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Overnight storms and a three hour postponement because of lack of wind disrupted the start of day four in Palma, but eventually two more races were sailed in slightly better wind conditions.
Race eight followed a similar pattern with Ainslie taking his fourth race win of the week. This time he was followed across the line by Zach Railey (USA) and Jonas Høgh Christensen (DEN). This result – along with a seventh in race seven - moved Railey up to second overall, while Daniel Birgmark (SWE) who finished 11-5 today, dropped to third overall. These two have also built a 17 point gap over the rest of the fleet.
Railey said, “Conditions were a bit better but still very hard to predict.” On Ainslie he had only respect. “Ben is going fast and making really great decisions on the race course. We had a close race in the second race today and he was able to edge me out for the win. You have to give credit when someone is sailing well and he is doing a great job this week.”
Ainslie of course is still getting back to fitness after an operation on his back earlier this year. He commented, “It was a difficult period over the winter. We’ve been here training pretty hard, but the conditions funnily enough are quite different to what we’ve been training in and I think everyone’s finding it hard. For me it’s just great to be back racing again and you do realise there’s a huge difference between training with four or five boats and suddenly having 60 boats, a long start line, 1.3 mile beats and a big course so it’s very different and it's great for me to be back racing and getting my head into that.”
Fourth overall Høgh Christensen commented, “Today was a very tough day for me. I sailed like a sack of potatoes.”
“In the first race I had a great start and was sure the right would pay, but the wind turned 25 degrees left and I rounded with only a few boats behind me. It turned out to be damage control rather than fighting for the podium. Ben didn't have a great start but he was committed to the left as one of only a few of the good guys.”
“The second race was a bit different. I was leading but made some mistakes dropping from first to tenth in a matter of minutes. Good speed and good decisions got me back to third. Zach led the most of the race but made a small error and Ben took the advantage.
“I made some big mistakes today and did not sail my best at all. Tomorrow will hopefully bring breeze and I hope to put points on the top 3so I have a fighting chance in the medal race.”
Other Olympic selection trials here are also running including the Poles and the Czechs and it couldn't be closer. Rafal Szukiel (POL) who was a 2008 Olympian is just two places and seven points ahead of the young Piotr Kula (POL), who had an excellent start to the regatta. Meanwhile the Czechs are even closer with Tomas Vika (CZE) leading four time Olympic veteran Michael Maier (CZE) by just one place and one point. Friday is going to be a critical day for all these sailors.
Szukiel commented on the selection process, “Our selection started here in Palma. We have three regattas, here, Hyeres and the Gold Cup, but only two best are counting. So everything is still open.” Is there a competitive spirit between the sailors. “At the moment we are one team. I hope it will stay like that up to the Olympics.”
On the conditions this week, “Today's conditions were difficult. The wind was shifty and different strength. I got some good results because I was sailing well downwind and what is more important I was starting well.”
Ninth placed Matthias Miller (GER) commented, “I'm very happy to be in the top ten. Last year was not so good for me, but I always could felt that I could do more. Now after lots of training in Valencia I'm ready. This week, like at the Europeans, the main thing is to reduce the risk.”
On qualification for Weymouth, “I didn't get selected last year. So the last selection is the worlds in Falmouth. I have to do top ten.”
However at the top of the fleet, Ainslie is now in a great position going onto the final day of the opening series. On Friday he has the possibility of sealing the regatta win with room to spare. He is the only sailor here seeming to make sense of the conditions every race and his scoreline proves it.
Results after eight races
Photos: Thom Touw
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