Please select your home edition
Edition
Zhik - Made for Water

Throwback Thursday - London 1948, the Master makes his debut

by Fi Edwards on 10 Jun 2016
Paul Elvstrom - London 1948 Olympic Games ISAF
The London 1948 Olympic Games was the start of a remarkable run of dominance from one man, one that would last unbroken for an incredible four Olympic Games and remain unequalled in sailing until Sir Ben Ainslie (GBR) in 2012.

The Great Dane, Paul Elvstrøm, is the hero of heroes; the man the greats of our sport idolize. He is the ultimate Olympian, a master on the racecourse and always a gentleman. His innate sense of sportsmanship and fairplay holds a fame that transcends sailing. His famous line, 'You haven't won the race if in winning the race you have lost the respect of your competitors' is quoted across sports, nations and cultures.

But for those in Torquay, Great Britain at the beginning of August 1948 for the start of the Olympic Sailing Competition all this would seem improbable. The Danish Olympic Committee had reportedly voiced misgivings about sending the shy teenager who couldn't speak English. At first their doubts would seem justified; Elvstrøm's regatta got off to an inauspicious start with a retirement from the first race following a port and starboard incident with Finnish competitor Erik Palmgreen. In his book, 'Elvstrøm Speaks on Yacht Racing' Elvstrøm wrote of the incident, saying:

'Before I left Denmark, everybody said, 'If you will not be the last we'll be happy,' and I felt I couldn't disappoint anyone, and so when I had to leave the course (In Race one) I was feeling very low inside. Then I said, 'OK, you shall not be the last,' and in the next race I came sixth… After that it went quite well.'

'Quite well' for Elvstrøm meant battling back from eighth with two races remaining to clinch the Gold; mastering the rough water in a remarkable feat of intelligence and physical fitness. In a final race where 12 of the 21 boat fleet capsized Elvstrøm's reefed Firefly flew.

London 1948 would be the first of four back to back Gold medals and the beginning of a remarkable career which would also include winning 11 world championships across five different classes - an achievement that is yet to be matched. Although he won his last Olympic Gold in 1960, Elvstrøm wouldn't hang up his sailing boots until 1988. Sixty at the time and sailing the physically demanding Tornado catamaran with his daughter, Trine, the master bowed out with a 15th place in the Busan breeze.

During his 40-year Olympic career Elvstrøm would be at the forefront of development. So great his genius that today, nearly 70 years on from his first Gold medal, many of the innovations he brought to the sport will still be used in Rio. The most visible of these will be the sitting out technique, known as hiking, that he developed, which will be used in six of the ten classes and the ergonomic buoyancy aid - the successor to his swim vest - worn by every competitor.

Other Elvstrøm advances will shape the competition on the water of Guanabara Bay this summer including the kicking strap, or vang, that he popularized - used by athletes to control the power of their boats; his self-bailing bailer - fitted to all of the Men's and Women's 470s; his series of books on the racing rules with their wallet of small plastic boats and his ideas for training which paved the way for the modern athletic sport.

#ThrowbackThursday

Every Thursday up until Rio 2016, World Sailing will look throwing it back to previous Olympic Games, looking back at the moments that shaped the sport to what it is today.
Beneteau Australia 2026Maritimo M600Sail Port Stephens 2026

Related Articles

America's Cup: Match dates announced
The 38th America's Cup Match will begin on July 10, 2027 from Naples. The 38th America's Cup Match will begin on July 10, 2027 from Naples, and is expected to conclude by the following weekend.
Posted today at 1:27 am
The Famous Project CIC update
Impossible seas, strong winds from the wrong direction, a damaged boat... There is much thinking, pondering, and mentalizing aboard the Maxi trimaran IDEC SPORT from The Famous Project CIC.
Posted on 22 Jan
505, OK & 470 Australian Nationals Days 3 & 4
The fleet woke to a scorching day with land temperatures reaching 40c After four races over the first two days, the OK Dinghy fleet took a rostered day off to go to take the customary photo selfies with the quokkas on Rottnest Island.
Posted on 22 Jan
RORC Transatlantic Race overall winner declared
Olivier Magre and skippered by his son Antoine Magre on Palanad 4 take the trophy The Royal Ocean Racing Club has confirmed Mach 50 Palanad 4 (FRA), owned by RORC Member Olivier Magre and skippered by his son Antoine Magre, also a RORC Member, as the overall winner of the 2026 RORC Transatlantic Race on IRC corrected time.
Posted on 22 Jan
2026 Flying 15 Australian Nationals at CYCofSA
Nick Jerwood wins the Coweslip Trophy for the sixth time After a day of practice racing much more manageable conditions greeted sailors for the first day of racing at the 2026 Flying 15 Australian Championships.
Posted on 22 Jan
Mini Globe Race Atlantic Dash for Recife
24,000 miles of this 28,000 mile race now complete The 1,700 miles from Cape Town to Saint Helena was in classic South Atlantic trade-wind conditions—mostly moderate, occasionally unstable, and fast enough to turn the passage into a genuine match race for the front of the fleet.
Posted on 22 Jan
The Ocean Race 2027 promises the ultimate test
A mammoth opening leg from Alicante to Auckland will be the longest in race history With less than a year until the start of The Ocean Race 2027, the world's top fully-crewed offshore sailing competition confirms a record-breaking opening leg that will take crews halfway around the world.
Posted on 22 Jan
Wet, Wild and Wonderful Stopover in Airlie Beach
For the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race fleet Airlie Beach and Coral Sea Marina once again proved their credentials as a world-class sailing destination, hosting a dynamic and highly successful stopover of the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race amid challenging tropical conditions.
Posted on 22 Jan
GLOBE40 Leg 4 Update: Two leaders neck & neck
A final twist 300 miles from the Valparaiso finish line With less than 300 miles to go to the finish in Valparaiso, the GLOBE40 seems poised to deliver a final twist in this fourth leg, a scenario only it seems to have in store.
Posted on 22 Jan
ILCA Under 21 World Championships 2026 day 3
Qualifying Series Complete in Lanzarote Slovenia's Luka Zabukovec has moved into the overall lead in ILCA 7, while Ginevra Caracciolo continues to assert her authority in the women's fleet at the end of the qualifying series, which gives way to the finals starting tomorrow.
Posted on 21 Jan