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Rio 2016 – Australians announce first Olympic Team members

by Australian Olympic Committee on 4 Dec 2015
Will Ryan, Matt Belcher, Lisa Darmanin and Jason Waterhouse at the Sailing Selection Announcement for the 2016 Australian Olympic Team at Middle Harbour in Sydney Matt King / Getty Images
Rio 2016 – At the London 2012 Olympic Games the Sailing Section was the shining light of the Australian Olympic Team, winning three gold and one silver medal. With medallists from 2012 continuing and new crews making podiums around the world, expectations are high for another successful Olympic sailing campaign at Rio 2016.

In Sydney on Friday the first six sailors to be selected by the Australian Olympic Committee were announced, including three gold medallists from London 2012. Olympic 470 Champion Mathew Belcher will be looking to defend his title in Rio. Since London he has new crew but the gold medals and awards have kept flowing. Will Ryan, 26, will make his Games debut and as the 470 men’s World Champions the pair will be the boat to beat.

Ryan replaced two-time Olympic gold medallist Malcolm Page who retired from the class, with the new combination continuing the golden streak to win three world championships in a row. They have finished on the podium at all major regattas including the Rio Test Event this year.

Belcher, 33, said it’s an honour to go to his second Games.

“Anytime you can represent your country is special… ever since I was a kid, going to the Olympics was all I wanted and to go to my second Games is just amazing.


“A lot of people don’t realise how much Will was involved in the London campaign. I’ve seen him grow and to share that excitement and put on the uniform together will be special.”

The duo are eyeing gold off Rio from the Marina da Gloria sailing venue.

“Our preparation is getting the best out of our performance and hopefully that’s enough to win,” Belcher said.

After competing in Rio multiple times over the last four years, Ryan said the Games are going to be spectacular.

“I think Rio 2016 is going be a really special place. The culture is just so special and I think there’ll be a lot of energy,” he said. 'It’s obviously extremely special to make my first Olympic team. It is something that I have been working hard toward for a very long time, and hopefully satisfying for all the people who have helped me on my journey to this point so far. There is an unbelievably impressive history associated with the Australian Olympic Athletes and Teams of the past and I feel very honoured to be able to join the likes of their names as being an Australian Olympic athlete.”

Racing the 49er class will be defending Olympic champions Nathan Outteridge and Iain Jensen. In 2012 the duo from Lake Macquarie in NSW were so successful they were assured of a medal before the medal race, on the waters of Weymouth. Outteridge had overcome a difficult Beijing 2008 Games where he capsized in the final race to finish fifth.

After London the pair joined Artemis Racing for the America’s Cup with Outteridge as skipper. The pair are also focused on their Olympic class and posted strong results, including a second at the World Championships in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Jensen, 27, and Outteridge, 29, are both currently in Bermuda training at their overseas base.

“It’s great to be selected for the Rio 2016 Games, to be able to go to Rio and perform and win a medal like we’re hoping to do, it’s obviously part of the process to get there,” Outteridge said. 'I think now securing selection it gives us a bit more to focus on, knowing that you have the spot, and for us heading into Rio in December for another practice event there.. it’s all about working together as a team to help us improve.”

The pair said they’re biggest competition at Rio is set to be New Zealand’s Peter Burling and Blair Tuke who are the current World Champions.

“I guess we’re in a very different spot than we were four years ago, we had only lost a couple of regattas in the four year cycle last time. At the moment we’re really struggling to take a regatta off the Kiwis so it’s a completely different place for us at the moment but we’re still trying to move forward and get that extra jump required to win,” Jensen said.

Cousins Lisa Darmanin and Jason Waterhouse will make their Olympic debut in the Nacra 17 mixed multi-hull, with the event reinstated for Rio 2016 after being excluded from the 2012 Games.

Both 24 and from Sydney’s northern beaches, the pair have been sailing together for eight years.

“To make the Australian Olympic Team is a surreal feeling, it has definitely not sunk in yet,” Darmanin said. 'What’s even more special is doing it with my cousin Jason, we are only six weeks apart and grew up together, we are very different people but we are perfect on the boat together and the best of friends, so to make the Team with him is incredible and it’s great that it is also a big family celebration.

The goal for Rio 2016 is a Gold Medal for Australia. This has been the goal since day one and we don’t intend to slow down now that we are getting a tracksuit. The preparation is going really well, we’ve had a great productive three months training in Australia since the Test Event and will head to Rio tomorrow to learn more about the venue and the environment so we are best prepared in eight months’ time.”

The pair claimed their first overseas medal together in 2009 winning the ISAF Youth Worlds in Buzios, Brazil. It’s been a successful 2015 for Darmanin and Waterhouse, winning the Rio Test Event and finishing second at the World Championships. Darmanin was also named Australian female sailor of the year last month.

“Our focus is strong and going back to Brazil reminds us how it all began and how far we’ve come. We’ve won two out of two in Brazil (The Youth Worlds and Test Event) so looking forward to the continuing that strike rate next year,” Darmanin said.

Waterhouse said selection brings them closer to the aim of a podium finish next year.

“It’s a goal we’ve been working towards for a long time and it’s a relief, it’s a stepping stone to gold at Rio,” Waterhouse said. It’s special to get to go to the Olympics with family. Our families support has been amazing.”

Further selections to the Sailing Section of the 2016 Australian Olympic Team will take place in May, with a total of 12 sailors expected.

In other classes the nomination process is ongoing and competition super tight. In men’s Laser, Tom Burton and Matt Wearn are both ranked in the top three in the world and only one boat can be entered per country.
Sailing at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games will take place from Monday 8 August – Friday 19 August at Marina da Gloria, in the Copacabana region of Rio.

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