Wind fades

As Brits lead Sonars on day two of the Rolex Miami Olympic Classes regatta

Wednesday January 26th 2005, Author: James Boyd, Location: United States
Disabled sailing got the spotlight on Biscayne Bay today as the two classes chosen for the 2008 Paralympics-the Sonar and the 2.4 Metre-completed a second day of competition at US Sailing's Rolex Miami OCR and as Shake-A-Leg Miami, one of the regatta's hosts, announced the launching of TeamParadise. The Rolex Miami OCR, which has returned to Miami for 16 consecutive years, is devoted to preparing disabled and able-bodied sailors for elite-level competition and is the largest Olympic and Paralympic classes regatta in the country. Over 320 sailors, representing 26 countries, are competing through Friday.

Before today's single race in the Sonar class, the British crew that finished sixth at the Paralympics in Athens - John Robertson, Steve Thomas and Hannah Stodel - had to return to the dock for a mast repair. They accomplished it in time to make a delayed start and maintained their fleet lead from yesterday after winning. The American team of David Schroeder, Keith Burhans and Bradley Johnson, currently in second after finishing second to the Brits today, welcomed the chance to sail against their closest competition. "They've worked together five years and are well-oiled," said Burhans. "All of us others are just putting together our teams." Burhans, a Paralympian from 2000 who calls tactics on the boat, explained that he and Schroeder have sailed only two other times together and Johnson, who won a bronze medal for the USA in 2004 as crew in the Sonar, was a new teammate for them both. "All things considered," said Burhans, "we're highly pleased with the level of our sailing."

Disabled sailors are given a classification rating-from 1 to 7, most to least disabled--based on their stability, strength and functionality in the boat. A Sonar team can share no more than 14 points in total.

Disabled sailors everywhere got a boost when Shake-A-Leg Miami (SALM) announced this morning its launching of TeamParadise and its plan to utilise the talents of acclaimed Olympic medallists and world champions to create an advanced sailboat-racing program dedicated to elite disabled and blind sailors from around the globe. The program, which will be headquartered from the SALM facility near the US Sailing Center in Coconut Grove, gets its lead energy from local Magnus Liljedahl, who brought home a gold medal for the USA from the 2000 Olympic Star event.

According to Liljedahl: "Some of the really promising disabled sailors don't get the opportunity for input from able-bodied sailors, and their learning curve is flat. World-class sailors such as Freddy Loof, Augie Diaz and Kevin Burnham have committed to spending time with the program and acting as ambassadors globally."

In the 2.4 Metre class, Sweden's Stellan Berlin is leading, with Canada's Allan Leibel in second.

Other Action

All but two of the 11 Rolex Miami OCR classes were deprived of at least one of their scheduled races today due to a dying afternoon breeze and the 49er class did not race at all. Across the board, there were no lead changes from yesterday.

USA's 2004 Olympic Silver Medallists John Lovell/Charlie Ogletree posted two first-place finishes today giving them three victories in four races so far. "The wind was shifty and puffy, but we sailed in the ocean instead of in Biscayne Bay, so it was really great-no motor boat traffic and a ground swell instead of flat water." Multiple world champion and 2004 Olympians Roland Gabler with crew Gunnar Strukmann (DEN) are Lovell and Ogletree's closest competition, trailing by six points.

Turning in a 1-4 today were the 2004 ISAF Women's Match Racing World champions Sally Barkow, Carrie Howe and Deborah Capozzi in Ynglings. "It's being patient, confident and in the right spot for the setup after the start that is important in this fleet," said Howe.

In addition to Rolex, sponsors for the Rolex Miami OCR are Nautica, Sperry Top-Sider, Team McLube and Zodiac. Regatta Headquarters for the 2005 Rolex Miami OCR are at the US Sailing Center, with classes hosted by the US Sailing Center; Coral Reef, Key Biscayne and Miami Yacht Clubs; the Coconut Grove Sailing Club; and Shake-A-Leg-Miami.

Top three results

Finn (26 boats)
1. Christopher Cook, CAN, 2-1-4-2, 9.00
2. Kevin Hall, Bowie, Md., USA, 1-4-6-1, 12.00
3. Soren Holm, DEN, 3-2-9-3, 17.00

470 Men (11 boats)
1. Sven Coster/Kalle Coster, NED, 1-2-1-2, 6.00
2. Mike Anderson-Mitterling/David Hughes, San Diego/San Diego, Calif., USA, 2-3-2-7, 14.00
3. Stuart McNay/Graham Biehl, Chestnut Hill, Mass./San Diego, Calif., USA, 3-5-3-9, 20.00

470 Women (9 boats)
1. Amanda Clark/Sarah Mergenthaler, Shelter Island, N.Y./Matawan, N.J., USA, 5-1-4-1, 11.00
2. Henriette Koch/Lene Sommer, DEN, 4-4-5-6, 19.00
3. Allison Jolly/Isabelle Kinsolving, St. Petersburg, Fla./New York, N.Y., 9-9-11-3, 32.00

49er (17 boats)
1. Morgan Larson/Pete Spaulding, Capitola, Calif./Miami Beach, Fla., USA, 1-1-1, 3.00
2. Dalton Bergan/Zack Maxam, Seattle, Wash./Coronado, Calif., USA, 4-2-2, 8.00
3. Rodion Luka/George Leonchuk, UKR, 2-3-4, 9.00

Laser Full (46 boats)
1. Brad Funk, Belleair Bluffs, Florida, USA , 2-1-2-3, 8.00
2. Andrew Campbell, San Diego, Calif., USA, 4-4-4-2, 14.00
3. John Pearce, Ithaca, N.Y., USA, 10-2-1-4, 17.00

Laser Radial (24 boats)
1. Paige Railey, Clearwater, Fla., USA, 1-3-2, 6.00
2. Anna Tunnicliffe, Norfolk, Va., USA 3-6-1, 10.00
3. Leah Hoepfner, Corpus Christi, Texas, USA, 6-1-5, 12.00

Star (40 boats)
1. Andrew Horton/Brad Nichol, Newport, R.I./Hanover, N.H., USA, 3-1-8-3, 15.00
2. Eric Doyle/Brian Sharp, Costa Mesa, Calif./Franklin, Mass. USA, 6-2-11-2, 21.00
3. Fredrik Loof/Anders Ekstrom, SWE, 7-6-5-4, 22.00

Tornado (11 boats)
1. John Lovell/Charlie Ogletree, New Orleans, La./Kemah, Texas, USA, 2-1-1-1, 5.00
2. Roland Gabler/Gunnar Strukmann, DEN, 1-2-5-3, 11.00
3. Rob Parrish/Lars Guck, Hillsborough, Calif./Bristol, R.I., USA, 3-5-3-4, 15.00

Yngling (8 boats)
1. Sally Barkow, Deborah Capozzi, Carrie Howe, Nashotah, Wis./Bayport, N.Y./Grosse Pointe, Mich., USA, 1-1-(6)-1-4, 7.00
2. Carol Cronin, Kate Fears, Jaime Haines, Jamestown, R.I./Washington, D.C./Newport, R.I., USA, (5)-2-1-2-2, 7.00
3. Felicity Clarke, Kari McKay, Joanne Abbott, CAN, 4-(8)-2-3-5, 14.00

2.4 Metre (18 boats)
1. Stellan Berlin, SWE, 2-1-1-4, 8.00
2. Allan Leibel, CAN, 3-3-6-3, 15.00
3. Marko Dahlberg, FIN, 1-4-7-5, 17.00

Sonar (7 boats)
1. John Robertson/Hannah Stodel/Steve Thomas, GBR, 1-1-1, 3.00
2. David Schroeder/Keith Burhans/Bradley Johnson, Miami, Fla./Rochester, N.Y./Hollywood, Fla., USA, 3-2-2, 7.00
3. Rick Doerr/James Leatherman/Michael Ross, Clifton, N.J./Glen Arm, Md./Leucadia, Calif., USA, 2-4-3, 9.00

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