An Olympic Rehearsal

ISAFThe Aquece Rio – International Sailing Regatta will act as a dress rehearsal for the Olympic Games with the world’s leading sailors, many of whom will be on the Olympic startline, fine tuning their preparations in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

From 15-22 August 339 sailors from 52 nations, racing in the ten Olympic sailing events will put themselves to the test across six race courses, three inside and three outside of Guanabara Bay.

Compared to the test events for other Olympic sports, sailing is unique. A large majority of those competing from 15-22 August will go on to Rio 2016 and in many cases the medallists at the test event will realise their dreams in a year’s time with an Olympic medal around their neck.

In the build up to London 2012, 18 medallists in the test event went on to take an Olympic honour, a statistic that could well be repeated and even bettered at Rio 2016.

With a wide array of exceptional sailing talent the stakes are high. A strong result at the test event can build up confidence and leave athletes with a can do attitude.

The 470 events will be spearheaded by Olympic gold medallists Jo Aleh and Polly Powrie (NZL) and Mat Belcher (AUS) sailing with Will Ryan.

Both the Kiwis and Australians took gold at the 2014 test event and are back in the mix, aiming for another good performance on the journey to retain their Olympic titles.

“It’s getting busier and busier out on the water, there are new boats and teams out every day… It’s rather exciting,” commented Aleh.

“At the moment everyone is just training, working on their boats and getting time on the water. But next week when we all start moving to the Marina da Gloria – the Olympic Harbour – things will start to ratchet up a little.”

A week on from Aleh’s comments and Marina da Gloria is a hive of activity. The sailors are in, International Race Officials are arriving and work continues on the marina to ensure it is up to scratch for the Olympic Games.

Whilst the focus is on this week, Belcher, holder of the last five 470 World titles, knows the athletes have their eyes on the ultimate prize within the sport, an Olympic medal, “For all of us, everything, every day we train, every minute and hour, weeks, months, years, it’s all about the Games.

“The regattas we do give us the opportunity to test things where we need to test, to benchmark ourselves, so that throughout the cycle we know where we are at and what we need to work on. And hopefully it will all come together when we need it – at the Olympics,” said Belcher.

The Men’s and Women’s 470 fleets feature 22 and 19 teams respectively. London 2012 silver medallist Luke Patience (GBR), sailing with Elliot Willis will be amongst the frontrunners in the men’s fleet alongside the links of Sime Fantela and Igor Marenic (CRO), Stu McNay and Dave Hughes (USA) and Olympic bronze medallists Lucas Calabrese and Juan de la Fuente (ARG).

2014 World, European and World Cup champions Lara Vadlau and Jolanta Ogar (AUT), London 2012 silver medallists Hannah Mills and Saskia Clark (GBR) and Annie Haeger and Briana Provancha (USA) will be in the mix in the women’s fleet.

Six race courses will be tested throughout the week, three outside of Guanabara Bay and three inside. Courses outside include Pai, Copacabana and Niteroi whilst the inside courses are Pão de Açúcar, Ponte and Escola Naval. All will be tested throughout the week by the ten Olympic sailing events

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