Please select your home edition
Edition
Sea Sure 2025

London Olympics 2012 - Spain wins Gold in the Women’s Match Racing

by David Schmidt, Sail-World USA Editor on 12 Aug 2012
Tamara Echegoyen Dominguez, Sofia Toro Prieto Puga and Angela Pumariega Menendez (ESP) capture Gold in the Women’s Match Racing event at the London Olympics 2012 onEdition http://www.onEdition.com
In a nail-biting, best-of-five match-racing series that went down to the last run of the last race, the Spanish-flagged Women’s Match Racing (WMR) team of Tamara Dominguez, Sofia Puga and Angela Menendez captured Gold, leaving the 'Speedy Sheilas' team of Olivia Price, Nina Curtis and Lucinda Whitty (AUS) to settle for Silver. In the petite finals, the Finnish-flagged team of Silja Lehtinen, Silja Kanerva and Mikaela Wulff Finland beat-out Russia’s Ekaterina Skudina, Elena Siuzeva and Elena Oblova to bring home Bronze.

Conditions on the Nothe course, which is situated just off of the Weymouth and Portland Sailing Academy, here in Portland, UK, can only be described as boisterous, with a strong breeze and one-meter seas that tested each crew’s heavy-air boat-handling ability more than any other sailing contest of this Olympiad.

First up were the petite finals, which started at noon. Here, the Finnish-flagged team of Silja Lehtinen, Silja Kanerva and Mikaela Wulff Finland beat-out Russia’s Ekaterina Skudina, Elena Siuzeva and Elena Oblova to bring home Bronze. Conditions only built as the day progressed, with puffs tickling 30 knots during the medal races.

For sailing fans, today’s medal race was one of the best contests of this Olympiad, with two equally skilled teams dialing-up and pressing the final results to the last run of the last race. Interestingly, neither the Australians nor the Spanish were favorites to medal (let alone capture Gold), but today quickly proved that speculation can be almost as disastrous as assumption. The RC was forced to fire the starting guns five times before a Gold-medal winner was determined, with a true on-the-water tug-of-war taking place throughout all five contests.

Race one went to Spain, with a tiny Delta of five seconds separating the Spanish stern from the Aussie’s bow. Race two demonstrated the Speedy Sheila’s skills, as the Aussies beat the Spanish by a comfortable margin of 22 seconds.


Race three offered one of the best sporting moments of the entire Olympic regatta. A boathandling duel ensued between the Spanish-flagged boat and the Sheilas, but the girls from Down Under spun into a wild Chinese Gybe. To illustrate how big the seas were (relative to the size of the Elliot 6 Meter’s freeboard), Price was spent overboard. Curtis and Whitty handed the situation beautifully, circling back for their floating skipper and quickly making-up distance, but the Spaniards earned the bullet by a Delta of 1:01.

The Speedy Sheilas bounced back in Race Four, scalping their opponents and leveling the overall score to two-to-two.

The stakes ratcheted to all new levels during the last starting-line Samba, with the Sheilas taking an early and convincing lead. Everything was looking golden for the girls from Down Under until the teams approached the final leeward mark. Both boats were surfing wildly in the steep seas, but then the Spanish-flagged team lured the Sheilas into a foul, thus forcing them to make a penalty turn. While Price immediately executed her 360, the judges deemed it incomplete, meaning that the Sheilas had to sail their final beat with a penalty turn still looming.

The finishing gun fired as the Spanish bow pierced the finishing line, determining Gold and closing-out the sailing section of the XXX Olympics. Once clear of the finishing area, the entire Spanish team took a victory swim, starting what will undoubtedly be a night of fantastic celebration for Spain.

Please stay tuned for more news from the Women’s Match Racing event, including quotes from the medal winners and plenty of racecourse images from today’s medal-race contest.

Sea Sure 2025Barton Marine Pipe GlandsRolly Tasker Sails 2023 FOOTER

Related Articles

50% off Vaikobi VCOLD Base Layer Top!
Vaikobi's best-selling thermal top of all time! Vaikobi's best-selling thermal top of all time! Super light hollow yarn, moisture-wicking fleece, super soft cozy feeling, won't overheat, quick-drying, UV50+.
Posted today at 6:36 am
The Ultimate Cold-Weather System Has Arrived
The Zhik Performance Drysuit sets a new standard in waterproof protection Redesigned for elite performance in cold, wet conditions, the Zhik Performance Drysuit sets a new standard in waterproof protection.
Posted on 8 Nov
World Sailing elects two Vice Presidents
Dr Sophia Papamichalopoulos OLY and Corinne Migraine voted in At the 2025 World Sailing General Assembly, the final meeting of the 2025 Annual Conference in Dún Laoghaire, Ireland, World Sailing Member National Authorities voted in the Vice Presidential elections.
Posted on 8 Nov
12ft Skiff Paramatta River Championship
Geotherm handles wild weather to claim the win Brett Hobson and Peter Nicholson made a return to 12ft sailing today and did it in style by pushing Geotherm (Sydney Flying Squadron) to a 54 second win over Sail Inc.'s Nick Press and Andrew Hay in wild weather at the Parramatta River Championship.
Posted on 8 Nov
Finn World Ranking November 2025
Marega now drops to second with the current European champion, Valerian Lebrun up to third. Laurent Hay, from France, has returned to the top of the 10th Finn World Ranking list after another successful season, including wining the International Finn Cup Malcesine and the Spanish championship in Ibiza.
Posted on 8 Nov
Upgrades to Palm Beach XI ahead of 2025 RSHR
Details of the race yacht's ambitious transformation revealed Just days after announcing its custodianship of the iconic Wild Oats XI, now reborn as Palm Beach XI, Palm Beach Motor Yachts today unveiled the details of the race yacht's ambitious transformation at the Fort Lauderdale International Boat Show.
Posted on 8 Nov
Beyou and Lagravière complete a stunning victory
On Charal in the Transat Café L'OR The French sailors Jérémie Beyou and Morgan Lagravière on board Charal sailed to victory on Friday in the 17th edition of the Transat Café L'OR, to complete a convincing win in the IMOCA Class.
Posted on 8 Nov
Sailing's Community Champions
The Sport Promotion Award at the 2025 Australian Sailing Awards Three events that positively promoted sailing in the community headline the Sport Promotion Award at the 2025 Australian Sailing Awards.
Posted on 8 Nov
Bulwarks and Bulldust – Show 7 Season 3
Apparent Wind and boat speed with North Sails' Ben Kelly, the Yoda of Multihulls Episode Seven - In the Captain's Chair this week is Ben Kelly, Multihull Segment Leader for North Sails Global.
Posted on 8 Nov
Macif Santé Prévoyance 3rd Transat Café L'or IMOCA
Sam Goodchild and Loïs Berrehar arrive in Martinique This Friday, 7 November, at 12.55 pm local time (5.55 pm in Paris), Sam Goodchild and Loïs Berrehar crossed the finish line of the IMOCA class in third place in Fort-de-France Bay, during the 17th edition of the TRANSAT CAFÉ L'OR Le Havre Normandie.
Posted on 7 Nov