test to see where our athletes stand -- and assess where they need to improve in order to win medals at the 2012 Games.”


The Rolex Miami OCR is not only an elite international competition but also an especially important regatta for American sailors hoping to qualify for the 2010 US Sailing Team AlphaGraphics, which annually distinguishes the top sailors in each Olympic and Paralympic class.


Andreasen and Olympic Coach Luther Carpenter (LaPorte, Texas) pointed to some of the American stand-outs, including 2008 Olympic Gold Medalist Anna Tunnicliffe (Plantation, Fla.) who has transitioned from single-handed fleet racing to skippering a Women’s Match Racing team of Molly Vandemoer (Redwood City, Calif.) and Debbie Capozzi (Bayport, N.Y.) in the new Elliott 6m. Women’s Match Racing will make its debut as an Olympic event at the 2012 Games. Tunnicliffe, who dominated the Laser Radial class over the past several years, is the current ISAF Rolex World Sailor of the Year and was just named US SAILING’s Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year for the second year in a row, as well as US SAILING’s SportsWoman of the Year for the second year in a row. 

“Anna knows what it takes,” said Carpenter. “She’s a strong athlete with an experienced team.” 


USSTAG’s Genny Tulloch (San Francisco, Calif.) and 2008 Olympian Sally Barkow (Nashotah, Wis.) will also skipper teams in the Elliott 6m, competing against 22 other teams, including those from France (skipper Claire Leroy is a 2007 and ’08 match racing world champion), Great Britain (skipper Lucy MacGregor was the winner of the recent Busan Cup), Sweden (skipper Anna Kjellberg was a bronze medalist at the ’09 ISAF Women’s Match Racing Worlds), and The Netherlands (skipper Renee Groeneveld with crew Annemieke Bes and Brechtje van der Werf won Sail for Gold in 2009, while a second skipper Mandy Mulder was NED’s 2008 Olympic Silver Medalist in the Yngling).


Overall, the Dutch are expected to come on strong across many classes. Last November, the Royal Dutch Sailing Federation presented its new Delta Lloyd Kernploeg, an elite program that has grown from six sailors to 18 in six different Olympic classes. The federation’s long-term ambition is to compete in all ten Olympic yachting classes during the 2020 Games with a fighting chance to win a medal in each class. During the Rolex Miami OCR, all 18 sailors of the “Delta Lloyd Team NED” will compete, including the match racing team of Groeneveld/Bes/van der Werf; Laser sailors Roelof Bouwmeester, Marc de Haas, Gijs Pelt; Laser Radial sailor Marit Bouwmeester (fourth at the 2009 Worlds and first at 2009 Sail Melbourne); the Women’s 470 teams of Lisa Westerhof/Lobke Berkhout (2009 World Champions) and Margriet Fokkema/Marieke Jongens (second at 2009 French Sailing Week in Hyeres); the Men’s 470 teams of Sven and Kalle Coster (first in ISAF’s world rankings) and Steven LeFevre and Steven Krol (the 2008 Junior World Champions); and RS:X sailor Dorian van Rijsselberge (third at the 2009 Worlds).


Skandia Team GBR, with the 2012 Olympics slated for its own backyard in Weymouth, has incentive to build on its already formidable reputation as a powerhouse in sailing.


“Competing at a home Olympic Games is a once-in-a-lifetime experience for any athlete,” said the Royal Yachting Association’s Olympic Manager Stephen Park, “and certainly it’s something which every day motivates our sailors and the support team around them to be the best they can be.”


Park said GBR’s windsurfer Nick Dempsey, who will compete in Miami, is a great example of that drive and determination to succeed on home waters. “After the heartbreak of placing fourth in Beijing, his sole focus in 2009 was to become the RS:X World Champion in his hometown of Weymouth.  And that’s exactly what he did, laying down an early marker that he’s the man to beat come 2012.”


In the Men’s 470 class, GBR’s Nick Rogers, with two Olympic silver medals to his credit, will be sailing with his new campaign partner Pom Green. Teammates Nic Asher and Elliot Willis, who are two-time 470 World Champions, are certain to provide some stiff competition, since they have been working hard to make sure they get their chance at an Olympic medal after missing out on the team berth for Beijing.


“For others, there have been new challenges along the road to Weymouth,” continued Park. “With the Yngling having been removed as an Olympic class, those sailors are weighing up their options, while Penny Clark has made the switch to the 470 from the Laser Radial.” Park notes that a strong contingent of his country’s Finn sailors -- Giles Scott, Andrew Mills and Mark Andrews -- has signed up for the Rolex Miami OCR.


“With the talent we have within the team and the groundwork we’re putting in place, there’s no reason why we shouldn’t be looking for another great Olympic regatta in 2012, and hopefully we’ll inspire our next generation of medal winners in the process!”


In the Rolex Miami OCR’s three Paralympic classes – 2.4 mR, SKUD18 and Sonar – the fleets may be relatively small compared to the Olympic events, but they are deep with talent. “We may not have quantity, but we definitely have quality,” said USSTAG’s Paralympic Coach Betsy Alison (Newport, R.I.).
 

The current 2.4 mR World Champion and 2008 Paralympic Bronze Medalist John Ruf (Pewaukee, Wis.) will once again faceParalympic Gold Medalist Paul Tingley (CAN) and 2009 IFDS Disabled Sailing World Champion Thierry Schmitter (NED). Alison also predicts the competition will be tight at the front end of the SKUD-18 fleet, where she expects to find USSTAG’s Scott Whitman (Brick, N.J.) and Julia Dorsett (West Chester, Pa.), who were undefeated at last year’s Rolex Miami OCR and who won a gold medal at Sail for Gold last summer, and GBR’s John McRoberts and Brenda Hopkin, who won a bronze medal at the 2008 Paralympic Games.


The Rolex Miami OCR hosts the same 10 Olympic and three Paralympic classes chosen for the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Sailing Competitions.  At the same time, it closely replicates the format and feel of what sailors can expect at those regattas. The classes are: Laser Radial (women), Laser (men), Finn (men), Men’s RS:X, Women’s RS:X, 49er (men), Men’s 470, Women’s 470, Star (men) and Elliott 6m (women), 2.4mR (open, able and disabled), SKUD18 (mixed, disabled) and Sonar (open, disabled).

 

The Rolex Opening Ceremony takes place at Coral Reef Yacht Club on Sunday, January 24. Staggered-start racing is scheduled for Monday through Friday in all Olympic and Paralympic classes.  For fleet racing in the Olympic classes, the event will include a double-point medal race on Saturday. The top ten finishers in the opening series of each event will advance to the medal race. Competitors in the Paralympic classes will have five days of fleet racing and no medal race. For the five-day women’s match racing event, the regatta will consist of an opening series, a knockout series, and a sail-off for boats not advancing to the knockout series.


Medals will be awarded to the top three boats in each Olympic and Paralympic event on Saturday, January 30, at the Rolex Awards and Closing Ceremony at Coral Reef Yacht Club.

Regatta Headquarters will be located at the US Sailing Center Miami, an official Olympic training center, in the Coconut Grove section of Miami, Fla. Event organizers have partnered with the city of Miami to provide world-class venues for competition. Additional hosts for the event include Coral Reef Yacht Club, Key Biscayne Yacht Club, Coconut Grove Sailing Club, Miami Rowing Club and Shake-a-Leg Miami. These sailing organizations host classes onshore, as well as help run the on-the-water racing. The Coral Reef Yacht Club also hosts the Opening and Closing Ceremonies. In addition, the University of Miami Hospital will provide on-site medical care during the event. 

 

In addition to title sponsor Rolex Watch U.S.A., US SAILING’s 2010 Rolex Miami OCR is also sponsored by AlphaGraphics, Atlantis WeatherGear, Sperry Top-Sider, Harken, Team McLube, and the University of Miami Hospital.

 

A complete roster can be viewed at the event web site, rmocr.ussailing.org, where real-time regatta results, photos and updates will be posted daily once racing begins. Video highlights, produced by T2Productions, will air Wednesday through Saturday and can be viewed on the event web site. Fans can also visit the Facebook fan page and Twitter page.

 

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January 6, 2010

Returning Champions

by Marni Lane

At this year’s Rolex Miami OCR, Great Britain’s Lucy MacGregor and her Women’s Match Racing team will set out to defend their 2008-2009 ISAF Sailing World Cup title, as will fellow Brit Nick Thompson, who won the last year’s Laser World Cup title.

“OCR is the first event of 2010 for the majority of people, so it’s the first chance to see how the winter training has gone, and it’s a good gauge for the year ahead,” said Thompson. “The competition is always tough.”

“In Miami, you get a good mix of racing conditions; it can throw anything at you, like we saw last year,” he added. “It’s a really tough event, which makes it stand out from some of the others.”

Rolex Miami OCR is also important to US Sailing Team AlphaGraphics (USSTAG) members such as Stu McNay and Graham Biehl, who recently finished second in the Men’s 470 at Sail Melbourne for the second year in a row. “We want to perform well at the Rolex Miami OCR because it’s the only [ISAF] Sailing World Cup on our home turf and we want to back up our silver medal at Sail Melbourne,” said Biehl. Sail Melbourne was the first event of the 2009-2010 ISAF Sailing World Cup, and McNay and Biehl scored 19 points towards their overall ISAF Sailing World Cup Standings. The team finished second in the ISAF Sailing World Cup standings in 2008-2009.

“I think OCR is going to be a great opening event for me,” said USSTAG teammate Paige Railey, who won a silver medal in the Laser Radial at last year’s Rolex Miami OCR, as well as gold medals at two other 2009 ISAF Sailing World Cup events, Kieler Woche in Germany, and the Trofeo SAR Princess Sofia MAPFRE in Palma, Spain. “I’m going to work on some new techniques, and I am interested to see how they will pan out.”

Aside from its importance on the world stage, US SAILING’s 2010 Rolex Miami OCR is crucial for American sailors in that it’s the last qualifying event for the 2010 US Sailing Team AlphaGraphics, which will select the top sailors in each Olympic and Paralympic class.


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