Giles Scott (GBR) made his move on the
fourth day at the ISAF Sailing World Cup Hyeres. A 1, 2 in
Thursday's races gives him a five point lead over Andrew Mills (GBR),
who won the second race, while some great sailing and consistency moves
Josh
Junior (NZL) up to third. He has been poised to strike all week,
always near the top but not making many waves around him. Giles
Scott's results during the opening series were nothing to write home
about but he still ended up second. This valuable two points, which is
non-discardable, is now serving him well as he puts some distance
between himself and the chasing fleet at the regatta moves towards its
conclusion.
Scott led a British charge in the first
race of the day in a much lighter breeze than the forecast 20
knots. Mark Andrews (GBR) took second with Ed Wright (GBR) in fourth and
Andrew Mills in seventh. It pushed Scott to the top of the leaderboard
for
the first time this week. Josh Junior split the British team, crossing
in third.
Four black flags inside the top 10 in race
five (or the fourth actual race of the final series if you
are still confused) changed the landscape somewhat with this morning's
leader Pieter-Jan Postma (NED), Jonathan Lobert (FRA) Vasilij Zbogar
(SLO) and
Andrew Murdoch (NZL) all pulled out. A further eight boats further down
were also disqualified for black flag infringements.
After the first general recall eight boats were pulled out when a left shift during sequence made
people push the line too hard. Then another were four black flagged in the start that got away.
In the end it was Andrew Mills who led
Scott across the finish line with Tapio Nirkko (FIN) in third.
Mills summed up his day, “Race 1 was a left hand track but a long right
hander a third of the way up the beat meant a pretty even race course. I
was a little stuck in the pack but with good speed and happy to get back
to seventh.”
“Race 2 got away in much lighter breeze but
there was plenty of breeze on the horizon on the left
so it was pretty much a race to the left. I started well and got out
there. Then we had a limited pumping run which meant a change of sailing
style to
a bit more 'softly softly catchy monkey'. The final run was a good
battle with Giles and I just managed to finish ahead.”
Scott said, “I did well
out of a right shift on the first beat, rounding in
about fourth or fifth and sailed to second downwind and maintained the
gap that Mark had on me up the second beat. Then I was able to pass him
near
the bottom of the last run before the finish.”
On his performance so far
Scott revealed, “I had the one really bad race in
qualifying with some very up and down wind that I didn't make the most
of, and then some gear failure in the final qualifying race with a vang
shackle
coming undone.”
On the new format he
said, “Vasilij [Zbogar] was a little hard done by as he
had a 10 point lead over me which is a shame for him as he sailed really
well over the first two days. I still think the qualifying needs to
count for
more.”
Junior moves up one to third overall after a
3, 6. “I struggled a little bit going upwind, but
have more than enough pace downwind to make up for it. The forecast
today was for a lot of breeze but it never eventuated. I think because
there was
to much high cloud around. Looking forward to the last day of finals
racing tomorrow before medal racing on Saturday.”
In the silver fleet there were race wins for Olympians Alican Kaynar (TUR) and Peng Zhang (CHN).
However Oleksiy Borysov (UKR) continues to lead, albeit by just one point from Kaynar and two from Zhang after a 5, 6 today.
There are two races left for the gold and silver fleets before the top 10 go into Saturday’s two
medal races.
Results after nine races
1 GBR 41 Giles SCOTT 8.00
2 GBR 85 Andrew MILLS 13.00
3 NZL 24 Josh JUNIOR 18.00
4 NED 842 Pieter Jan POSTMA 18.00
5 GBR 11 Edward WRIGHT 21.00
6 FRA 112 Jonathan LOBERT 24.00
7 SLO 573 Vasilij ZBOGAR 30.00
8 FIN 218 Tapio NIRKKO 34.00
9 FRA 29 Thomas LE BRETON 36.00
10 NZL 16 Andrew MURDOCH 36.00
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