Please select your home edition
Edition
ETNZ Store 2024 728x90 TOP

Finn contender Caleb Paine makes the hard work count for Rio Olympics

by Robert Deaves on 16 Jul 2016
Finn contender Caleb Paine makes the hard work count - 2016 Rio Olympic Games Robert Deaves
In the cockpit of the Finn belonging to Caleb Paine (USA) there is a decal that reads “No Paine, no gain”. This very much sums up his attitude towards making sure he is the absolutely best prepared he can possibly be come the start of the Olympic Games in August.

“I think that no matter what, in the toughest times when you are out there training, it is being able to keep pushing no matter what. You are not always going to win every drill, or be the fastest downwind, but you keep working. I think I've always been hard working but you are going to do everything you can to win that one spot and be the better sailor or athlete in the end.”

Caleb Paine started off sailing the Finn when he was 19. “I was introduced to it by a guy named Scott Mason from Long Beach, California. I sailed the boat once, totally loved it and realised it would give me the ability to go to the Olympics and possibly win a medal. As soon as I graduated high school I had the opportunity to sail with Zach Railey (USA) and train with him and I was his training partner leading up to the 2012 Games.”



After Railey stopped sailing following the London 2012 Games, Paine assumed his place as the top Finn sailor in the US. He won World Cup regattas in Miami and Medemblik and briefly rose to world number one. Since then he has been a regular at the front end of the fleet, including seventh place at the 2014 ISAF Sailing World Championship where he qualified the USA for its Finn place in Rio.

To win his place on the US Sailing Team he first had to defeat his former training partner, who had made a very late comeback to try for this third Olympics. He says Railey returning to the campaign trail, “helped me drive and work harder. I actually 100 per cent believed every day, even if he was or wasn't, I just told myself that he was going to come back to sail.”

Paine had not even started Finn sailing when Railey had won his medal, however he eventually overcame Railey in the final and decisive trials regatta at the Finn European Championship in Barcelona in March. Railey’s tactics made headlines on sailing columns worldwide, but Paine, stayed calm, won the trials and his ticket to Rio.



From the start Paine has committed himself fully to training in Rio and learning its tricks. Over the past three years he estimates he has spent more than three months training there. It’s a big commitment. “Yes, but at the same time I get to see Brazil and sail in Brazil even if I hadn’t have qualified it still would have been have been something worthwhile.”

“US Sailing did a great job in going down in the year after the London Games and scoped the whole area out and went to Rio and saw some of the difficulties in living on the Rio side, but went over to Niteroi and realised it's the same distance to all the sailing venues and closer to some of the outside ones and it was just a great place to sail. It's safe, family orientated, you walk around at night no problems, pretty low key and you don't have a lot of the distractions that you have over on the Rio side. It's been a great facility and it's worked very well.”



“I think a lot of people have been training in Rio for a long time, and it's been great sailing and I look forward to sailing in the harbour. It's quite challenging. And from that aspect, it's one of the hardest and most difficult places to sail but that also makes it fun.”

Since making the US Sailing Team he says he has been focusing on improving his starting technique, downwind technique and getting used to some of the equipment that he will be using. “Just spending lots of time in the boat and getting as comfortable with the equipment as possible. Just so there are no surprises or question marks, so I can go in to the Olympics totally confident and sure of everything that I have.”

“I would say I am fairly positive, but a realist at the same time. I can fully understand where I stand but that also gives me the ability to see the path I need to take to do the best I can or succeed.”



Like most sailors he is sidelining all the other issues that have surrounded preparations for the Games. “If you look all over the world there are pollution problems and I've been there a long time and been OK, never been sick and had zero problems whatsoever. But just like when you travel anywhere abroad you are going to take measures to make sure you are safe. I have done everything I need to do to make sure I am safe in Brazil.”

“We all have to deal with it, all the sailors have to sail in the same circumstances, and some people will let it take advantage of them and it may affect the way they perform but it's the same for everyone so you might as well perform the best you can in the circumstances you are presented with.”

“I think it’s going to be very, very tough. I think it's going to be close racing, due to the racecourses and the challenging aspects of those courses. I think it's going to be very exciting and I think there is going to be some very close points by the end of the regatta and I am looking forward to seeing how it turns out.”

Armstrong 728x90 - Performance Mast Range - BOTTOMZhik 2024 March - FOOTERHyde Sails 2022 One Design FOOTER

Related Articles

2024 Queen's Cup Race® - Registration is open!
The overnight race across the lake from Milwaukee to South Haven Plan now to join the fleet for the time-honored tradition of sailing the Queen's Cup" Race. The 85th sailing of this overnight race is brought to you by South Shore Yacht Club and sails across Lake Michigan from Milwaukee, Wl, to South Haven, Ml.
Posted on 10 May
44Cup Baiona Day 2
Switzerland's day in the sun History was made on the 44Cup today when, for the first time, a team representing land-locked Switzerland was top scoring boat of the day.
Posted on 10 May
49er & 49er FX Europeans & Nacra 17 Worlds Day 4
Uruguay surges to the top of the 49ers Uruguay has never qualified a 49er to the Olympic Games. In fact across the whole history of the modern Olympics the South American nation has just won 10 medals, none yet in sailing.
Posted on 10 May
US Clubs invited to race in Sailing League Regatta
St. Francis Yacht Club invites interested yacht clubs based in the United States to race St. Francis Yacht Club invites interested yacht clubs based in the United States to race in an inaugural Sailing League Regatta in San Francisco, California.
Posted on 10 May
Cup Spy May 9: Testing the wind machine
Luna Rossa have been testing the old and new AC75 wingfoils as they wind down in Cagliari Luna Rossa sailed for the fourth successive day from Cagliari, Sardinia. A point of interest on Thursday was the relative performance of its two wing foils - one to the new AC75 Class Rule, the other a legacy foil used in the 2021 America's Cup.
Posted on 10 May
Ambrogio Beccaria wins The Transat CIC in Class40
Crossing the line of the historic race at 03:47:55 hrs this morning Italy's Ambrogio Beccaria on his all Italian designed and built Musa 40 Alla Grande Pirelli added the hugely prestigious Transat CIC Class 40 title to his steadily growing collection of solo and short handed ocean racing honours this morning.
Posted on 10 May
Marine Auctions: May Online Auctions
Bidding to open on Friday 24th May May 2024 Online Auction Bidding to Open Friday 24th May Close Thursday 30th May at 2pm AEST.
Posted on 10 May
Is this the slipperiest AC75 boat in the fleet?
There's plenty to suggest American Magic's 'Patriot' is the most refined aerodynamic package so far There's plenty to suggest that American Magic's AC75 'Patriot' is the most refined aerodynamic package so far and if that's the case the team's new machine could be the lowest drag Cup boat out there.
Posted on 10 May
Marina Portoroz Melges 24 Regatta preview
Melges 24 European Sailing Series event to set sail on Friday It's that time of the year again when Portoroz beckons the international Melges 24 fleet as the Melges 24 European Sailing Series 2024 makes its next stop in this picturesque Slovenian coastal town.
Posted on 9 May
The 5 Minute Warning
Andy Rice & Matt Sheahan's 5min racing update PlanetSail's Matt Sheahan catches up with Sailjuice's Andy Rice who's reporting from the South of France. Andy's at the last big regatta for the 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 classes before the Olympic Games just over a couple of months from now.
Posted on 9 May