Please select your home edition
Edition
North Sails Loft 57 Podcast

Hempel World Cup Series Final in Marseille, France - Day 3

by Daniel Smith, World Sailing 7 Jun 2019 05:06 AEST 4-9 June 2019

Mattia Camboni (ITA) and Lilian de Geus (NED) hold top spot in the Men's and Women's RS:X as the battles heat up at the Hempel World Cup Series Final in Marseille, France.

After Wednesday's blowout, the sailors racing across the ten Olympic events and Open Kiteboarding were eager to get back to what they do best sailing as hard and as fast as possible in a bid for glory.

A full schedule of racing was completed and the leaderboards are shaping up nicely ahead of Saturday and Sunday's Medal Races which will be live on World Sailing's YouTube channel.

Italy's Camboni controlled the Men's RS:X fleet on the opening day, claiming two race victories and a second. No racing was possible on Wednesday but in three further races on Thursday, sailed in a variable 10-15 knot breeze that veered from the west to south west, he continued to impress.

A third race victory was backed up with a second and a ninth, which he discards. "I've had two really good days," expressed the young Italian. "One day was perfect and today could have been perfect if it wasn't for my last race. I had a really bad start. I had to tack in the middle of the course and it was hard to get back. I also made a few mistakes but the other races were good. It could have been worse.

"I have a good feeling with my equipment, even though it's a little bit old. I'm feeling fast and we had a lot of good days in Lake Garda training in similar conditions. I have no stress and the luck seems to be with me. I hope it's like this for the remaining days."

Camboni has opened up an eight point advantage over Poland's Piotr Myszka and is a further two points clear of compatriot Daniele Benedetti.

Alongside the fight for the 2019 Hempel World Cup Series Men's RS:X title, Camboni also has the added pressure of trying to qualify himself to August's READY STEADY TOKYO Sailing, the Olympic test event.

"This is an important competition because it's the World Cup Final. It would be nice to get the medal because I'm working so hard. This event is also qualification for the test event. We had the World Cup in Miami and this is the last event. Daniele and I are really close," concluded Camboni.

Claiming the Hempel World Cup Series title would go a long way in Camboni demonstrating he has what it takes to succeed at the highest level.

Three fleet races remain ahead of Saturday's Medal Races.

The Netherlands' de Geus is racing in Marseille without the pressure that is bestowed on many of her rivals. De Geus has already qualified for Tokyo 2020 and will compete at her second Olympic Games next Summer.

Sailing without the added stress off fighting a national rival or qualifying the country, having done that at the first time of asking, is paying off. She advanced to first overall on Thursday following a 6-6-1 scoreline.

"It was amazing conditions today," commented de Geus. "This morning we went out and we had no breeze. We waited a bit and it's good we waited because we had some really nice breeze after that. The races were amazing.

"There are a lot of good sailors here. It's a good battle every day. You've got to battle and work hard for everything and I'm happy I managed to get that final race win."

De Geus finished fourth at Rio 2016, her first Olympic Games, missing out on a medal by a single point. With the pain of missing out still evident, she knows what she has to do to ensure she doesn't lose out again, "Ahead of Tokyo 2020, I've got to keep going on the pathway I'm going, taking steps forward every day. If I do that then I have a good chance of taking a medal at Tokyo."

Saskia Sills (GBR) secured a 7-3-3 scoreline and is two points off de Geus in second. Flavia Tartaglini (ITA) is third.

A real battle is developing between Kiwi team mates Andy Maloney and Josh Junior in the Finn.

Between them, the pair have won every single race. Junior has three of the five victories but finds himself a point behind Maloney, the leader. Junior's discard is higher than Maloney's and he counts a fourth following a scoring penalty in Race 4 that saw him pick up a maximum 13 points for the race.

The fight will continue on Friday as they bid to extend their advantage over Max Salminen (SWE) who is third, eight points off.

After watching their team mates Ruggero Tita and Caterina Banti (ITA) win gold at the 2018 World Cup Series Final, Italy's Vittorio Bissaro and Maelle Frascari are fighting hard for glory in the 24-boat fleet.

Bissaro and Frascari have sailed sublimely and from four races, sailed their way to a 2-5-2-1 scoreline. That has enabled them to open up their lead over John Gimson and Anna Burnet (GBR).

Billy Besson and Marie Riou (FRA) occupy third and Ruggero Tita and Caterina Banti, who clinched two victories today, are fourth.

After winning the single 49er race in strong breeze the day prior, Spanish brothers, Federico and Arturo Alonso completely dominated the four fleet races on Thursday.

The Spaniards won the first three races and concluded the day with a second. As a result they have opened up a 21-point advantage over Benjamin Bildstein and David Hussl (AUT). Overnight leaders Kévin Fischer and Yann Jauvin (FRA) were penalised in the first race of the day and raced in the middle to lower end of the fleet. High scores have pushed them down to fourth.

Julie Bossard and Aude Compan (FRA) shone in the 49erFX. Two race wins, a second and a third, positions them at the top of the pack, ten points clear of Aleksandra Melzacka and Kinga Loboda (POL).

Australia's Mat Belcher and Will Ryan look well acclimatised to the Marseillaise waters after another outstanding day. Two bullets and a second has allowed them to leapfrog Jordi Xammar and Nicolás Rodriguez (ESP) into first overall.

The Spaniards had led from day one but they could not match the Australians consistency to maintain it. They are still in the hunt, seven points off, and with four fleet races remaining know they can move back into pole position.

France's Camille Lecointre and Aloise Retornaz clinched two race wins and a fourth to move into medal contention in the Women's 470. The pair were ninth heading into Thursday's sailing but now sit second thanks to their work on the water.

Rio 2016 Olympic champion, Hannah Mills, sailing with Eilidh McIntyre (GBR) lead the Women's 470. They claimed the final race win of the day and are seven points clear of the French. Overnight leaders, Afrodite Zegers and Lobke Berkhout (NED) dropped to third.

In the Laser, the race victories continue to be shared with three separate winners from the day's races. They went to Zan Luka Zelko (SLO), in fifth, Agustin Vidal (ARG) in sixth and the third placed Adonis Bougiouris (GRE). Ryan Lo (SGP) holds the lead on 12 points followed by Giovanni Coccoluto (ITA) on 15.

Lithuania's Viktorija Andrulyte maintained her consistency in the Laser Radial with a 1-2-2 scoreline to open up a nine point advantage over Elena Vorobeva (CRO) and Tatiana Drozdovskaya (BLR). The points are close at the top of the fleet with Carolina Albano (ITA), Silvia Zennaro (ITA) and Yumiko Tombe (JPN) within striking distance of the podium.

Racing is scheduled to start at the earlier time of 10:00 on Friday 7 June. The forecast is for strong gusts in the afternoon and the race management team will aim to make the most of the 15-19 knot morning breeze.

Event website: wcsf.marseille.ffvoile.fr

Related Articles

World Sailing launches the World Sailing Academy
A new online learning platform for the global sailing community World Sailing officially launched the World Sailing Academy, an innovative new online learning platform designed to provide comprehensive educational resources and training to sailors, coaches, officials, administrators, and the global sailing community. Posted on 17 Jun
Summer Youth Olympic Games equipment confirmed
Dakar 2026 will feature 2 sailing events in the Techno293 World Sailing is pleased to announce the selection of Techno293 as the equipment used in competition at the upcoming Summer Youth Olympic Games Dakar 2026, being held from 31 October to 13 November 2026. Posted on 29 May
Steering the Course kicks off to #AccelerateAction
World Sailing's global women's sailing festival gets under way soon The 2025 edition of Steering the Course, World Sailing's global women's sailing festival, gets under way on 23 May with a week-long focus on #AccelerateAction in support of this year's International Women's Day theme. Posted on 22 May
NYYC hosts 2025 World Sailing Mid-Year Meeting
Board conducted a series of productive strategic meetings The gathering brought the World Sailing Board and Council together in person at the Club's historic 44th Street Clubhouse in Manhattan—an iconic venue designed by Whitney Warren, renowned architect of Grand Central Station. Posted on 19 May
World Sailing Inclusion Championships preview
Event will bring together an expected 215 sailors from around the world, to Oman The Sultanate of Oman has been chosen to host the first edition of the new World Sailing Inclusion Championships. Posted on 14 May
World Sailing Annual Conference & Awards preview
This will be the second time the town has hosted a World Sailing Annual Conference. The coastal destination of Dún Laoghaire has been chosen to host the 2025 World Sailing Annual Conference and World Sailing Awards from 3-8 November 2025, bringing together over 400 international delegates. Posted on 9 May
Hannah Mills OBE to share carbon footprint success
At World Sailing Sustainability Session Great Britain's most successful female Olympic sailor and strategist for Emirates GBR SailGP Team, Hannah Mills OBE, will headline as guest speaker at World Sailing's upcoming Sustainability Session on renewable energy in the sport. Posted on 8 May
World Sailing welcomes LA28 athlete quota
The Int. Olympic Committee's has announced the of athlete Quotas, Sports and Events for LA28 World Sailing has welcomed the International Olympic Committee's announcement of athlete quotas, sports and events for the 2028 Olympics, due to be held in Los Angeles. Posted on 10 Apr
World Sailing Race Officials Training programme
Available to Member National Authorities to apply for on an annual basis World Sailing is proud to announce the launch of a new education programme for Race Officials. Posted on 1 Apr
World Sailing launches new coaching scholarship
Each programme combines experiential learning on the water with in-person sessions World Sailing is celebrating the launch of the World Sailing Coaches Scholarship 2025-2028, a brand-new programme for Member National Authorities (MNAs) which targets coaches and instructors working in grassroots sailing through to national level. Posted on 31 Mar
Sea Sure 2025X-Yachts X4.0Maritimo 2023 S-Series FOOTER