Please select your home edition
Edition
upffront 2024 May Flash Sale Leaderboard

470 European Championship in San Remo, Italy - Overall

by Andy Rice 20 May 2023 11:30 PDT 14-20 May 2023

Anton Dahlberg and Lovisa Karlsson (SWE) have won the 470 European Championship by a single point after a tense Medal Race in San Remo, Italy.

The points were so close that it took a few minutes before anyone could be sure of who had won. Eventually the cheer went up from the Swedish boat as Dahlberg and Karlsson realised they had successfully defended the European title they won in Turkey eight months earlier. Simon Diesch and Anna Markfort (GER) took silver and Hippolyte Machetti and Aloïse Retornaz (FRA) had to settle for bronze.

The conditions for the two-lap course were not at all straightforward. The wind was gusting and swirling off the Italian cliffs, never consistent, always patchy, varying between 8 to 14 knots. The unpredictable breeze made it very hard to defend a lead but offered up opportunities to attack.

Machetti and Retornaz sailed a brilliant race, pumping and working the boat to great effect down the first run to move into the lead ahead of Japan. The breeze continued to prove unreliable and fickle. But the French sailed a very good final windward leg to extend their lead a little more, to around 40 metres. As the positions stood, with Sweden and Germany battling away in the back half of the pack, gold would go to France who had started the day in third.

Having profited from gybing out to sea on the first downwind, the leading French did the same again. However, their teammates who had moved up to second at the final windward leg, Camille Lecointre and Jérémie Mion (FRA), did a straight set on starboard gybe. It proved to be the better decision.

When the two French converged towards the bottom gate for the last sprint reach to the finish, they were neck and neck. Machetti/ Retornaz had the inside line at the mark, but turning on to the reach they were judged by the umpires to have not kept clear of Lecointre/ Mion who luffed their rivals and scorched across the finish line in first place. Forced to take down the spinnaker and execute a 360 degree turn, Machetti and Retornaz relinquished their hard-won lead and by the time they had got going again they slipped to fourth place across the finish.

It was a horrible way for the French to conclude what had otherwise been a well-sailed race, and it opened the door for Sweden and Germany to overtake them in the standings. Dahlberg and Karlsson reached across the line in seventh place, immediately behind the Germans. Carrying a 3-point advantage going into the race, at least the Swedes knew they had beaten Diesch and Markfort.

As to the gold however, for some agonising minutes the Swedish boat waited silently before the official points were eventually confirmed. Never one to disguise his emotions, Dahlberg was ecstatic, punching the damp air in sunny delight. "We were lucky but we feel so happy," he grinned. "The French dropped some important points in the end which was unfortunate for them, but it was enough to make the small difference in our favour. It's such a relief to defend our European Championship."

Karlsson paid tribute to the Germans and the French they had just beaten. "It's an honour to race against them, we had to fight really hard all week and the standard in the fleet is going up all the time," she said.

Anna Markfort had few regrets, even if she and Diesch had missed gold by such a small margin. "If you'd have offered us a silver medal at the European Championships at the start of the week, we'd have grabbed it," she said. "I'm exhausted, physically, mentally, everything! We've pushed ourselves all week and we're really pleased with how we've sailed."

At the prize-giving later in the afternoon Machetti was still hurting at the missed opportunity in the Medal Race, just those final 100 metres of the reach to get the gold. "But I'm still happy we came away with a medal, a bronze, when so many boats were in contention. It was a learning experience, a tough one, but we're getting better and a medal this week is a sign of moving in the right direction."

International 470 Class president Dimitris Dimou paid tribute to Yacht Club San Remo and Marina degli Aregai for hosting such a successful event. "I can't think of a better venue for celebrating the 60th anniversary of the 470," he said. "We have seen perfect 470 weather this week, tough conditions that most boats would not be able to handle, and the sailors have fought hard and fair for the whole week."

Related Articles

470 Europeans at Cannes Day 4
Spain's Jordi Xammar and Nora Brugman top the rankings Spain's Jordi Xammar and Nora Brugman top the rankings by six points from France's Camille LeCointre and Jeremie Mion. The British team of Martin Wrigley and Bettine Harris had a stellar day with a 2,1 scoreline to move up to third. Posted on 10 May
470 Europeans at Cannes Day 3
While racing did get underway in light winds, the breeze then dropped to nothing While racing did get underway in light winds, with a full lap completed, the breeze then dropped to nothing, resulting in the race being abandoned. Unfortunately that was it for the day and the fleet were sent ashore. Posted on 9 May
470 Europeans at Cannes Day 2
A superb day for the Italian pairing of Elena Berta and Bruno Festo More light and shifty winds in Cannes on day 2 of the 470 European Championship made for difficult conditions to race in, watching for the shifts. Posted on 8 May
Berthon proudly supports Vita Heathcote
The Olympic-qualified sailor is preparing in her campaign for gold Berthon is pleased to announce its support for Olympic-qualified sailor Vita Heathcote as she prepares to compete in the first mixed crew 470 at the Paris Olympic Games, taking place from July 26th to August 11th, 2024. Posted on 8 May
470 Europeans at Cannes Day 1
Japan's Keiju Okada and Miho Yoshioka take the early lead Three races were held on the first day of the International 470 Class European Championship in Cannes, France. The day started off with very light winds, slowly building as clouds built over the race course. All in all, three races were held. Posted on 8 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
470 Europeans at Cannes Preview
The last major international event for the class before the Olympic Games The Yacht Club de Cannes is hosting the last major international event before the Olympic Games. Posted on 29 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
North Sails Performance 2023 - FOOTERZhik 2024 March - FOOTERMySail Crew