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Burling and Tuke secure 4th consecutive 49er World Champs


Burling and Tuke secure 4th consecutive 49er World Champs in impressive style

Peter Burling and Blair Tuke have won their fourth consecutive Olympic 49er World Championship after successfully defending their crown in Clearwater, Florida, further extending their unprecedented string of regatta victories to 24 straight wins.

Meanwhile Alex Maloney and Molly Meech have finished the 2016 49erFX World Championships in 8thoverall and in the 2016 Nacra 17 World Championship Gemma Jones and Jason Saunders have finished 14th overall ending on a high note with a 2nd place in today’s race.

49er

Peter Burling and Blair Tuke have taken the 2016 49er World Championship in impressive style securing the title defence with two races to spare.

Clearwater has thrown high winds and big waves, as well as light air days at the Olympic skiff and multihull fleets contesting their 2016 world championships, yet the phenomenal kiwi 49er pair have come out on top once again.

Not even a hand injury, suffered by Tuke early in the event, was enough to derail the pair who taped up and pushed on.

Going into today Burling and Tuke were 28 points ahead of the pack and this morning they used the day’s first two gold fleet races to open enough of a points lead to secure the 2016 49er World Championship.

A massive 45 point margin was required to get into this uncommon unassailable position before sailing the last 25-boat gold fleet race and the final top ten double points medal race. They went on to place 12th in the final gold fleet race and then 3rd in the medal race and take the title by 41 points.

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“We were really happy to go out there with a pretty healthy lead going into the day but still a bit of work to do,” says Peter Burling. “And we’re absolutely stoked to go out there and finish it off with a couple of races to spare. It’s always a pretty nice way to do it.”

As world sailing has moved towards adding extra weight to the last race of a fleet racing regatta, with the introduction of the medal race, Burling and Tuke defy statistics and deliver the improbable.

“It’s been really challenging, a big range of conditions,” adds Blair Tuke. “We’ve sailed in up to 20 knots with big waves, and light tricky stuff so it’s been a real mix of conditions and we’re happy with how we’ve been going across the board.”

Four consecutive 49er World Championship titles is something not seen before and the achievement places Peter Burling and Blair Tuke firmly into the record books. They now draw equal to Nathan Outteridge’s accomplishment of four 49er World titles (2008, 2009, 2011 and 2012).

Perhaps even more impressive is their mounting tally of consecutive regatta victories which now reaches 24 straight Olympic 49er class regatta wins including this year’s 2016 New Zealand 49er National Championship and now the 2016 49er World Championship. This sort of accomplishment is particularly impressive in the sport of Olympic sailing where venue, conditions and large fleets make consistency on this level incredibly difficult to achieve.

Being able to perform and finish at the front across all conditions, superior boat handling, tactical brilliance and great teamwork are among their campaign assets which set them apart from their rivals.

Despite their incredible track record over recent years it seems it has taken a long time for New Zealand sporting fans and mainstream media to recognize quite what these two, who quietly go about their business, are achieving in the Olympic 49er class.

While prioritizing their Olympic campaign towards Rio 2016 both Burling and Tuke compete in a combination of sailing disciplines which seems, for them, to be beneficial in cross crediting knowledge and skill.

“Blair and myself have got a pretty busy schedule coming into the Games and through to August and it’s something that we’ve been putting a lot of thought into. A lot of planning has gone in to how the next six months are going to unfold for us.”

“We’re really looking forward to the challenge and it’s going to be good fun.”

In January 2014 Emirates Team New Zealand announced that they had signed the pair, and a little over a year later their roles with the America’s Cup Challenge stepped up with Burling announced as helmsman for the 2017 campaign.

The pair is coached by Hamish Willcox, a three-time World Champion in the Olympic men’s 470 class himself.

Burling, now 25 years old, grew up sailing in the Bay of Plenty at the talent breeding Tauranga Yacht & Powerboat Club, while 26 year old Tuke started his sailing career in Northland, New Zealand with the Kerikeri High School sailing academy and he represents the Kerikeri Cruising Club.

Burling was just 17 years old when he represented New Zealand, and finished 11th at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, sailing in the men’s 470 class with Carl Evans. He became the youngest sailor ever to represent New Zealand at the Olympic Games, and was the youngest member of the 2008 New Zealand Olympic Team.

Subsequently joining forces with Blair Tuke to mount an Olympic 49er campaign the kiwis became friends and training partners with the talented Australian pair of Nathan Outteridge and Ian Jensen and rose through the ranks. Leading into London 2012 Outteridge and Jensen were the team to beat, but that proved impossible and the Australian’s claimed the Olympic gold while Burling and Tuke collected the silver, which happened to be New Zealand’s 100th Olympic medal.

Since then the kiwis have developed an indomitable determination to go one better and win Olympic gold for New Zealand embarking on an unprecedented run of victories at all the major international 49er regattas they’ve attended.

Burling and Tuke are the 2013, 2014, 2015 and now 2016 World Champions in the 49er, they also won the 2013, 2014 and 2015 49er European Championships.

They were awarded the ISAF World Male Sailor of the Year for 2015, and are finalists for New Zealand’s prestigious Halberg Team of the Year to be announced this Thursday in Auckland.

49er FX

Things really heated up in the women’s 49erFX class today with some mixed results from some of the top placed crews and others fighting it out against their national team-mates for Olympic selection.

The FX women raced three gold fleet races this morning in which the New Zealand duo of Alex Maloney and Molly Meech placed 11th, 12th and 5th which saw them go into the final medal race lying 7th overall.

Decreasing and shifting breeze saw the 49erFX medal race sailed in very funky conditions, the kiwis crossing the line in 9th and closing the regatta in 8th overall.

Spain’s Tamara Echegoyen and Berta Betanzos have taken the 2016 49erFX world title ahead of Maiken Foght Schutt and Anne-Julie Schutt of Denmark, with Germany’s Victoria Jurczok and Anika Lorenz claiming the bronze medal.

This regatta has demonstrated that the 49erFX class will be exciting to watch when it makes its Olympic debut in Rio this year.

Nacra 17

Gemma Jones and Jason Saunders capped off their 2016 Nacra 17 World Championships with a 2ndplace in their last race of the regatta. Disappointed to miss out on the top ten medal race cut after yesterday, the NZL Sailing Team pair today sailed one race against the remainder of the fleet, and they conclude the regatta in 14th overall.

“We’ve learnt a lot with equipment here, and we won’t make the same mistakes again so I think there is a lot of things we can change to get back to what we think is our best level,” said Jason Saunders after yesterday’s competition.

“We have about a week off now and then we have our home regatta, Oceanbridge Sail Auckland and we’ll go there and we’ll race around with the young guys and a few of the other kiwis and then we’ll build up with the usual Europe trip, Palma and Hyeres and mix that in with a couple of stints in Rio and really looking towards August.”

Olivia Mackay and Micah Wilkinson, New Zealand’s up and coming pair in the Olympic mixed multihull class, were 18th in today’s race and wrap up the regatta in 19th overall.

New Zealand’s Final Results

49er World Championship

1st Peter Burling & Blair Tuke (NZL Sailing Team)
36th Logan Dunning Beck & Jack Simpson (Aon Fast Track Squad)
38th Markus Somerville & Josh Porebski

42nd Isaac McHardie & Trent Rippey (Aon Fast Track Squad)
Full results here

49erFX World Championship
8th Alexandra Maloney & Molly Meech (NZL Sailing Team)
19th Erica Dawson & Ellie Copeland (Aon Fast Track Squad)
Full results here

Nacra 17 Championship

14th Gemma Jones & Jason Saunders (NZL Sailing Team)
19th Olivia Mackay & Micah Wilkinson (Aon Fast Track Squad)
Full results here

Links

There are two main websites where you can follow all the action. http://www.saillife.com/ for the Nacra17 and http://49er.org/event/2016-world-championship/ for all 49er and 49erFX updates.

For image requests and more information contact:

Jodie Bakewell-White
Email: Jodie@yachtingnz.org.nz
Tel. 021 709 065

Open your diary or calendar – here are this year’s key dates on the Road to Rio.

February

2016 470 Men’s and Women’s World Championships, San Isidro, Argentina
Racing dates: 22-27 February

2016 RS:X Men’s and Women’s World Championships, Eilat, Israel
Racing dates: 22-27 February

2016 Oceanbridge Sail Auckland, Murrays Bay Sailing Club, Auckland
Racing dates: 24-27

March

2016 Finn European Championships, Barcelona, Spain
Racing dates: 7-12 March

2016 Princess Sofia Regatta, Palma de Mallorca, Spain
Racing dates: 28 March – 2 April

April

2016 Laser Radial World Championships, Nuevo Vallarta, Mexico
Racing dates: 14-20 April

ISAF Sailing World Cup Hyeres, France
Racing dates: 22-26 April

May

2016 Finn World Championships (Finn Gold Cup), Gaeta, Italy
Racing dates: 6 – 11 May

2016 Laser World Championships, Nuevo Vallarta, Mexico
Racing dates: 12-18 May

June

ISAF Sailing World Cup Weymouth, United Kingdom
Racing dates: 10-14 June

August

2016 Rio Olympic Games, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Racing dates: 8-19 August

2016 Rio Paralympic Games, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Racing dates: 7–18 September

ends

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