Please select your home edition
Edition
March to end August 2024 affiliate link

Para Sailing Worlds - Doerr, Kendell and Freund (USA) win Worlds Title

by Will Ricketson on 29 May 2016
Porteous and McKinnon (USA 71) leading Everhart-Skeels and Walker (USA 74) on Saturday in the SKUD-18. Jasper van Staveren / Delta Lloyd Regatta
2016 Para World Sailing Championships - US Sailing Team Sperry Sonar athletes have won the overall title at the 2016 Para World Sailing Championships (May 24-28) / Delta Lloyd Regatta, a clear signal that that the United States will be a medal threat at the Rio 2016 Paralympic regatta. Other significant events on Saturday included the conclusion of the US Sailing Rio 2016 Athlete Selection Series in the SKUD-18 class, and the US team taking it’s best overall finish at the 2.4mR Para Worlds since London 2012.

Rick Doerr (Clifton, N.J.), Brad Kendell (Tampa, Fla.) and Hugh Freund (South Freeport, Maine) had to fight until the final leg of the last race in order to secure their title, but after a week of consistently sailing at the top of the fleet, they would not be denied. Doerr, a Beijing 2008 Paralympian, won the 2007 Para Worlds in the Sonar. However, this was his first World Championship win competing with Kendell and Freund. “The hard work that we’ve been doing over the past year, and over the last few days on that racecourse, is rewarding,” said Doerr, the longest-tenured athlete on the US Sailing Team Sperry (1998). “I’m proud to be part of an effort with these two guys.”

Kendell described the final day of Sonar racing as a close fight from start to finish. “We had to fight back (in the final) race,” said Kendell, who like Freund will compete in his first Paralympic Games in September. “We had to look for where the British and Australian teams were, and on that first leg we knew we were too far behind them. We knew we had a battle, and we won that battle. It was a great thing to have that wonderful feeling of holding the American flag at the end.”

Freund noted that while winning World Championship gold was their biggest accomplishment as a team to date, they have larger goals in sight, and called this week of racing the best possible preparation for Rio 2016. At their previous major event, Sailing World Cup Hyeres in April, the team came agonizingly short of the top spot on the podium. “We were really happy to have had the opportunity to go into the last day today in the leading position,” said Freund. “That was our big falter (moment) at the last regatta. We just didn’t have the mental ability to push through the last two races. Our top goal coming into (the Worlds) was to make sure that we were in that position again, and to practice that at a really intense regatta.”



Kendell noted that their Paralympic Games campaign has made significant strides since adding coach Mike Ingham (Rochester, N.Y.), who holds over 20 national and North American one-design titles, to the program in 2015. “We have to give a lot of credit to Mike,” said Kendell. “He knows us, and he’s worked on what we needed to work on. He’s helped us tremendously, and it’s showing.”

The Rio 2016 selection series for the SKUD-18 concluded on Saturday, and Ryan Porteous (San Diego, Calif.) and Beijing 2008 SKUD-18 gold medalist Maureen McKinnon (Marblehead, Mass.) bested Sarah Everhart-Skeels (Tiverton, R.I.) and Cindy Walker (Middletown, R.I.) by a single point in the series, earning a ticket the Paralympic Games in September. The Rhode Island pair, who are the only all-female SKUD-18 team in the world, needed to beat Porteous and McKinnon by two places in Medemblik. While Everhart-Skeels and Walker were the top U.S. boat in Medemblik, the two American teams finished in adjacent positions in the overall standings, giving victory to Porteous and McKinnon. The two boats had a very close selection series, which consisted of the 2015 and 2016 Para Sailing World Championships.

“It’s been a lot of ups and down this week, but we made it,” said McKinnon, who is campaigning for the Paralympics for a fourth time. Porteous said he was very proud to have won the right to sail for his country on the biggest stage in adaptive sports. “It’s going to be great sailing against these elite athletes at the Games, and I’m honored to be representing the United States. We have a lot we can get better at, and hopefully we’ll win a medal for the U.S.”

More information on US Sailing’s SKUD-18 athlete selection to come in a later release. All sailors selected for the Rio 2016 U.S. Paralympic Sailing Team are subject to approval by the U.S. Olympic Committee (USOC).



In the one-person 2.4mR class, Dee Smith (Annapolis, Md.) earned a career-best result at the 2016 Para Sailing Worlds, beating out his 2015 result by one place and taking fifth overall. The America’s Cup, Volvo Ocean Race and Maxi boat veteran has had a steep learning curve since entering the 2.4mR fleet in the spring of 2015, but has showed over the course of the 2015 and 2016 Worlds that he has the speed to compete at Rio 2016. Smith said he is planning to spend as much time as possible at the Paralympic Games regatta venue in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil over the next three months until the Opening Ceremony in September.



Final US Results - 2016 Para World Sailing Championships:

Sonar (Paralympic Three-Person Keelboat)

• 1st overall, Rick Doerr (Clifton, N.J.), Brad Kendell (Tampa, Fla.) and Hugh Freund (South Freeport, Maine), U.S. Paralympic Team and US Sailing Team Sperry (national team)

SKUD-18 (Paralympic Two-Person Keelboat)

• 10th overall, Sarah Everhart-Skeels (Tiverton, R.I.) and Cindy Walker (Middletown, R.I.), US Sailing Team Sperry (national team)
• 11th overall, Ryan Porteous (San Diego, Calif.) and Maureen McKinnon (Marblehead, Mass.), US Sailing Team Sperry (national team)

Note: Everhart-Skeels/Walker must beat Porteous/McKinnon by two places or more to win Rio 2016 selection.

2.4mR (Paralympic One-Person Keelboat)

• 5th overall, Dee Smith (Annapolis, Md.), U.S. Paralympic Team and US Sailing Team Sperry (national team)

Sail Port Stephens 2024North Sails Performance 2023 - FOOTERVetus-Maxwell 2021 v2 FOOTER

Related Articles

Youth in the limelight at Antigua Sailing Week
Axxess Marine Youth 2 Keel Race Day The breeze was on the up for the second day of Antigua Sailing Week, celebrating youth sailing on Axxess Marine Youth 2 Keel Race Day. The 10-knot easterly breeze piped up during the day, gusting up to 15 knots.
Posted today at 5:34 am
America's Cup: Shoeby on that Splash and Sail
It was nice to tick all that off in one day.” Kevin Shoebridge on ETNZ's Day 1 Splash and Sail We thought, 'We've got a bit of time. We'll pull the mainsail up'. Then we ended up going for a sail [and fitting in three dry foiling tacks]. It was nice to tick all that off in one day.” Kevin Shoebridge on ETNZ's Day 1 Splash and Sail.
Posted today at 5:20 am
100 entries and counting
For Ocean Dynamics and Mount Gay Airlie Beach Race Week Entries for Ocean Dynamics and Mount Gay Airlie Beach Race Week 2024 have already touched 100 and continue to grow as organiser, Whitsunday Sailing Club (WSC), announces a new Regatta Director, Jenni Birdsall.
Posted today at 5:02 am
2024 52 Super Series PalmaVela Sailing Week Day 2
Gladiator open their 2024 account with race 1 victory Tony Langley's Gladiator team took the first race win of the 2024 52 SUPER SERIES season at 52 SUPER SERIES PalmaVela Sailing Week after profiting from a bold call on the first downwind leg.
Posted today at 4:34 am
SailGP's Racing on the Edge latest episode
Big crashes and all of the drama from the ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix The latest episode of SailGP's Racing on the Edge docuseries, in partnership with Rolex, unfolds all of the drama and action from the ITM New Zealand Sail Grand Prix in March.
Posted on 29 Apr
Jérémie Beyou on his way to Lorient
Leading Transat CIC contender turns around with forestay damage Jérémie Beyou, one of the top hopes for the Transat CIC solo race from Lorient to New York is returning to Lorient after damage to his J2 forestay.
Posted on 29 Apr
New York Vendée - Les Sables d'Olonne Preview
One month to go until the final race before the Vendée Globe One month from now, 31 skippers will set sail from New York towards the Vendée, for the final qualifying and selection race to qualify for the Vendée Gobe: the most challenging sailing race around the world.
Posted on 29 Apr
470 Europeans at Cannes Preview
The last major international event for the class before the Olympic Games The Yacht Club de Cannes is hosting the last major international event before the Olympic Games.
Posted on 29 Apr
Grantham local skippers crew of non-professionals
Hannah Brewis has led amateur sailors across the world's largest ocean "I didn't think when I was learning to sail on Rutland Water that it would one day eventually lead to me crossing the biggest ocean in the world as a skipper."
Posted on 29 Apr
The Transat CIC Day 2
Dalin and D'Estais in the lead After a sunny, spectacular start, the 48 solo sailors taking part in the Transat CIC had to deal with the first windy and bumpy night at sea, crossing a front with 30 plus knots of wind and a rough sea state.
Posted on 29 Apr