Please select your home edition
Edition
RS Sailing 2021 - LEADERBOARD

Star Sailors League Finals - The return of Fredrik Loof

by Alex D'Agosta on 4 Nov 2014
London 2012 - Olympic Games - Star - SWE - Fredrik LOOF and Max SALMINEN Carlo Borlenghi/FIV - copyright
Fredrik Loof is to Sweden what Scheidt and Grael are to Brazil. Well on par with the rest of the champions gathering in Nassau (Bahamas) for the second Star Sailors League Finals.

The only big question is who will actually win, especially considering the quality of the sailors competing. Some are returning after last year in the Bahamas, others last time out at Weymouth and others still have never competed together before. That is what the Finals are turning on yet again: the battle between generations of champions with a past and present in boats often very different from the Star.

Before debuting in what many feel is the finest and most technical class, Loof himself had a glorious career in the Finn. Like Xavier Rohart and others of his generation. Including Bruno Prada who returned to it in the last two years. And, of course, new SSL candidates for 2014: Jorge Zarif, World Champion 2013, and Giles Scott, reigning Champion this year. Three World Championships in the bag (Tallinn 1994, Gdansk 1997 and Melbourne 1999), two seconds and a third in the rankings, plus significantly, Olympic bronze at Sydney 2000 (after two fifth places) have made Loof one of the great Finn names.

After a string of high-profile results and the Australian Olympics, he moved up to a higher class, the legendary Star. There too, Freddy delivered, completing three further campaigns with enviable results even in the qualifiers. Two Gold Stars (World Championships): 2001 in Medemblik and 2004 at Gaeta. Six Silver Stars: Three European Championships (Skodstrup 2001, Genoa 2002 and Girona 2004), Two Eastern Hemisphere Championships (Naples 2006 and Hamburg 2010) with one Western Hemisphere in the middle in 2007. His Olympic performance was explosive too: 12th in Greece 2004, bronze in China in 2008 and then gold at London in 2012.

After so much success, Loof seemed, like others before him, to have turned a page. But then came the first Star Sailors League Final. Once again almost all the big names were involved, except for him and a few others. The formula was new: short, interesting races, highly selective. Lots of adrenaline right to the line: players need to win to the very last race, they can’t rest on their laurels or opt for conservative strategies. But it’s all worth it in the end. There are 4,000 points available to the winner (with less for those behind him) and they count towards entry to upcoming events. There is also an impressive 200,000 dollars in prize money. Plus, of course, the glory of beating one of the strongest fleets of all time. A fleet that gathers at Nassau in the first week in December.

Navico AUS Zeus3S FOOTER2024 fill-in (bottom)J Composites J/99

Related Articles

Armstrong Midlength FG Board redefines foiling
Armstrong Midlength FG Board gives you the freedom to define how you ride. The choice is yours Armstrong Foils have announced the new Midlength boards, they are epic for wing and prone surf among many other things. The Armstrong Midlength FG Board Range truly redefines when and how you can go foiling.
Posted today at 8:42 am
La Grande Motte International Regatta preview
Final dress rehearsal for the Cats and Skiffs ahead of Paris 2024 The Nacra 17 World Championship along with the 49er and 49erFX European Championships is attracting 148 teams to La Grande Motte in the South of France for six days of racing.
Posted today at 8:28 am
SailGP: Spectacular on board video of USA capsize
USA SailGP team has released spectacular on-board video coverage of their capsize in Bermuda USA SailGP team has released spectacular on-board video coverage of their capsize in Bermuda in Friday's third Practice session. Surprisingly given the violence of the capsize, none of the crew were injured.
Posted today at 2:18 am
SailGP: Kiwis push back at Media Conference
Burling disagrees that the Kiwis were gifted the season lead by an Australian snafu in Christchurch New Zealand driver Peter Burling has disagreed that the Kiwis were gifted the season lead by Australia's Christchurch penalty, arguing ‘we have earned our right to be here'.
Posted today at 12:35 am
Antigua Sailing Week Day 5
Classic conditions on Antigua & Barbuda Tourism Race Day Racing at Antigua Sailing Week came to a spectacular finale with Antigua & Barbuda Tourism Race Day. Full trade winds blasted across the race area, bathed in sunshine.
Posted on 3 May
SailGP: Tense times in Bermuda
A capsize in Practice, along with the effect of season points penalties puts big pressure on teams The NZ Black Foils are determined to keep hold of top spot as Australia looks to bounce back from Christchurch horror show. The pressure comes on all the teams to secure a place in the $2 million Championship Final Race in San Francisco in July
Posted on 3 May
The Swarm Podcast Episode 13: Jordan Roberts
The man behind the lens at all major WASZP events Jordan is the man behind the lens at all of our major events at WASZP. General Manager Marc Ablett joins Jordan to discuss what we try and achieve through our coverage.
Posted on 3 May
Cape 31 Australian Nationals Preview
To be held at Hamilton Island Race Week in August With the fifth Cape 31 recently arriving in Australia, the Cape 31 Class are excited to announce the first National Championship Down Under! A big achievement for the guys who have been working on getting the class started.
Posted on 3 May
20th PalmaVela Day 2
Classic Palma sea breeze day sees the event at full size As the giant PalmaVela multiclass regatta mustered all 12 classes which are competing at this 2024 edition of the Med's traditional curtain raiser, it was 'back to normal' Palma Bay at its spring best.
Posted on 3 May
McIntyre Ocean Globe Race update
Translated 9 defeat the odds to finish They just kept coming! Nothing could, or would stop them. The McIntyre Ocean Globe has truly shown the depth of human stories over the past eight months and this story is a classic.
Posted on 3 May