Racing Gets Tighter – Day 2 Of The TT:R World Championships

Gruber pushes ahead

The gap between the leading kiteboard racers narrows as they fight for the world title in Gizzeria, Italy.

 

TT:R WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS AND PUMP KITE TROPHY

Words: Ian Mackinnon / Photos: ICARUS Sports

The reigning world champions who had suffered mixed fortunes in the opening exchanges found better speed and consistency to propel them up the rankings on the second of the five scheduled days of racing off Gizzeria’s Hang Loose Beach.

Germany’s Florian Gruber, the defending two-times world champion, pushed passed the overnight leader, Frenchman Titouan Galea, with a measured performance and a confident victory in his day’s sole elimination round decider.

In the women’s TT:R Worlds division France’s Poema Newland cemented her overnight lead with a solid outing in the light breezes that varied between 10kts and 14kts, despite rain and unseasonal thunderstorms that circled in the Calabrian hills overlooking the track.

But reigning TT:R Youth World Champion, Nina Font Castells of Spain, bolstered her campaign when she climbed to second place in the standings with a victory in her day’s only elimination round decider.

Font Castells’ improved showing was partly the result of a mistake by the Dominican Republic’s Lou Marin, who crossed the line first, but finished joint second after she incurred a penalty during the race.

 

Hang Loose Beach slalom

 

Her fellow countryman, Adeuri Corniel, had no such problems in the TT:R Pump Kite Trophy being run in tandem with the “open” world championships to offer young athletes a chance for further practise before October’s Youth Olympic Games (YOG) in Buenos Aires.

Corniel, the current TT:R Youth World title holder after his victory in China in early May, has been virtually untouchable, easily winning every one of his races on the opening two days of the regatta.
    
France’s Benoit Gomez, also a YOG qualifier, again finds himself in second place in the standings, unable to match the pace of the talented Corniel, an accomplished and rising star in kiteboarding’s freestyle discipline.
    
“I was second yesterday, and I’m second again,” said Gomez. “Corniel is just faster. Partly, I’m just a lot heavier at 95kgs, which is a bit of a problem in these lighter winds. Also, I’ve got a new Upeksha Gawa board that I’ve only used five times. It’s faster, but more complicated and I need to get it dialled in.”
    
Like many others in the Pump Kite division he is focused on honing his skills for YOG, where the riders will be restricted to four “tube” kites and a twin-tip board identical to those they are using in Italy.

In the women’s division, the girls born between 2000 an 2003 who have qualified for YOG, chose to go for TT:R World title glory, but are also able to use it as practise as most racers are using “tube” kites.
  
“All the ‘Olympic’ girls decided in the end to enter the ‘open’ division to train for Buenos Aires,” said Font Castells. “I can definitely feel everyone’s getting better. It really keeps you motivated to improve. So it’s great I’m up to second. On the first day I was a bit underpowered for the conditions.”

Men’s TT:R Worlds leader Gruber, too, found himself a little short of power in the lighter conditions of the first day and was pleased to get his hopes a hat-trick of titles back on track with a win on day two.

 “I’m pleased to win the elimination round decider to go top,” said Gruber. “But in the process I broke my favourite 15m [foil] kite in a bit of a tangle on the beach. So I’ll have to change it. Let’s see what happens.”

 

Watch the highlights of Day 2:

FIND REGULAR RESULTS AT WWW.TWINTIPRACING.COM

 

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