Top Team from Tokyo Take 2022 Europeans

Top Team from Tokyo Take 2022 Europeans

Tita and Banti Dominate in Fourth European Championship

Sport

11/07/2022 - 08:24

Olympic sailing is hugely competitive, but dominating performances, and seasons do happen. Rarely, if ever, has a team won a major championship the way Ruggero Tita and Caterina Banti won this European Championship in Aarhus. In 15 races they won nine of them, were second 5 times, and had an eighth. In total, their 21 points is less than a quarter of the 86 points the second place team scored.


The Nacra 17 had a reset in March as the fleet introduced adjustable rudder rake systems. The change allows foiling upwind most of the time and it seems to have played right into the strength of the reigning gold medalists. Tita and Bandi are dominant on the foil, which was already clear from their downwind sailing in the Tokyo quad and has become unwieldly as the fleet has move to full foiling.


The rest of the fleet is watching their every movement, however, and no doubt the gaps will diminish over time.


Finishing second to the slick Italians are a young duo of Micah Wilkinson and Erica Dawson (NZL) who appear on the podium at a championship for the first time. The pair narrowly won Kiwi Olympic selection to Tokyo, but dealt with an injury in the months leading up to the games which did not allow them to be at top form at the Olympics. Their racing this week was very strong in what was quite a competitive fleet behind Italians, and the Kiwis sailed very consistently all week showing they will be a team to keep an eye on.

 
Sinem Kurtbay with Akseli Keskinen (FIN) finished third, which is also their first trip to the podium at a major championship. The pair have been on a steady rise for the past couple of seasons and look poised to become headliners.

The fleet packs up now for shipping to Nova Scotia, Canada for the World Championship at the end of the summer.

Top Team from Tokyo Take 2022 Europeans

Tricky Medal Race can't Stop Champions From Winning

After a dramatic penultimate day that saw boats launching and crashing in bursts of spray, the medal races Sunday were a 180 from Saturday where racing was cancelled early. The 2022 European Champions were crowned in the 49er and 49erFX after the Bay of Aarhus dished out subtle but game changing shifts and puffs that wound up determining podium.

 
After a dramatic penultimate day that saw boats launching and crashing in bursts of spray, the medal races Sunday were a 180 from Saturday where racing was cancelled early. The 2022 European Champions were crowned in the 49er and 49erFX after the Bay of Aarhus dished out subtle but game changing shifts and moderate puffs that wound up determining podium.

 
Double Olympic gold medalists Grael/Kunze (BRA) slid into first Saturday after a slow but deliberate climb to the top that saw them picking their way through the fleet each race of the series. Not always the fastest, but often the most calculated, the pair didn't risk a close start in the Medal Race and headed back to the line with Americans Roble/Shea as the rest of the 10-boat fleet, each team from a different country, marched out to a dominant left hand shift in the flat seas and six to eight-knot winds. Last for most of the race, the Brazilians did just enough to get around two boats, finishing eighth, and winning the championship by six points.

 
Current world champions van Aanholt/Duetz (NED) had a chance earlier in the race to keep their upward march going towards first, but several fickle shifts didn't go their way and they settled for silver. Bobeck/Netzler (SWE) who lead the fleet for the majority of the event held onto third by winning the Medal Race.

 
Still one of the strongest teams in the 49er fleet after their win the Oman worlds last fall, Lambriex/van de Werken (NED) were feeling relaxed going into the final day with the lead. But a 25th in the last race, their throwout, shook the Dutch and a sixth in the Medal Race sealed their second place, allowing Botin/Trittel Paul (ESP) to claim their second European Championship title, their first being in 2018 in Gdynia, Poland.

 
Peters/Sterritt (GBR) did just about all they could to grab second with their second place in the Medal Race but ended up just one point behind the Dutch in third.

 
Sailing Aarhus and the city defined by it's seat on the sea was a spectacular back drop to the championship and though places changed multiple times in each of the three Medal Races, the winners were no surprise. "There's usually little change at the top," said 49FX sailor Jo Aleh of New Zealand who was guest commentator during the medal races. With two Olympic medals in the Women's 470, Aleh should know. "They've been sailing so well all week, they can match any condition they get."

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