The New Zealand Herald

Olympic champs stand in way of Tokyo aim

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Logan Dunning Beck and Oscar Gunn will have surfing and fishing on their minds over the next couple of weeks but the main item on their agenda is winning a medal for New Zealand at the Tokyo Olympics.

That is no small ambition, given the quality of the 49er fleet and the impending return to action of Olympic and four-time world champions Peter Burling and Blair Tuke.

Crucially, though, Dunning Beck and Gunn qualified the boat for the 2020 Games and it will now come down to one of four New Zealand crews for the ticket to Japan.

Dunning Beck and Gunn have shown enough since they teamed up about 12 months ago to suggest they have great potential. They finished third in yesterday’s medal race at the world championsh­ips in Denmark to be seventh overall and it’s come on the back of medals at both last year’s Olympic Week in Japan and the World Cup in Hyeres.

“It feels great to have [Olympic qualificat­ion] out of the way so early,” Gunn said. “It doesn’t guarantee we are going but it’s something we don’t have to worry about in the future. We can carry on racing and try to beat all the other Kiwis.”

Dunning Beck added: “We’ve had a couple of good results so far. There’s still a heck of a long way to go. It’s like staring at a massive hill to climb in the next two years to try to win the spot and then win a medal at the Olympics but we are having fun and improving really fast, which is the most important thing. We will carry on and keep doing what we are doing.”

Alex Maloney and Molly Meech will take a similar approach.

The pair came to the world championsh­ips as title contenders, having won their last regatta, but things didn’t fall their way.

They were fifth in yesterday’s medal race and eighth overall, which meant they ticked off a significan­t achievemen­t.

“It’s really cool to qualify New Zealand a spot in the 49erFX,” said Meech.

“It’s only two years to Tokyo so it’s exciting it’s all under way. The next thing is selection. It’s going to be an exciting couple of years.”

Yesterday’s 49erFX medal race was full of drama and excitement.

Maloney and Meech sailed well and were second when a big squall ahead of a thundersto­rm hit the stadium course in the Bay of Aarhus.

The Austrian combinatio­n, who had been leading the race and were 11 points ahead of their nearest rival, capsized as the wind swung around the compass, allowing the Dutch pair of Annemiek Bekkering and Annette Duetz to snatch gold.

“After the first lap, it started to get a bit crazy and shifted quite far left and then a huge right pressure band came in and it seemed the people further back managed to get it first and the whole thing tipped on itself,” Meech said.

“For us this week, there were a few surprises and unexpected things happened on the course,” Maloney said.

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