Youth Worlds: Three crews in top two after Day 2
by Yachting NZ 18 Jul 2018 04:42 BST
Josh Armit - Laser Radial - NZL - Day 2 - World Youth Sailing Championships, Corpus Christi, Texas © James Tomlinson / World Sailing
If yesterday was a good start to the youth sailing world championships in Corpus Christi for the New Zealand sailors then today was even better as Josh Armit jumped to the top of the Laser Radial fleet and two other crews settled into second.
Seb Lardies and Scott McKenzie are second in the boy's 29er and Veerle ten Have is second in the girl's RS:X. On top of that, Greta Stewart and Tom Fyfe had a much better day in the Nacra 15 and climbed five places to fourth, Seb Menzies and Blake McGlashan are sixth in the boy's 420 and Max van der Zalm is ninth in the boy's RS:X.
Armit rounded off what was a good day for most of the NZL Sailing Foundation Youth Team with two bullets in the Laser Radial to establish a two-point lead over Australia's Zac Littlewood. He clearly enjoyed the moderate and sometimes gusty winds at Corpus Christie and his position was helped when the discard for his worst score to date came into play, allowing him to drop his sixth from the first race of the regatta.
"I had a better day today," said Armit, who won last year's Laser Radial under-17 world title. "I enjoyed the conditions out there and got a better feel for the boat. I also made some good decisions which led to some good races.
"It was a good confidence booster to go out there and get some good results. I need to keep doing what I'm doing because it worked today."
It also worked for ten Have, who went into the day leading the girl's RS:X. She backed it up with two thirds and a second to be one point behind Italy's Giorgia Speciale.
Crucially, the top three have established a handy break over the rest of the fleet, with Poland's Weronika Marciniak 15 points behind Great Britain's Islay Watson in third.
The boy's 29er fleet is also starting to take shape with Lardies and McKenzie holding onto second place, five points behind leaders Mathias Berthet and Alexander Franks-Penty of Norway who won two of today's three races. The Kiwi pair were ninth (their drop), third and fourth today, but had to fight hard at times to keep in touch with the leaders.
"We got out of some sticky situations on the start line," Lardies said. "We had to bail early to try to get a clear lane. Tomorrow we need to send it hard off the line so we don't get pinched and can get a clear lane straight away."
McKenzie added: "We hope the rest of the week goes as well as it has been going. Just no silly mistakes."
Stewart and Fyfe fought their way back into contention in the Nacra 15 off the back of two seconds and a ninth in their three races today, which leaves them six points off the crews in second and third. The Argentine pair of Teresa Romairone and Dante Cittadini showed their class, winning all three races, and now have a 13-point lead with three days remaining.
Stewart and Fyfe had a straightforward plan: "Keep it simple, get good starts and go fast in the right direction."
Menzies and McGlashan are right in the mix in the boy's 420, which is proving to be one of the most competitive fleets at the youth worlds, after a 10th and third today. The American pair of Joseph Hermus and Walter Henry dominated today's two races to open a handy seven-point lead over second but only 10 points separate second and 11th.
The promising Menzies (13) and McGlashan (15) are the youngest members of the New Zealand team in Corpus Christie and have shown in the first two days they are more than competitive against rivals who are sometimes five years older than them.
As many as 382 sailors from 66 countries are competing at the youth sailing world championships, which is the pinnacle event for youth sailors. Some of New Zealand’s top sailors have won titles at this level, including Chris Dickson (1978-80), Russell Coutts (1981), Dean Barker (1990), Tom Ashley (2002) and Sam Meech (2009).
Results and standings after the second day of the youth sailing world championships at Corpus Christi today:
Boy's 420 (23 boats)
1st: Joseph Hermus / Walter Henry (USA) (3) 2 1 1 - 4 points
2nd: Otto Henry / Roma Featherstone (AUS) (8) 7 2 2 - 11 pts
3rd: Kacper Paszek / Bartek Reiter (POL) 5 5 (19) 5 - 15 pts
6th: Seb Menzies / Blake McGlashan (NZL) 4 (13) 10 3 - 17 pts
Girl's 420 (22 boats)
1st: Carmen Cowles / Emma Cowles (USA) 1 1 (23 UFD) 1 - 3 pts
2nd: Vita Heathcote / Emilia Boyle (GBR) 4 2 1 (6) - 7 pts
3rd: Julia Minana Delhom / Silvia Sebastia Borso di Carminati (ESP) 2 (4) 2 4 - 8 pts
14th: Cara Higinbottom / Alice Floyd (NZL) 11 12 (15) 11 - 34 pts
Boy's 29er (25 boats)
1st: Mathias Berthet / Alexander Franks-Penty (NOR) 6 (8) 1 2 1 1 - 11 pts
2nd: Seb Lardies / Scott McKenzie (NZL) 3 1 5 (9) 3 4 - 16 pts
3rd: Henry Larkings / Miles Davey (AUS) 1 2 2 6 (10) 7 - 18 pts
Girl's 29er (23 boats)
1st: Pia Andersen / Nora Edland (NOR) 2 1 3 (17) 1 1 - 8 pts
2nd: Zoya Novikova / Diana Sabirova (RUS) (4) 3 1 3 2 2 - 11 pts
3rd: Berta Puig / Isabella Casaretto (USA) 5 6 2 1 (7) 5 - 19 pts
15th: Sophia Fyfe / Alice Haslett (NZL) 17 (24 UFD) 12 13 10 12 - 64 pts
Nacra 15 (24 boats)
1st: Teresa Romairone / Dante Cittadini (ARG) (3) 2 3 1 1 1 - 8 pts
2nd: Silas Muhle / Romy Mackenbrock (GER) 1 6 1 (10) 6 7 - 21 pts
3rd: Henri Demesmaeker / Frederique van Eupen (BEL) 2 1 (25 DNF) 3 9 6 - 21 pts
4th: Greta Stewart / Tom Fyfe (NZL) 10 (12) 4 9 2 2 - 27 pts
Boy's Laser Radial (58 boats)
1st: Josh Armit (NZL) (6) 3 1 1 - 5 pts
2nd: Zac Littlewood (AUS) 1 (8) 4 2 - 7 pts
3rd: Juan Cardozo (ARG) (7) 1 6 3 - 10 pts
Girl's Laser Radial (46 boats)
1st: Charlotte Rose (USA) (4) 1 1 1 - 3 pts
2nd: Emma Savelon (NED) 1 2 (6) 2 - 5 pts
3rd: Valeriya Lomatchenko (RUS) (6) 4 2 3 - 9 pts
22nd: Samantha Stock (NZL) (25) 23 18 24 - 65 pts
Boy's RS:X (27 boards)
1st: Geronimo Nores (USA) 1 1 1 (4) 1 2 - 6 pts
2nd: Nicolo Renna (ITA) 2 2 2 2 2 (3) - 10 pts
3rd: Fabien Pianazza (FRA) (6) 5 3 1 3 1 - 13 pts
9th: Max van der Zalm (NZL) 7 16 9 6 9 (19) - 47 pts
Girl's RS:X (17 boards)
1st: Giorgia Speciale (ITA) 2 (3) 3 1 1 1 - 8 pts
2nd: Veerle ten Have (NZL) 1 1 2 (3) 2 3 - 9 pts
3rd: Islay Watson (GBR) 3 2 1 2 (4) 2 - 10 pts
Full results worldsailingywc.org/results/2018
The team are proudly supported by the NZL Sailing Foundation (previously known as the NZL Yachting Trust), Oceanbridge, Zhik and HPSNZ.