Please select your home edition
Edition
Maritimo 2023 S-Series LEADERBOARD

Five Ring Circus

by Mark Jardine 6 Aug 07:00 UTC
The Olympic rings at the Paris 2024 Sailing Venue © World Sailing / Sander van der Borch

I've got mixed feelings about the Paris 2024 Olympics. The sailing event so far has definitely had its ups and downs, highs and lows, stand-out performances, shocks, disappointments and controversies.

The visual aspect of the Games is fantastic, and the sailing videography has been superb. Watching the top sailing athletes ply their trade and manoeuvre their boats leaves me in awe of their skills, and reminds me to move the boat around a lot more when I'm sailing in waves. The best of the best are inspirational.

The racing area has been challenging. The wind hasn't played ball most of the time, and the racing schedule has been severely disrupted. In sailing we are inherently reliant on the wind, so it's always annoying when it doesn't turn up for the big events. For whatever reason, that seems to have been happening a lot lately. Let's hope it isn't a trend that continues...

One of the events with new equipment and format is the Men's and Women's Windsurfing.

The new equipment is the iQFoil, which took over from the RS:X. I'm a big fan of the iQFoil. It's fast, manoeuvrable, and great to watch. I wasn't a fan of the 'air rowing' in the RS:X, where the fleet were pumping their sails like they wanted to break them, and so seeing windsurfers foiling around with their graceful, gliding gybes is a welcome change.

The new scoring system is another matter and turned the top three in the Women's Windsurfing on its head in just 7 minutes and 38 seconds. Great Britain's Emma Wilson utterly dominated the Open Series, finishing on 18 points with Israel's Sharon Kantor second on 49 points and Italy's Marta Maggetti third on 70 points.

Then came the new Quarter Final, Semi Final and Final. The Quarter Final saw those who finished the Open Series between tenth and fourth battle it out for two places in the Semi Final, then those who finished third and second in the Open Series took on those two sailors for two slots in the Final against the winner of the Open Series.

There are two major problems with this format. All three of these Final races took place on the same course, giving those who competed in the Quarters and Semis valuable knowledge of the area, such as the wind shifts and bends. It was putting the Open Series winner at a disadvantage, which cannot be fair. Secondly, sailing has always been a sport that rewards consistency. The reason for this is because luck can play a part, but over a longer series this generally evens itself out.

I'm gutted for Emma Wilson. Yes, I'm British, so accuse me of being a Winjin' Pom, but she deserved that gold, and I fully understand her immediate reaction of saying she was done with the sport.

The sad reality is that the Olympics is chasing viewers and needs the dramatic moments. X Games, Esports, the continuing growth of football (or soccer as you may know it), and other events are stealing a march on the 'traditional' Olympics, so the orders from the IOC are to make things more exciting. World Sailing needed to respond to keep sailing in the Games, but this format is not the answer.

I'm not taking away from the achievements of Marta Maggetti or Sharon Kantor - they're both World Champions in the class and exceptional athletes - but I believe this was Emma Wilson's time, and bronze doesn't reflect the quality of her performance.

Back on to more positive points...

The crew kinetics on the Nacra 17 Mixed Multihull are simply astounding. Watching the sailors running up and down the hulls on the trapeze to control the foil angle, especially on the downwind legs, is incredible. The crews in this class have an exceptional amount of work to do, and their fitness must be incredible.

The Italian team of Ruggero Tita and Caterina Banti look almost untouchable, winning six of the opening seven races, and well ahead in the overall standings. Other teams have learned from their techniques, but they seem to have pushed things on to another level.

In the ILCA 6 Women's Dinghy, Marit Bouwmeester has become the most successful female Olympic sailor of all time, winning the Paris 2024 competition ahead of the Medal Race. She won silver at London 2012, gold at Rio 2016, bronze at Tokyo 2020, and now gold at Paris 2024. That's quite some record, and all at Sail-World.com and YachtsandYachting.com pass on congratulations.

In the ILCA 7 Men's Dinghy, Australia's Matt Wearn is showing his class. Consistency is near impossible to come by, but he's pulled out a 14-point lead after eight races and is looking good to collect another gold medal to add to the one he picked up at Tokyo 2020. He's an extraordinary sailor in an exceptional fleet.

Watching the windward mark roundings in this fleet is plain scary. Some of the positioning and manoeuvring to find gaps is phenomenal, where helms have to absolutely nail a tack to squeeze into a slot and avoid a penalty. Of course it doesn't all go exactly to plan, and there is a fair bit of bumper cars, but it's great to watch.

I was racing my ILCA in the Keyhaven Regatta on Monday, where we had two great races in a lovely breeze, and a superb turnout. At the end of the first race I finished second, just nine seconds behind good friend and rival Ian Sanderson, and we joked that you could have fitted the entire Men's Dinghy fleet at Paris 2024 in the gap!

The Skiffs were the first to finish, holding their Medal Races on Friday.

In the Men's Skiff, the Spanish pair of Diego Botin le Chever and Florian Trittel Paul, fresh from their SailGP Season 4 win, were already ahead, but sailed a flawless Medal Race to seal their victory and are surely contenders for World Sailor of the Year.

In the Women's Skiff, The Netherlands' Odile van Aanholt and Annette Duetz nearly snatched defeat from the jaws of victory, with a mix-up of where the finish line was, but they spotted their error just in time to secure gold.

I'm yet to form an opinion on the Men's and Women's Kite events. I haven't seen any of the racing live, and am looking forward to when I do. They are seriously fast, at up to 40 knots, and how you cross tacks with other sailors boggles my mind. Some traditionalists will say that it's just not sailing, but in my opinion anything powered by the wind is.

We'll see how the Medal Series plays out in this class. It involves the top ten and seems complex, but I think it's far fairer than the Windsurfing format. Here's the explanation...

Those ranked third to tenth compete in the Semi-Finals, going into two groups of four. Those seeded third and fourth after the Opening Series begin the Semi-Finals with two wins, while the fifth and sixth seeds carry over one victory.

The first athlete in each Semi-Final to get three wins qualifies for the Finals. In the four-athlete Final, the top overall seed from the Opening Series begins with two wins, the second seed with one and the two winners of the Semi-Finals start from scratch. Once again, the first to three wins gets the gold and the remaining medals are awarded based on number of race wins and seeding.

Got it, or has this left you scratching your head like me?

At the end of the day, I firmly believe that the Five Ring Circus which is the Olympics needs Sailing and Sailing needs the Olympics. Let's hope the powers that be can iron out the wrinkles in the format for the next cycle, and that the breeze comes in for the remaining racing.

Mark Jardine
Sail-World.com and YachtsandYachting.com Managing Editor

Related Articles

Big Cats IV
You have made this series oh-so-popular, and oft requested more instalments Thank you. You have made this series oh-so-popular. Additionally, you have oft requested more instalments, which is also greatly appreciated. So, we started all this back in September of 2021 with Big Cats I. Posted on 2 Dec
Making time to take time
Selene might not be top of mind, but you'll be happy you took time to find out Funny thing is that this title applied to both parties. Me, because we had to make time to find out more about Selene, as they are not what you might refer to as 'top of mind'. It's OK. They admit to that. Posted on 6 Nov
Savvy Navvy - making boating more accessible
I spoke to founder Jelte Liebrand about his background, philosophy, the app itself The rise of Savvy Navvy in the world of boating navigation has been spectacular, with over 2 million downloads of the app. Posted on 21 Oct
Who makes a better BBQ?
Hold that thought. We'll revert, as this story about Sabre is right in the middle of our wheelhouse Hold that thought. We'll come back to it, because this story is right, bang, smack in the middle of our wheelhouse. Sabre is part of a small group of boatbuilders who started out making yachts (sailboats) before venturing into motor yachts. Posted on 24 Sep
For when looks not only matter, they count!
It's in the way the canopy integrates, and her amazing folding bulwark It's the look of her, for sure. She's just got something about her. It's in the way the canopy integrates, and her amazing folding bulwark. It is like the boat is sort of on steroids, but remains elegant, and everyone's interested to see her. Posted on 10 Sep
Do it on an empty stomach
Now I bet you thought that means this editorial is going to be about seasickness. Uh-uh Now I bet you thought that means this editorial is going to be about seasickness. Uh-uh. Actually, it is about hospitality. More specifically, Turkish hospitality, which is incredibly generous, and always involves heaps of food. Posted on 28 Aug
Magnificent journey and an awesome passage
43 years and 7000 nautical miles. The former is the journey, and the latter is the passage 43 years and 7000 nautical miles. Both are very weighty numbers in their own right. Both have tremendous significance. Both apply to the same greater subject here. Now the former is the journey, and the latter is the passage. Posted on 14 Aug
Talk about a bad rap
For whenever you think you have it bad, ponder these guys For whenever you think you have it bad, ponder these guys. Now rather than just the whole of them, it really comes down to the Big Four, albeit the stature of one of them is nowhere near as big as its reputation. Posted on 31 Jul
Good times
I had a distinctly Bernard Edwards and Nile Rogers flashback with the Tesoro T40 Yes. I had a distinctly Bernard Edwards and Nile Rogers flashback. Actually. Stop the press! It was a halleluiah moment. The reason? Got to catch up in person with the Tesoro T40... Posted on 30 Jul
From the Olympics to ocean passages
1.5 million users and counting: from Olympians, to ocean racers, cruisers and powerboaters Yes. The best there are on the water use PredictWind. However, it is not just limited to the Olympic Classes. Ocean racers and cruisers, as well as powerboat passage makers comprise the 1.5m users of the renowned system, and there is good reason why. Posted on 29 Jul
Savvy Navvy 2024Maritimo 2023 S-Series FOOTER