For challenging conditions and lack of reliable sailing breeze, the Olympic Regatta in Marseille will most likely go down as one of the toughest in living memory. Along with the high temperatures, the lack of breeze put a huge strain on everyone - the sailors, coaches, race officials and volunteers. Yet despite all that, it's hard to argue with who won the 30 medals across 10 events. Sailors, athletes who displayed huge resilience, dug deep and prevailed in the high heat and high pressure of Paris 2024.
The new events worked out well for the sailors and the sport. As Olympic equipment the 470 has been in the Games since Montreal 1976, but Paris 2024 is the first edition where men and women have raced in the same 470 together. Then there were the new foiling classes - the iQFOiL windsurfers and Formula Kite boards - which lit up the race track and achieved peak speeds never before seen in Olympic sailing competition.
The fans in Marseille couldn't get enough of the competition and the Olympic atmosphere. Every time the sailors headed out to racing or returned to the beach, the crowd was ready to give them a hero's welcome. Team Mama - the two mothers Sarah Steyaert and Charline Picon who won bronze in the Women's Skiff - along with kite silver medallist Lauriane Nolot were the local favourites, although the Spanish contingent made a lot of noise when Diego Botin and Florian Trittel took gold in the Men's Skiff.
After showing signs of promise in the past two Olympic Regattas, The Netherlands finally becomes top sailing nation with two gold and two bronze, the only country to win four medals from 10 events. Next best were Italy and Austria with two gold medals apiece
Stefano Peschiera's bronze was Peru's first ever Olympic medal in sailing. Max Maeder, aged 17, won Singapore's first ever sailing medal with bronze in Men's Kiteboarding. Marit Bouwmeester's gold in Women's Dinghy makes her the most successful female sailor of all time, now with two golds, a silver and a bronze for the Dutch legend - Andy Rice
Men's Windsuring
Gold: Tom Reuvenym ISR
Silver: Grae Morris, AUS
Bronze: Luuc Van Opzeeland, NED
Women's Windsuring
Gold: Marta Maggetti, ITA
Silver: Sharon Kantor, ISR
Bronze: Emma Wilson, GBR
Men's Kite
Gold: Valentin Bontus, AUT
Silver: Toni Vodisek, SLO
Bronze: Maximilian Maeder, SGP
Women's Kite
Gold: Eleanor Aldridge, GBR
Silver: Lauriane Nolot, FRA
Bronze: Annelous Lammerts, NED
Men's Dinghy
Gold: Matt Wearn, AUS
Silver: Pavlos Kontides, CYP
Bronze: Stefano Peschiera, PER
Women's Dinghy
Gold: Marit Bouwmeester, NED
Silver: Anne-Marie Rindom, DEN
Bronze: Line Flem Hoest, NOR
Men's Skiff
Gold: Diego Botin Le Chever / Florian Trittel Paul, ESP
Silver: Isaac McHardie / Williams McKenzie, NZL
Bronze: Ian Barrows / Hans Henken, USA
Women's Skiff
Gold: Odile Van Aanholt / Annette Duetz, NED
Silver: Vilma Bobeck / Rebecca Netzler, SWE
Bronze: Sarah Steyaert / Charline Picon, FRA
Mixed Dinghy
Gold: Lara Vadlau / Lukas Maehr, AUT
Silver: Keiju Okada / Miho Yoshioka, JPN
Bronze: Anton Dahlberg / Lovisa Karlsson, SWE
Mixed Multihull
Gold: Ruggero Tita / Caterina Banti, ITA
Silver: Mateo Majdalani / Eugenia Bosco, ARG
Bronze: Micah Wilkinson / Erica Dawson, NZL