Rolex Miami Olympic Classes Regatta - Day 1
by Barby MacGowan 25 Jan 2005 07:51 GMT

Mark Mendelblatt & Steve Erickson at the Rolex Miami Olympic Classes regatta © Dan Nerney / Rolex
Country’s Largest Olympic Preparation Regatta Kicks Off in Florida
While Miami residents might have complained about this morning’s unusually chilly temperatures, hundreds of sailors at the 16th annual Rolex Miami OCR gratefully accepted the clear skies and moderate breezes that came with them. The conditions made for a near-perfect first day at the Rolex Miami OCR, one of the largest Olympic and Paralympic preparation regattas in the country. The event has returned to Biscayne Bay for a 16th year and is hosting 217 boats representing 26 countries.
New talent seemed to carry the day in several classes, including the Star.
Andrew Horton and Brad Nichol (Newport, R.I./Hanover, N.H.) topped the
scoreboard with four points, with Mark Mendelblatt and Steve Erickson (St.
Petersburg, Fla./Hood River, Ore.) officially in second, but also with
four points total. For Horton, a winning member of the 2004 ISAF Match
Racing World Championship team, and Nichol, this is only their fourth Star
regatta together. “It’s awesome to be here with all the old-school
greats,” said Horton, referring to the class’s history of attracting
incredible sailors and making them lifelong converts. In fact, the “Star
of the Star Class,” Mark Reynolds (San Diego, Calif.), a four-time
Olympian and three-time Olympic medallist, holds third place with crew
Phil Trinter (Port Washington, N.Y.), a Star-class Olympian from 2004.
“Horton and Mendelblatt are going to be good,” said Reynolds. “I just
hope I can beat them a few times.” Mendelblatt also represented the U.S.
at the 2004 Olympics in the Laser class. He plans to launch an official
Olympic campaign with Mark Strube (Palm Beach, Fla.) but when Strube was
not available to sail with him for this event, Erickson stepped in. “I
decided I needed mentoring,” said Mendelblatt, “so who better to ask?”
Erickson has sailed Stars for 24 years and is an Olympic Gold Medallist
from 1984.
Clearwater, Florida’s Paige Railey, a 2003 World Youth Champion, started
out strong today, topping the Laser Radial fleet after two races. The
17-year-old has come to get a taste of “Olympic-like” competition and is
up against, among others, a real Olympic Silver Medallist (in Europe
class), Lenka Smidova of the Czech Republic, who sits in third overall.
Smidova gave Railey the nod as one of the competition’s top players. “I
am not a fan of this class, really,” said Smidova, who says she is
unfamiliar with the boat while Railey has spent much of her youth sailing
it. The Laser Radial is a class newly added to the Olympics for 2008.
Railey’s older brother is testing his luck in the Finn class, having
switched from sailing a Laser at this event for the previous four years.
He currently sits in fourth place out of 26 boats. “I’m really happy with
that,” said Railey. Canada’s Chris Cook holds the lead, while the USA’s
Finn representative from the 2004 Olympics, Kevin Hall (Bowie, Md.), is
close behind in second.
“This is one of the most important Olympic classes events in North
America,” said Dean Brenner (Wallingford, Conn.), chairman of US SAILING’s
Olympic Sailing Committee. “I think this is a great start to the
quadrennium from the U.S. Olympic perspective, because of the quality of
the American sailors competing and the number of new faces we have on the
scene.”
Other U.S. sailors turning in top performances were Morgan Larson/Pete
Spaulding (Capitola, Calif./Miami Beach, Fla.) in 49ers; Brad Funk
(Belleair Bluffs, Florida) in Lasers; Amanda Clark/Sarah Mergenthaler
(Shelter Island, N.Y./Matawan, N.J.) in 470 women’s; USA’s 2004 Olympic
Silver Medallists John Lovell/Charlie Ogletree (New Orleans, La./Kemah,
Texas) in Tornado; and 2004 ISAF Women’s Match Racing World champions
Sally Barkow (Nashotah, Wis.), Carrie Howe (Grosse Pointe, Mich.) and
Deborah Capozzi (Bayport, N.Y.) in Ynglings.
The Netherlands team of Sven Coster/Kalle Coster leads the 470 Men’s
class, while Stellan Berlin of Sweden leads the 2.4 Metres and the British
team of John Robertson/Hannah Stodel/Steve Thomas leads Sonars.
In addition to Rolex, sponsors for the Rolex Miami OCR are Nautica, Team
McLube and Zodiac. Regatta Headquarters for the 2005 Rolex Miami OCR are
at the US Sailing Center, with classes hosted by the US Sailing Center;
Coral Reef, Key Biscayne and Miami Yacht Clubs; the Coconut Grove Sailing
Club; and Shake-A-Leg-Miami.
For more information, including the latest results and photos, visit the
event web site at www.ussailing.org/Olympics/RolexMiamiOCR
Results after Day 1:
Finn (26 boats)
1. Christopher Cook, CAN, 2-1, 3.00
2. Kevin Hall, Bowie, Md., USA, 1-4, 5.00
3. Soren Holm, DEN, 3-2, 5.00
470 Men (11 boats)
1. Sven Coster/Kalle Coster, NED, 1-2, 3.00
2. Mike Anderson-Mitterling/David Hughes, San Diego/San Diego, Calif., USA, 2-3, 5.00
3. Stuart Mcnay/Graham Biehl, Chestnut Hill, Mass./San Diego, Calif., USA, 3-5, 8.00
470 Women (9 boats)
1. Amanda Clark/Sarah Mergenthaler, Shelter Island, N.Y./Matawan, N.J., USA, 6-1, 7.00
2. Henriette Koch/Lene Sommer, DEN, 5-4, 9.00
3. Erin Maxwell/Alice Manard, Stamford, Conn./Evanston, Ill., USA, 4-7, 11.00
49er (17 boats)
1. Morgan Larson/Pete Spaulding, Capitola, Calif./Miami Beach, Fla., USA, 1-1-1, 3.00
2. Dalton Bergan/Zack Maxam, Seattle, Wash./Coronado, Calif., USA, 4-2-2, 8.00
3. Rodion Luka/George Leonchuk, UKR, 2-3-4, 9.00
Laser Full (46 boats)
1. Brad Funk, Belleair Bluffs, Florida, USA , 2-1, 3.00
2. Matias Del Solar, CHI, 1-7, 8.00
3. Andrew Campbell, San Diego, Calif., USA, 4-4, 8.00
Laser Radial (24 boats)
1. Paige Railey, Clearwater, Fla., USA, 1-3, 4.00
2. Leah Hoepfner, Corpus Christi, Texas, USA, 6-1, 7.00
3. Lenka Smidova, CZE, 2-7, 9.00
Star (40 boats)
1. Andrew Horton/Brad Nichol, Newport, R.I./Hanover, N.H., USA, 3-1, 4.00
2. Mark Mendelblatt/Steven Erickson, St. Petersburg, Fla./Hood River, Ore., USA, 1-3, 4.00
3. Mark Reynolds/Phil Trinter, San Diego, Calif./Port Washington, N.Y., USA, 2-5, 7.00
Tornado (11 boats)
1. John Lovell/Charlie Ogletree, New Orleans, La./Kemah, Texas, USA, 2-1, 3.00
2. Roland Gabler/Gunnar Strukmann, DEN, 1-2, 3.00
3. Rob Parrish/Lars Guck, Hillsborough, Calif./Bristol, R.I., USA, 3-5, 8.00
Yngling (8 boats)
1. Sally Barkow, Deborah Capozzi, Carrie Howe, Nashotah, Wis./Bayport, N.Y./Grosse Pointe, Mich., USA, 1-1-6, 8.00
2. Carol Cronin, Kate Fears, Jaime Haines, Jamestown, R.I./Washington, D.C./Newport, R.I., USA, 5-2-1, 8.00
3. JJ Isler, Pease Glaser, Laura Schmidt, La Jolla, Calif./Long Beach, Calif./Chicago, Ill., USA, 3-3-5, 11.00
2.4 Metre (18 boats)
1. Stellan Berlin, SWE, 2-1, 3.00
2. Marko Dahlberg, FIN, 1-4, 5.00
3. Allan Leibel, CAN, 3-3, 6.00
Sonar (7 boats)
1. John Robertson/Hannah Stodel/Steve Thomas, GBR, 1-1, 2.00
2. David Schroeder/Keith Burhans/Bradley Johnson, Miami, Fla./Rochester, N.Y./Hollywood, Fla., USA, 3-2, 5.00
3. Rick Doerr/James Leatherman/Michael Ross, Clifton, N.J./Glen Arm, Md./Leucadia, Calif., USA, 2-4, 6.00