Please select your home edition
Edition
Feb-Nov23 Leaderboard TEMO2

Sail-World NZ - August 3: Olympic Newsletter from Tokyo2020 Olympic Sailing Regatta

by Richard Gladwell, Sail-World.com/nz 2 Aug 2021 12:37 UTC 24 July 2021
Tokyo2020 - Day 4 - July, 28, - Enoshima, Japan. Peter Burling and Blair Tuke (NZL) © Richard Gladwell - Sail-World.com / nz

Welcome to Sail-World.com's New Zealand Olympic editon e-magazine for August 3, 2021

Greetings from Enoshima, Japan, with New Zealand sailors set to sail in three Olympic Medal races over the next two days.

Rightly or wrongly, the success of the Tokyo2020 Sailing Olympics and New Zealand sailors' performance will be defined by the Kiwi Olympic team's performance over the next couple of days.

Of course, sailing's performance will be compared by the mainstream media to other sports and their respective achievements.

The TV broadcast consists of some magnificent images both on and off the boats, but it is a different picture from what we see on the water.

The bottom line with this regatta is that a handful of sailors across all fleets have the ability to read the conditions and be able to use those to their advantage.

Australia's Mat Belcher and Will Ryan are the stand-out in this regard. They have two races to go before the Medal Race, and their worst performance is a fifth placing.

Across all fleets, there are top sailors with multiple double-digit places - some have scorecards with places in the 20's.

That's a function of the vagaries of the breeze and currents at Enoshima, coupled with light conditions that make the shifts and increases in pressure more difficult to spot.

Looking at the situation in AC75 terms, Enoshima is like seeing one AC75 wallowing in light winds off its foils, while 20 metres away, another has found the wind pressure and is blasting away at over 40kts.

As some sailors have commented, Enoshima is one place where it pays to be greedy- when you hit a spot of increased pressure or get onto a wind bend or more localised shift.

To some extent, it also pays to bang the corners and hope you get lucky. That strategy has worked for many sailors, but it is a bit of a stretch thinking that your luck will stay in for the whole series.

From this distance, one gets the impression that the post-mortems have already started in New Zealand - as they inevitably do when Rowing has a good medal haul. That conversation soon shifts to the "we've got to back winners" cliche when the Olympic results get translated into funding allocations.

There are a few points that need to be borne in mind when assessing the Kiwi performance at Enoshima.

Firstly, New Zealand was only represented in six events in Enoshima, yet we qualified in all ten.

On the Olympic Qualifications list, New Zealand is the most prevalent non-selector. In Rio, we were represented in seven events after electing not to send sailors in two women's events and one male event. In Tokyo, it was three women's events and one male event.

We have to send teams which are comprised of potential top ten competitors, but also with those who are there for development or to provide a benchmark for domestic competition on their return to New Zealand.

Anyone who has done any analysis of Olympic performance knows that generally, no one wins a Gold medal on their first attempt.

Russell Coutts is one exception, but even the most successful sailor of all time. Ben Ainslie missed the Gold medal in Atlanta in 1996.

Boardsailor, Tom Ashley who won the Gold medal in Windsurfing in 2008 at Qingdao, had a very average Olympics in 2004 - placing 10th. He took those learnings into a dominant performance four years later. Fortunately, New Zealand had the good sense to send Peter Burling and Carl Evans to Qingdao in 2008, when they were still in their mid-teens and the youngest sailing team that had ever competed at the Olympics. They just missed the cut for the Medal Race, but Burling realised what had to be done after the learning experience, and the rest is history.

Comparing Sailing with Rowing can be a little fraught, particularly when there is a situation such as we have had with COVID and the restrictions that it has placed on crews and competition.

Rowing has a very well structured European competition with the Rowing World Cup events making it possible for a New Zealand team to be sent to row in usually four regattas and then qualify through that circuit or through their World Championships. Sailings regatta circuits are much more scattered.

Rowing also has an excellent development path from school level. Those who follow the sport can remember seeing Joseph Sullivan winning three events at the Maardi Cup in just over 30 minutes and the Evers-Swindell sisters before him. Both, of course, went on to win Olympic Gold medals about seven years later.

Rowing is also a sport that can be run by times and numbers - particularly when a body like Rowing NZ has an excellent performance database. The RNZ selectors will seat-race crews until they find the best combination and then start the serious training at their superb facility at Karapiro.

Plus, you don't get far in Rowing without having a big ticker and being able to row through the pain. That's a mental thing and something that can never be taught.

Unlike Rowing, Sailing is not a sport where crews are selected like an arranged marriage.

Sailing is one where you find a friend and start a campaign and see how things go.

The other big difference is that, unlike sailors, rowers don't pay for their boats. Rowing NZ would never be able to run the selection system they do if boat ownership was a factor.

Sailing is more a concentration sport than Rowing - and it is maybe that factor that has seen so many yo-yo results in Enoshima - as the sailors struggle to think logically in the heat and read and process the winds and currents.

Of course, the significant difference between Rowing and Sailing is that the ones doing most of the concentrating are the cox (who is not making a physical effort in the boat), the stroke and the bow rower. The rest just "pull like dogs", as Irish Lightweight Rowing gold medalists, the Donovan brothers, were want to say.

So when glib comparisons are made between Rowing and Sailing over the next few months, be aware of some very key differences.

Inevitably there will be a review into Sailing, but it is only valid as a learning exercise. The next Olympics are just three years away and will be one where, thanks to the wisdom of World Sailing, half the Tokyo2020 events will change.

The simple point is that if there is to be new talent inducted into the New Zealand team, then the time to start was yesterday. This is not a normal Olympic cycle. We're already in Year 2. It is up to the sailors to make the first move, not Yachting NZ.

One of the key factors that will emerge from a review will be the performance of team management and coaches. Enoshima has been a test of team management under pressure.

Thanks to COVID, lead-up events have been cancelled, and when teams get off to a bad start, the management and coaching staff need to have cool heads, settle the situation down, and refocus.

Australian Laser Gold Medalist, and current World Champion Mat Wearn, scored 17th and 28th places in the opening races here in Enoshima. But he and his coaches/management managed to turn his performance around, putting together a string of single-digit performances, to the point where he had the Gold medal as good as around his neck before the Medal race was sailed.

One of the stand-outs from this regatta is that you have to have genuine sailing talent to be successful.

Sailing is not a sport, unlike others, that can be heavily coached.

In Sailing, the coach is part of the crew. They all work together differently.

A look around the boat park and fleet on the water here at Enoshima - reveals some interesting personalities and relationships.

Again, no one size suits all - free spirits and flair must be allowed to develop in their own way and not be boxed into the constraints of a rigid program whose primary focus is achieving the required performance numbers.

That is a challenge that the sports funders have to get their heads around - and the current approach, which has been built around accepted business principles, needs a tweak around talent development at Olympic level.

One of the imponderables of this event will be the effect of World Sailing's late banning of electronic wind recording devices and applications.

One, YotBot, is available off the shelf, and around 16 countries alone were using YotBot. Enoshima seems to be a race area where a system like Yotbot would have been useful to measure wind performance.

It is all very well to ban technology to try and stop a so-called "Arms Race". But when products are available off the shelf - what is the problem? The technology is a very small part of the campaign cost and arguably is one way for the developing countries to close up to the established players and their systems.

One of the stand-out aspects of this Olympic Regatta is the increasing number of developing countries participating, evidenced by many country designators that we have not seen previously.

, they are not at the front of the fleet - but some have their moments - including American Samoa, which led the Men's 470 fleet on the first beat of one race and rounded the mark in third place before dropping back to mid-fleet.

There will be more to come on this regatta after it is all done and dusted. But in the meantime, enjoy the final two days that remain.

Stay tuned for the latest action from the Olympics. Sail-World will be on the water at Enoshima, bringing you our perspective on how the racing action unfolds.

For all the latest news from NZ and around the world, see the top stories below.

Between newsletters, you can follow all the racing and developments in major and local events on www.sail-world.com/nz or by scrolling to the top of the site, select New Zealand, and get all the latest news and updates from the sailing world.

Good sailing!

Richard Gladwell
NZ Editor

Please forward your news stories and images directly to Sail-World NZ as text in the email and attach images in the standard way for emails. Our email address is sailworldnzl@gmail.com

To subscribe to Sail-World.com's NZ e-magazine published weekly, go to the website sail-world.com/nz and click on Newsletter and Subscribe. You can see previous newsletters by clicking on Newsletter and then Archive from the drop-down menu.

To check if you have been missing one or more Sail-World newsletters - then check on Archive in the Newsletter section - and if you are missing some, then enter a new email address for you. Again the location is www.sail-world.com/NZ/newsletter

Or if you are a potential advertiser and want to understand how Sail-World can work for your company, website or product, then drop a line to Colin Preston, whose details are in the Contact section of sail-world.com/nz.

If you need to contact the Sail-World team, our phone numbers are +649 489 9267 or 021 301030 or from outside New Zealand +6421301030 and on WhatsApp at the same number. Our Skype address is sailworldnzl

Related Articles

Not on a mission - Just simply IS the mission
So if life is an adventure, and we are here to master the addiction, this may help all of us So if life is an adventure, and we are here to master the addiction, Renate Klocke might have the keys to success for us all. She only first stepped onto a boat six years ago, and crossed the two big oceans in the process. Posted on 28 Mar
Tom Davis on the North Sails' new cruising sails
A Q&A with Tom Davis about the North Sails' newest cruising cloth Sail-World checked in with Tom Davis, North Sails' commercial director, to learn more about RENEW, the company's newest and most sustainable panel laminate cruising sailcloth. Posted on 5 Mar
A+T 500 series Wind Sensors
For the highest accuracy and faster response A+T Instruments may be a name that needs introducing to you in the world of performance marine instrumentation. They are a group of highly qualified engineers who are taking a no-compromise approach to constructing the best sensors and instruments. Posted on 9 Feb
Marine Insurance: One size doesn't fit all!
Stoneways Marine Insurance supporting the infrastructure of the sailing world A huge part of the work at Stoneways Marine Insurance is supporting the infrastructure of the sailing world, the marine businesses that create, maintain, store and provide for the yachts and pleasure craft which we enjoy on the water. Posted on 5 Feb
U can't touch this
Reputedly, the very words that came out of MC Hammer's mouth that created the song Reputedly, these were the very words that came out of MC Hammer's mouth. They then went on to become the immortal tune. Posted on 15 Jan
TEMO·1000 electric outboard motor defies the norm
Innovative, powerful, quiet and emmision-free TEMO are an innovative French company who look at solutions in a different way. We'd already taken a close look at the TEMO·450, with its extendable pole, rather than the traditional shape of engine housing at the top, and now we've tried the TEMO·1000. Posted on 2 Jan
Upcycling your Recycling part 3
Brother from another mother Thank you. You have catapulted this thread's two other siblings into the outstanding category. Upcycling your Recycling, and then a little later on, Upcycling your Recycling – Sister from another Mister looked at a Volvo 70 mould, and a former TP52. Posted on 22 Dec 2023
Seldén's new range of winches and winch handles
Presented by Mats-Uno Fredrikson at METSTRADE We spoke to Seldén's Mats-Uno Fredrikson at METSTRADE 2023 about the new range of manual and electric self-tailing winches. Posted on 19 Dec 2023
RYA videos about disabled sailing
Enjoying your time on the water regardless of a physical impairment These videos were produced by the RYA's Sailability team, and tell of how you can enjoy your time on the water regardless of a physical impairment. Posted on 1 Dec 2023
Under the skin of the J/112E
What happens under the layer of gelcoat on a yacht is inherently invisible to the naked eye What happens under the layer of gelcoat on a yacht is inherently invisible to the naked eye. At a boat show what you see is the shine and the shape, the glitz, and the glamour. Posted on 4 Nov 2023
Noble Marine 2022 SW - FOOTERCyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERMarine Products Direct 2023 - Calypso FOOTER