Please select your home edition
Edition
Henri-Lloyd Dynamic Range

49er and 49erFX South Americans - Podium spots decided in Rio

by Murillo Novaes on 9 Nov 2014
Mens 49er FX winners Peter Burling and Blair Tuke who won the South American Champion after missing the whole of the first day (three races) of the 12 race regatta. Bernardita Grez / 49er.org http://49er.org/
The wrap up of the VIII South American 49er Championship and the II 49erFX South American Championship took place in a good south by southwest breeze of 10 to 14 knots on the epicentre of the international Olympic sailing nowadays, the Guanabara bay, in Rio de Janeiro.

The cloudy day began early for the men’s fleet, as they were the first to hit the water this Saturday, which meant no beers Friday night and no morning surfing on Arpoador beach like some of the guys did yesterday.

The first race on 'Escola Naval' (the Brazilian Navy Academy, the oldest university in the country) racecourse had a new winner in this event, the Yankees Brad Funk, an American Laser champion, and his mate Trevor Burd. Their success, although, did not helped too much for a better position in the overall leaderboard as they finished in 21st among the 25 boats fleet featuring 14 nationalities.

On the other hand, the great winners of the day and the winners of the championship were the amazing, to say the least, kiwi double, Peter Burling and Blair Tuke. Peter said that 'the racecourse is tricky, especially for the strong current. But is the same way to everybody', apparently do not fit in that ‘everybody’ part of the sentence.


He and his crew simply won two races today to complete five wins in the 12 races series and, even counting 52 points of two of the three DNCs for the missed first day when they were flying back from the ISAF Sailor of the Year party in Palma de Mallorca, manage to outpace all the opposition and claim the overall victory with 68 points. Another great feat for the actual world champions and silver medallists in London that are becoming a legend in the 49er class and since the last Olympics have not lost the first position on any regatta the attended.

The rest of the podium is another tale, a protest drama that is going on since yesterday and became a novel with many chapters and overturns. At first the Danish duo Jonas Warrer and Anders Thomsen got a redress on the eighth race for a starting line situation involving Americans, Italians and Austrians as well. But this Saturday morning new video evidence got them disqualified, and another protest was filled by them, trying to cancel the new decisions. Since the last protest has not been judged yet, the Frenchs Mann Dyen and Christidis Stephane got the second ladder of the pedestal with 76pts.

In the South American exclusive fight, the brothers Yago and Klaus Lange, sons of the Argentinian sailing legend Santiago Lange, had not a good day, with two intermediate positions, but it was enough to claim the continental title and the third place overall. Marco Grael and Gabriel Borges, from Brazil, got the second South American place (seventh overall) and their compatriots Dante Bianchi and Thomas Low-Beer were third (13th overall).


49erFX – The girls had more time to rest on the hot and humid Saturday and got to work about 1:30pm in a traffic jam of weekend sailors and other Olympic class boats going to practice leaving the club too. But nothing that disturbed the peace of the mixed Dutch boat of Anemiek Bekkering and Rick Peacock that with two wins and a third saw their immense lead grow more and get them in the summit, winning the event with only 19 points. Peacock, the coach of the girls said that he intended 'to have fun, of course, and get to know better the manoeuvres inside the boat and the details of the racecourse. Also is very good to leave the tender and feel the real thing', he added.

The first all-female crew and vice-champions in Rio were the Newzealanders Alex Moloney and Molly Meech, with 37pts. The third place overall feature the British double Charlotte Dodson and Sophie Ainsworth with 51 pts. The South American title remained in Brazil as Juliana Senfft and Gabriela Nicolino, in 13th overall, were the first of the continent among 13 countries represented in the event.

'For me is great to keep the title home. Last year, Martine and Kahena won it, but this year they did not raced for real as they were coming from the prize giving of the Sailor of The Year Award ceremony in Palma. It was a high level regatta and for our training was great', said the new South American 49erFX champion Juliana Senfft.

The prize giving ceremony took place on Rio de Janeiro’s Yacht Club (ICRJ) with sandwiches and beer. The winners of the event were awarded with exclusive Seiko watches and the sponsor also granted the FX Chilean double, last place overall, an new spinnaker for the developing of the class. The Mackey boats donated the perpetual South American Prize and the winners on both classes got their names written on the beautiful wood plate with a painting showing the boats sailing.

The next important event for the leaders of the international 49er and 49erFX Rankings and the top contenders for medal positions in Rio 2016 is the Intergalactic Championship that will start on the 11th and on November 49er website

For the 49er results click here

For the 49erFX results click here




Vetus-Maxwell 2021 v2 FOOTERHyde Sails 2024 - One DesignZhik 2024 December

Related Articles

Transat Paprec Day 18
48 Hours to Glory By Friday, the outcome of the Transat Paprec will be known. But who will have the final say? Who will seize the advantage, who will get stuck, who will claim an honorable finish, and who will be left disappointed?
Posted on 7 May
iQFOiL Youth & Junior International Games day 2
Heavy Rain Sets the Scene, But Racing Pushes On at Lake Garda Despite relentless rainfall, part of the day's race program went ahead as planned at the iQFOiL Youth & Junior International Games, hosted by Circolo Surf Torbole.
Posted on 7 May
XR 41 Dominates Debut at MaiOR 2025
FORMULA X Takes First Place in ORC A&B The northern European offshore racing season launched in spectacular fashion at the Mai Offshore Regatta (MaiOR) from 2 to 4 May 2025, and the spotlight was firmly on X-Yachts' latest high- performance model - the XR 41.
Posted on 7 May
Smeg's 29 years of 18ft Skiff sponsorship success
It all began when a Trevor Barnabas-led team raced a skiff named Omega Smeg-2UE The Smeg Australia 18ft skiff sponsorship with the Australian 18 footers League began in 1996-97 and has continued harmoniously, with many great successes, over the following twenty nine seasons on Sydney Harbour.
Posted on 7 May
Canada Ocean Racing Acquires Foiling IMOCA
For Scott Shawyer's Vendée Globe Campaign Canada Ocean Racing is proud to announce the acquisition of a current generation foiling IMOCA 60 - formerly known as Groupe Dubreuil and originally 11th Hour Racing - Malama.
Posted on 7 May
Bulwarks and Bulldust – new Vodcast Show launches
Join us as we pan for the gold dust, whilst sifting out the bulldust. Bulwarks and Bulldust looks at the serious subjects from inside the world of boating, but we don't take ourselves too seriously. The show covers off everything from Off The Beach to Superyachts, Powerboats to Ocean Racing, and the marine industry itself
Posted on 6 May
iQFOiL Youth & Junior International Games day 1
Unexpected breeze delivers a spectacular opening day of racing on Lake Garda The iQFOiL Youth & Junior International Games are officially under way in Torbole, Lake Garda, marking the second major event of the 2025 season for the U19/U17/U15 athletes of the iQFOiL Youth & Junior International Class.
Posted on 6 May
Transat Paprec Day 17
"An Atlantic Crossing with the Intensity of La Solitaire" They've proven that persistence pays off—even when faced with serious setbacks. Lola Billy and Corentin Horeau had to make a pit stop in Lisbon during the first week of the race to replace a damaged rudder.
Posted on 6 May
Night sailing, Transat Paprec, Congressional Cup
Night sailing, encountering light airs in the Transat Paprec, Congressional Cup We bundled up as the last of the rays sunlight dipped below the Olympic Mountains and night quietly fell on Puget Sound. We'd been racing for about twelve hours in the Seattle Yacht Club's Protection Island Race (April 26), and we were getting tired.
Posted on 6 May
Triple amputee passes halfway point of challenge
Craid Wood is more determined than ever, despite troubles during Pacific crossing Despite experiencing a number of technical issues with his boat, Craig Wood is now halfway through his sail with well over 4000 nautical miles done. He is feeling positive about reaching the finish line at Osaka in Japan in just over a months' time.
Posted on 6 May