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Race Win Puts Irish Olympic Duo in Contention

9th March 2012
Race Win Puts Irish Olympic Duo in Contention

#BACARDI CUP – Peter O'Leary and David Burrows have shot to second overall in the Bacardi Cup leaderboard with an impressive 1, 4 scored yesterday in testing conditions on Biscayne Bay, Miami. The Cork-Dublin duo who will sail for Ireland at the London Olympics this summer are only two points adrift of the leaders, Poland's Mateusz Kusznierewicz and Dominik Zycki. A further two races of the series that has been cut short by strong winds take place today with the Irish pair eyeing the prestigious class title, a regatta in which they finished second in 2011. O'Leary and Burrows are racing a new P-Star keelboat launched only last week.

In the first race of the day for the Star class 2008 Olympian O'Leary and Burrows (Ireland) led around the first leeward mark followed closely by 2008 Star World Champions Mateusz Kusznierewicz and Dominik Zycki (Poland) and Xavier Rohart and Pierre-Alexis Ponsot (France). The positions remained intact as the three teams crossed the finish line. In race two, 2007 BACARDI Cup champion Hamish Pepper and crew Jim Turner (New Zealand) were leading at the first mark, followed by Kusznierewicz/Zycki and Rohart/Ponsot, but the Polish team succeeded in beating them across the line, with the French team finishing third.

The win of the second race moved Kusznierewicz and Zycki to the top of the overall standings with three points, followed by O'Leary and Burrows with five. Day one leaders Hans Spitzauer, a five-time Olympian, and Gerd Habermueller (Austria) placed 9-5 in today's races and dropped to third overall, where they are tied on points with Rohart and Ponsot. Two points back, Pepper and Turner stand fifth with eight points.

"Overall not a bad day," said Peter O'Leary. "After two days on shore we were very happy to be on the water again. Conditions were good, yet a bit tricky with big waves that made sailing interesting. We were first at the first mark and we took it from there to the finish. In the second race we had an excellent start and then had to overcome a big wind shift. We made it to the top mark in the top group, and although we wanted to win we had to settle for fourth."

In a further boost for the Irish camp O'leary's training partner, his brother Nicholas crwed by Rodney Hagebols lies 12th in the 67-boat fleet after scoring a fifth yesterday in his first ever Star event. Ireland is also racing in the Melges class in Miami this week. Report here.

Published in Olympics 2012
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