Kiwi crew out to win medal race at 470 world champs
Kiwi crew out to win medal race at 470 world champs
Paul Snow-Hansen and Dan Willcox will look
to win tonight's medal race to finish the 470 world
championships in Greece on a good note after they dropped
out of medal contention overnight (NZ
time).
The Kiwi pair went into
the penultimate day in fourth but a 27th on the third and
final race overnight saw them drop to ninth and out of medal
contention.
It was an unfortunate result for last year's
world championship silver medallists who had otherwise
sailed a consistent regatta with eight top-10 scores. But
they were left rueing a disqualification from one race when
they were trapped between two boats and caught over the
startline, meaning every other score counted because they
had used up their discard.
They were 10th and 13th in the
days other races.
"In the first two races we executed
pretty well and scored two keepers but got our tactics wrong
in the third race and couldn't find a way to catch up,"
Willcox said. "Unfortunately, we didn't end the way we
wanted to today and we have dropped back to ninth.
"Our
main goal tomorrow is to go out and win the medal race and
end up on a good note and see how much we can bump up the
leaderboard, so all go tomorrow."
It was a day of big
gains and losses throughout the rest of the competition as
teams scrapped at the top of the leaderboard and others
battled to make the medal race. The winds off Thessaloniki
blew between 8-14 knots but the overcast conditions meant it
was quite shifty.
The lead changed hands for the first
time in the men's fleet when the Swedish pair of Anton
Dahlberg and Fredrik Bergstrom were 21st in the second race
but they bounced back to win the last race of the day to
hold a one-point advantage over Australians Mat Belcher and
Will Ryan.
it means whichever team finishes in front
tonight will win the world title. Austria's David Bargehr
and Lukas Mähr are in a strong position to claim
bronze.
Poland’s Agnieszka Skrzypulec and Irmina
Mrózek Gliszczynska have guaranteed themselves either gold
or silver in the women's fleet with a 16-point advantage
over Great Britain's Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre. They
could afford one slip-up overnight having finished in the
top three of every race in the first four days so no damage
was done when they finished 19th in one race overnight.
There are no Kiwi crews in the women's fleet with Jo
Aleh taking a year out from the 470 and Polly Powrie having
retired from Olympic sailing.
Results after the
fifth day of the 470 world championships in Thessaloniki,
Greece, overnight
(NZT)
Men
1.
Anton Dahlberg / Fredrik Bergstrom (SWE) 1 2 1 1 2 2 3 18 4
(21) 1 - 35 points
2. Mathew Belcher / Will Ryan (AUS) 4
4 1 1 3 9 1 (10) 7 1 4 - 36 pts
3. David Bargehr / Lukas
Mähr (AUT) 3 3 4 1 3 (25) 2 4 17 4 19 - 60 pts
9. Paul
Snow-Hansen / Daniel Willcox (NZL) 3 7 6 9 3 8 (UFD) 7 13 10
27 - 93 pts
Women
1.
Agnieszka Skrzypulec / Irmina Mrozek Gliszczynska (POL) 3 3
3 2 2 2 3 3 (19) 3 4 - 28 pts
2. Hannah Mills / Eilidh
McIntyre (GBR) 1 1 1 5 3 (14) 9 11 1 6 6 - 44 pts
3. Tina
Mrak / Veronika Macarol (SLO) 3 1 1 3 14 (16) 7 5 6 1 9 - 50
pts