Please select your home edition
Edition
MySail Skipper

Sardinia Grand Slam IKA KiteFoil World Series - Day 3

by International Kiteboarding Association 10 Oct 2021 00:23 PDT

By the time Britain's Connor Bainbridge dons his competition shirt on the final day of racing at the KiteFoil World Series Cagliari, he will have had the dubious honour of having worn all three of the leaders' coloured jerseys, such is the intensity of the battles on the water.

On the penultimate of four days of spectacular racing on the strikingly-beautiful Gulf of Angels track on the Italian resort island of Sardinia, the Briton's performance in the day's four races was enough to move him up to second place overall.

Bainbridge began the day on his 21m kite, in the 10kts sea-breeze blowing over the Devil's Saddle headland, to the right of the course. But by the third race in keenly fought contests with the French duo of Axel Mazella and Théo de Ramercourt, the Briton went down to his 15m kite as the breeze picked up to 12kts.

"To be honest it's been a bit of a mixed bag for me," said Bainbridge. "My aim was to stay consistent. But so far I've been through the yellow shirt of the leader and the red of the third placed rider. Tomorrow I'll be in blue that signals second place."

On day three of the regatta, De Ramecourt also moved up the standings to third place, after searingly-fast racing on his 21m kite in all four races. He recovered from a tangle at the start of race one, going on to collect two subsequent bullets and a third place.

"I was happy that I managed to make the top 10 in that first race after the tangle," said De Ramecourt. "Then I got two bullets. I managed to read the wind shifts and use the gusts. So I was pleased. I forced myself to stay on my 21m registered kite in practice for the upcoming Worlds."

Still, despite the turmoil on the leaderboard below him, Mazella was an island of calm precision as he retained and extended his overall lead with two bullets and two seconds as he hunts down victory and a share of the €25,000 prize pot.

Remarkably, 16-year-old Italian Riccardo Pianosi almost robbed Mazella one of his bullets in the dying and increasingly-shifty breezes of the day's last race. Pianosi led at the first top and bottom marks of the two-lap, windward-leeward course, but was just overhauled by Mazella on the second upwind leg.

"I had a 100-metres gap on Axel Mazella," said Pianosi. "I was ahead at the top and bottom marks. But he read the wind shift on the upwind leg and I didn't see it. He's an animal; a monster on the track."

If anything, the racing among the women, racing in one fleet with the men, was even more turbulent. With two high-placed finishes, France's Lauriane Nolot moved past countrywoman Poema Newland in the standings.

But Nolot and Newland failed to complete the day's last race. Newland had also got in a tangle with Italy's Tiana Laporte in the first race, though both were able to recover and finish. Laporte is a kitefoil racing novice and relished the second-place finish she managed among the strong French women's squad.

"I've been kiteboard racing for just a year," said Laporte, 25. "But I'm doing all the regattas I can. Kiteboarding is a passion and my dream is to go to the Olympics. I'm addicted to speed. At first it was a bit of a rollercoaster as I didn't really know how to manoeuvre well. But it's great. I love it."

Forty-two athletes—29 men and 13 women from 19 countries and five continents—are battling in the World Series' third act in Cagliari. The International Kiteboarding Association (IKA) KiteFoil world champions will be crowned at the close of the slated five stops.

The Czech Republic's Vojtech Koska, 16, is another young athlete cutting his teeth at the top level at the World Series Cagliari, his first big competition. The lure of an Olympics' berth on his national team pushed him to take on the challenge.

Koska has been kitefoil racing for just a year and began his journey at the Formula Kite Youth Worlds in Gizzeria in July, where he placed a creditable 15th overall. The Czech teenager was up against stiff opposition that included the likes of winner, Max Maeder (SGP), who went on weeks later to become European champion at 15.

But Koska has already tasted victory with a win at a major open kitefoil racing event just a week ago in Greece, while he attends school at the World Class Kiteboard Academy that combines academic study, athletic achievement and travel.

Koska, who began kiteboarding at the age of nine, had spent the past two years on the Canary Island of Tenerife where his passion was freestyle and "big air". But when kitefoil racing got its place in the Olympics, debuting in the Paris 2024 Games, Koska made the switch.

"I decided to change to kitefoil racing because of the Olympics" said Koska. "I saw much more potential in racing than freestyle. Right now I'm trying to get as much experience, as fast as possible."

Koska and his parents have been in discussions with the Czech sailing federation and already get a little financial backing to help him compete and grow. But for now the veteran racer from Russia, Ivan Doronin, has been coaching him.

He has been learning fast. On the first day of the World Series Cagliari, in gnarly conditions when the offshore Mistral breezes hit 33kts, Koska was in his element. In one race on day one he managed to place 11th battling the world's best, though the lighter more technical conditions of day two were less to his liking.

"This is my first big competition," said Koska. "The first day was good for me. I like the stronger wind, which I'm used to from Tenerife. The second day was harder. For me now, it's all about understanding what the others are doing so that I can improve. The starts are difficult. Being in the right place on the line and not getting in a tangle is tough. But it's great experience."

All the races of the KiteFoil World Series Cagliari, which reaches its finale on Sunday, are being featured on Facebook Livestream.

Overall Standings:

KiteFoil World Series Cagliari - Men (14 races, 3 discards)

1 FRA Axel Mazella 17pts
2 GBR Connor Bainbridge 31pts
3 FRA Théo de Ramecourt 33pts

KiteFoil World Series Cagliari - Women (14 races, 3 discards)

1 FRA Lauriane Nolot 186pts
2 FRA Poema Newland 196pts
3 FRA Jessie Kampman 222pts

Full results: www.kitefoilworldseries.com.

Related Articles

Connor Bainbridge completes Team GB line-up
14-athlete sailing team set for Paris 2024 Connor Bainbridge has today been named as Team GB's men's kite athlete for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, completing the 14-strong sailing team. Posted on 3 May
Zhik kits out Australia's Olympic sailors
With industry-first high-performance neoprene-free wetsuit When Australia's 12 Olympic sailors take to the waters of Marseille in July this year, they'll wear the industry's first high-performance, neoprene-free wetsuits created by Sydney sailing apparel company Zhik. Posted on 1 May
Grabbing chances with both hands
Can bad weather actually lead to more sailing? There's been no getting away from the fact that it's been a pretty miserable start to 2024 weather-wise in the UK. February saw record rainfall (yes, I know we're famed for our rain over here), it's been seriously windy and generally chilly. Posted on 30 Apr
worldmarine.media news update
Transat CIC, Congressional Cup, Last Chance Regatta News from The Transat CIC from Lorient to New York, the 59th Congressional Cup where Chris Poole and Ian Williams contested the final and the Last Chance Regatta, where the final qualifiers for Paris 2024 were decided. Posted on 30 Apr
FRA, GER, GBR lead qualification numbers
For Paris 2024 Olympic Games The Paris 2024 Olympic Games will see at least 63 nations represented across 10 events this summer after qualifying concluded at the Last Chance Regatta in Hyères in the south of France. Posted on 29 Apr
Bainbridge victory paves way in Hyeres
Securing a Formula Kite Olympic quota place for Team GB Connor Bainbridge revelled in a 'rollercoaster' Last Chance Regatta that ended in him securing an Olympic quota place for Team GB. Posted on 29 Apr
Australian Sailing Team at French Olympic Week
A pair of Silvers on French waters for Australian sailors Australian sailors showcased their skill and determination amidst challenging conditions at French Olympic Week in Hyeres, securing two silver medals and positioning themselves strongly for Paris 2024. Posted on 27 Apr
US Sailing Team at the Last Chance Regatta overall
Rose wins French Olympic Week, Lyons and Edegran qualify for Paris 2024 Winds in the high 20s caused an early end to the 55th French Olympic Week. With no medal races, yesterday's scores stand, and US Sailing Team's Charlotte Rose is taking home her first World Cup win of her career in the ILCA 6. Posted on 27 Apr
US Sailing Team at the Last Chance Regatta day 6
The penultimate day of racing greeted competitors with dark, rainy skies US Sailing Team's Ford McCann took the water for the ILCA 7 Last Chance medal race but entered with too many points between himself and third to make Olympic country qualification possible. Posted on 26 Apr
Last Chance Regatta at Hyères, France Day 6
Six Olympic dinghy places claimed by emerging nations Six of the eight men's and women's dinghy Olympic places on offer at the Last Chance Regatta were claimed by sailors supported by the World Sailing Emerging Nations Program on a rain-soaked final day of qualification at the Semaine Olympique Française. Posted on 26 Apr
Cyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERNorth Sails Performance 2023 - FOOTER37th AC Store 2024-one-728X90 BOTTOM