Sunday Star-Times

Kiwi windsurfin­g legends in Olympics race

Bruce Kendall and Aaron McIntosh are driving change in windsurfin­g. Michael Brown reports.

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The future of Olympic windsurfin­g could be decided next month and at the forefront of discussion­s are options put forward by two Kiwis who once ruled the sport.

Aaron McIntosh and Bruce Kendall both have packages up for considerat­ion by World Sailing (WS) to be the equipment of choice for windsurfin­g at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Five options are presently being tested at Lake Garda in Italy, with a WS committee likely to make a recommenda­tion for the full WS council to vote on next month.

The RS:X was first used at the 2012 London Olympics, and will again feature in Tokyo next year, but has many detractors, including many of the sport’s top sailors and coaches, who say it is too expensive for what it is, not durable enough and far too physically demanding.

Even two-time Olympic champion Dorian van Rijsselber­ghe, who is coached by McIntosh, and who it could be argued has the most to lose with any change, implored WS to consider a different option.

Among the five windsurfer­s being tested are three windfoilin­g packages, the RS:X and Kendall’s Glide design.

The one perhaps capturing the most attention is Windfoil1, which is being driven by a handful of individual­s, including McIntosh and fellow Kiwi Antonio Cozzolino, van Rijsselber­ghe and America’s Cup sailor Glenn Ashby. The foiling revolution that is transformi­ng sailing has also reached windsurfin­g and it’s seen a resurgence of the sport in New Zealand.

As many as 50 competitor­s took part in this year’s inaugural national championsh­ips and many others can be found buzzing around harbours and lakes throughout the country.

‘‘Windsurfin­g has gone through a dramatic change over the last two years,’’ says McIntosh, who won bronze at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, and three world titles. ‘‘It’s all happening above the water. We are flying. It’s faster, more dynamic and windsurfin­g is cool again. The current classes are quite stagnant and stuck in the past. Windfoilin­g has taken windsurfin­g to another level and that’s pretty exciting.

‘‘I think the key is to really

 ??  ?? Bruce Kendall’s Glide, above, and Aaron McIntosh’s Windfoil1, right, are being tested on Lake Garda as potential future models of Olympic windsurfer­s.
Bruce Kendall’s Glide, above, and Aaron McIntosh’s Windfoil1, right, are being tested on Lake Garda as potential future models of Olympic windsurfer­s.
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