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13th December. 2021 Youth Sailing World Championships presented by Hempel, Al Mussanah. Sultanate of Oman. The first day of racing in the Formula Kite fleet (Photo by Lloyd Images/ Oman Sail)

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Italy’s Beach Boys are flying on Day One

Day one in Oman delivered stunning weather for the start of the 2021 Youth Sailing World Championships presented by Hempel.

The breeze started around midday at 5 knots and as the warm Oman sun rose higher above the Barceló Mussanah Resort, the thermal sea breeze climbed to around 12 to 13 knots by late afternoon. All 11 events completed their schedule of races for the first day of world-class competition between 433 sailors from 59 nations.

The beach sports are becoming a bigger part of Olympic competition, and the same is now true at the Youth Worlds. In the boys’ kitefoiler division, Italy’s Riccardo Pianosi (ITA) was fast out of the blocks as he powered his 21-metre kite to first place in the opening two heats, followed by a second and third place in the next. This puts the Italian two points ahead of Max Maeder (SGP) who recovered from a DNF (Did Not Finish) in the opening heat, the 15-year-old from Singapore bouncing back with a fourth and two race wins.

In the other boys’ beach event, the windsurfers known as Techno 293+, Pianosi’s team mate proved utterly dominant. Federico Alan Piloni (ITA) opens his Youth Worlds account with three first places, putting the Italian two points ahead of Great Britain’s Boris Shaw (GBR). Perhaps it’s no surprise to see Italy doing well in the beach sports considering that the team manager at the Youth Worlds is one of Italy’s most highly decorated Olympians, the windsurfing legend Alessandra Sensini.

On the girls’ windsurfers, it was a runaway victory for France’s  Manon Pianazza (FRA) with three race wins. However, only two points behind is Zoe Fernandez de Bobadilla Ramos (ESP). On the girls’ kitefoilers, Gal Zukerman (ISR) powered her way to a perfect four first places ahead of Julia Damasiewicz (POL) with a bunch of seconds.

Meanwhile in the boat events there was plenty of action across all the courses. The interesting challenge for the doublehanded teams in the 420 and 29er fleets is that many crews share their supplied boats between the boys and girls teams from the same country. As Can Erturk and Ali Beren Adamcil (TUR) stepped ashore from winning their opening session in the Male/Mixed division of the 420 class, the young Turks immediately started to retune the rig for their female team mates, Nehir Guzeltuna and Derin Acal (TUR). “They are lighter than us,” said Erturk, “so we help them to set up the mast for flatter sails. We are one boat and four sailors, but we sail for Turkey as one team.”

Behind the Turks in the Male/Mixed 420 is Spain’s crew, Ian Clive Walker March sailing with Finn Dicke (ESP). Spain is also doing well in the girls’ 420 fleet, Neus Ballester Bover and Andrea Perello Mora (ESP) holding a three-point advantage over Camilla Michelini and Margherita Bonifacio (ITA).

In the 29er girls’ fleet, the USA leads, Sophie Fisher and Charlie Leigh (USA) winning two of the three races with Agata Scalmazzi and Giulia Vezzoli (ITA) taking the other win and holding second overall.

The reigning 29er World Champions from Spain, Mateo and Simon Codoner Alemany (ESP) were slow to get going. An 18th place was not the start the Valencian brothers were looking for. “It takes me a while to warm up,” smiled Mateo the 16 year old helmsman. “I worked out what to do by the end of the day. Go left and go fast!” They did speed up to sixth in the next race and won the last race of the session. It’s tight on points with Denmark’s Jens-Christian Dehn-Toftehøj and Carl Emil Sloth (DEN) holding a one-point lead over the Nyenhuis brothers from the USA.

It’s even tighter at the top of the ILCA 6 Female fleet, with the front four split by just a point, Norway’s Marie Jacobsen Lepperöd (NOR) in the lead followed by Russia, Czech Republic and Peru.

Ukraine’s Oskar Madonich (UKR) scored two seconds to take the lead in the ILCA 6 Male division, with two thirds putting José Gomes Saraiva Mendes (POR) in second.

Mirroring the Nacra 17 Mixed Multihull in the Olympic Games, the smaller youth catamaran, the Nacra 15, also sees boys and girls racing together on the same trampoline. Two traditional strongholds of multihull racing – France and the Netherlands – hold the top places, Thomas Proust and Eloïse Clabon (FRA) winning two heats and Olivier Jaquet and Femme Rixt Rijk (NED) taking the other.

Competition continues on Tuesday 14 December, starting at 1200 hours local time [GMT +4]. To look back through the tracking from today’s races, and to follow live racing for the rest of the regatta, go to https://youthworlds2021.sapsailing.com

For full results, go to: https://worldsailingywc.org/results/

For video and photo galleries: https://worldsailingywc.org/multimedia/

11 Events at the Youth Worlds

Female Windsurfer Bic Techno 293+

Male Windsurfer Bic Techno 293+

 

Male Kiteboarding FormulaKite

Female Kiteboarding FormulaKite

 

Female Two Person Dinghy 420

Male/Mixed Two Person Dinghy 420

 

Female One Person Dinghy ILCA 6

Male One Person Dinghy ILCA 6

 

Male Skiff 29er

Female Skiff 29er

 

Mixed Two Person Multihull Nacra 15

About the Youth Worlds

First held in Sweden in 1971, the Youth Sailing World Championships are World Sailing’s flagship event for youth sailors.

Past notable winners include America’s Cup skippers Chris Dickson (NZL), Russell Coutts (NZL) and Dean Barker (NZL); Olympic medallists Nathan Outteridge (AUS), Iain Jensen (AUS), Robert Scheidt (BRA), Amelie Lux (GER), Ben Ainslie (GBR), Iain Percy (GBR), Alessandra Sensini (ITA), Elise Rechichi (AUS) and Tessa Parkinson (AUS); and The Ocean Race sailors Stuart Bannatyne (NZL) and Richard Clarke (CAN). The most successful Youth World Champions are Sally Cuthbert (GBR) and Zofia Klepacka (POL), having won four successive titles in the Laser II and Mistral respectively.

Following the success of their athletes at the 2019 edition, Spain is the current holder of the Nations Trophy, awarded annually to the top-performing nation at the Youth Worlds.