Race
 1 got started in a pleasant 9-11 knots with Oscar flag flying for free 
pumping. After a route up the middle right, Cornish squeezed round the 
top mark in the lead from Italy’s Filippo Baldassari and Henry Wetherall
 of Great Britain.  
Ramshaw took the left track downwind and passed Cornish, who later 
admitted he had not seen the Oscar flag flying. Ramshaw held the lead 
through the gate, but on the shortened second upwind where the leaders 
covered each other, Baldassari got in front, if very briefly. 
This time 
Cornish got it right downwind and moved ahead, only to make another 
mistake and pass through the gate marks on his way to the finish, 
sailing a longer course than those who sailed straight to the finish. He
 just maintained his lead with Ramshaw second and Baldassari third. 
Heiner, who had followed Cornish, crossed fourth.
| 
                    
                        | Race 2 started in slightly more breeze, with
 a clear right hand shift soon after the start. Brazil’s Jorge Zarif, 
winner of the World Cup Series in Miami, made a very risky port tack 
approach to the pin and ended up with a UFD starting penalty. Pic 
emerged from the far right with a nice lead that he extended on all the 
way to the finish. Mikolaj Lahn from Poland was second throughout, while
 Zsombor Berecz from Hungary, who had rounded the top mark in 11th moved
 up on the second upwind to cross in third. |  | 
    
            | 
                    
                        | Cornish explained his day. “The first 
race was an accumulation of school boy errors I think. I forgot that 
Oscar flag was up for free pumping on the first run and then sailed 
round the gate, which I didn’t need to do, before the finish line so 
definitely didn’t make that one easy.” 
 The conditions were not quite what he was expected, but he followed that with a sixth place to lead overnight. “The
 wind was a lot further left than we had on our forecast and I always 
had it in the back of my head that there was something in the right, and
 as it played out the breeze started to clock right during the day. It 
was the side to be on.”
 
 On his great start to the week “Can’t complain. Certainly it was a 
day that was easier to get wrong than to get right so I am glad to come 
out of that unscathed.”
 
 On the smaller fleet at the World Cup Series, “It has its pros and 
its cons. I like the idea of getting all the top sailors in one place 
but also like the size of the fleet that the Finn attracts, so it’s a 
shame to turn that away from such great venues like this.”
 |  | 
    
            | 
                    
                        | Pic said of his Race 2 win. “I thought 
the wind was starting to be a bit strange and I saw the cloud, and in 
those conditions it starts to go right. So I started at the committee 
boat and went right and then took the pressure, and at the top mark I 
had nothing to do because the mark was on the left and it was just keep 
the speed and go.” 
 “On the second upwind, the Polish (Lahn) was a bit more to the right and
 each time he was taking a bit more pressure than me so I tried to go 
over a bit. He was fast though and did really well.”
 
 The talk of the coming days is of the mistral. “I think the mistral 
is coming. We trained a lot in Marseille with this mistral, and I am 
ready for that. We can have 25, maybe 35 knots. For sure it is stronger 
in Marseille, but I think it could be super windy here.”
 |  | 
    
            | 
                    
                        | Third overall, Ramshaw, was very pleased with his start to the week. In the first race, “I
 had a good start and sailed conservatively and was able to round in the
 top five and had a good downwind and put it together from there.” “In the second race I had a bad start and went up the middle and the
 right came in so there were about 20 boats well ahead. But I ended up 
sailing a really good downwind and a good upwind and same back to the 
top 10, so I am really happy with that, and if I can salvage races like 
that into good races, it will make for a good series.”
 
 Since the Olympics, “I have been training mostly in Valencia. I 
sailed Miami and Palma, but I did not do very well at those regattas, so
 I am now working with a new coach, Larry Lemieux, and so far I am 
really liking where things are going  and I am feeling much better out 
on the race course.”
 
 The Finns fleet is scheduled to have two more races on Wednesday at 
13.30. Racing continues until the medal race on Sunday 30 April.
 |  | 
                                        
                                    
                                    
                                
                            
                            
                                
                                    
                                    
                                        
                                            
Results after two races
1              GBR 91           Ben CORNISH                7.0          
2              NED 89           Nicholas HEINER            9.0          
3              CAN 18           Tom RAMSHAW             10.0                      
4              FRA 17            Fabian PIC                     12.0          
5              TUR 21           Alican KAYNAR              12.0          
6              POL 17            Piotr KULA                     15.0          
7              FRA 112          Jonathan LOBERT         17.0          
8              HUN 40            Zsombor BERECZ        18.0          
9              ESP 17            Pablo GUITIAN SARRIA 19.0          
10            ITA 123            Filippo BALDASSARI      23.0          
Full results here 
 
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