Please select your home edition
Edition
Hyde Sails 2024 - One Design

Britain feel threat of Eastern promise

by Mike Rosewell, Times Online on 22 Jun 2006
Britain’s world champion women’s quad scull, stroked by double Olympic silver medal-winner Katherine Grainger, felt the emerging power of China in the second round of the World Cup at Poznan, Poland yesterday.

Britain, the leaders of the World Cup to date, were forced to battle after China led by inches at 500 metres. Grainger's team held the same minimal lead at 1,000 and 1,500 metres, but China overhauled them by 0.42 sec at the finish to gain the only automatic qualifying place for the final.

'We just didn’t finish it off right,' Paul Thompson, the Britain coach, said. 'It's better to know now, rather than later, what China can do.'

Australia and Germany were also fast in the other heat and Thompson said: 'The final looks likely to be a cracking race.'

Thompson’s new protégés, Annie Vernon and Anna Bebington, winners in the women’s double scull at the first World Cup event in Munich, qualified for their semi-final with a second-place finish behind Australia yesterday. However, Thompson said that he is hoping to 'get a bit more out of them in the middle of the race'.

There were no hiccups for Britain’s other two leading World Cup boats, the men’s coxless four and the new single sculling star, Alan Campbell. The four, unbeaten for two seasons but pushed very close by Germany and Holland at Munich, were comfortable heat winners yesterday in a reshuffled line-up after Steve Williams, the Olympic gold medal-winner, was moved from his accustomed bow seat to No 2. The Dutch were absent and New Zealand were the direct qualifiers in the other heat, well ahead of a new Germany crew but slower than Britain.

Campbell was one of four heat winners and semi-final qualifiers in the sculls, the other three being Olav Tufte, the Olympic champion from Norway, Marcel Hacker, the former world champion from Germany, and Mahe Drysdale, the world champion from New Zealand and Campbell’s training partner in London during the winter.

Campbell, who was watching his New Zealand friend for the first time in a while, said that 'he has got a good bit of speed about him'.

Campbell and the men’s coxless four were not the only British first place qualifiers of the day. Matt Wells and Steve Rowbotham, in the men’s doubles and the men’s lightweight four, both of whom finished a frustrating fourth in Munich, filled the top spots to reach their semi-finals. Tim Male moved from third to first in the closing stages of his lightweight singles heat.

Only one of the seventeen British crews in action yesterday is no longer in the medal hunt

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk
Cyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERB&G Zeus SR AUSNorth Sails Loft 57 Podcast

Related Articles

Hyde Sails Flying Fifteen Video Tuning Guide
Ben McGrane explains how to get the most out of your B1 mainsail with B1 or 2H jibs Hyde Sails release new detailed video guide for tuning the Flying 15 for use with the B1 mainsail with B1 or 2H jibs.
Posted on 22 May
Gladwell's Line: - May 22 - A big month
Kiwi's loss is Italy's gain - our thoughts on the hosting debacle. Kiwi's loss is Italy's gain - our thoughts on the hosting debacle. Paul Whiting's tribute - 45yrs on. Surprise winner of biggest ever two-handed nationals. Chalkie Bland remembered.
Posted on 22 May
Puget Sound sailing, Etchells, J/70s, Cup news
Seeking Goldilocks conditions on Puget Sound, Etchells NAs, J/70 U.S. Nationals, AC38 news As the saying goes, 'you don't know unless you go'. While I've mostly heard this phrase applied to climbing, skiing, and mountaineering, four late-winter and springtime races on Puget Sound this year exemplified the fact that this line.
Posted on 20 May
The appeal of offshore
Is there still appeal? Have we made it too onerous? Why would someone take it up now? I had been pondering. Yes. Marquee events have no issue attracting entrants. Middle Sea, Transpac, Cape to Rio, Fastnet, and Hobart all spring to mind instantly, but what of the ‘lesser' races? Lots of boats in pens (slips) a lot of the time
Posted on 18 May
Banger Racing, Back Racing and No Racing
Racing on the cheap, a return to racing for young Aussies, and ILCA struggles We start with racing on the cheap at the Colander Cup, then focus on a return to racing for the Aussies at the Youth Worlds, moving on to a complete lack of racing at the ILCA Worlds, and then looking at how SailGP should be back out on the water.
Posted on 14 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
For the love of slightly larger, even faster boats
Bring it on. No chicken chutes allowed. Celestial, the newest Cape 31 in Oz is up and racing Thank you. You have let For the love of small, fast boats run before the breeze like a superlight planning hull under way too big a kite, with immense sheep in the paddock, and the Sailing Master grasping the flare gun in his pocket... No chicken chutes.
Posted on 4 May
The Allure of Timber
The longevity, and sheer beauty, of boats made of wood In these days of exotic materials, high modulus carbon and ultra lightweight construction, it's possible to overlook the longevity, and sheer beauty, of boats made of wood.
Posted on 29 Apr
A look inside the Spirit Yachts yard
A close look at what makes their yachts unique Traditional skills in boatbuilding could be regarded as a lost art from a bygone era. In the world of fibreglass and carbon, the joinery and laminating techniques of wood ribs and cedar strips are a thing of the past.
Posted on 28 Apr
Transat Paprec, Classics, US Sailing, Cup news
Some parts of North America are experiencing a faster approach of spring's warm tidings than others While some parts of North America are experiencing a faster approach of spring's warm tidings than others, the offshore racing action is plenty hot in the Transat Paprec.
Posted on 22 Apr