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HomeSportVNR Alert: Day 3 at Dutch Water Week: Shaping the Future of Olympic Sailing with New Formats

VNR Alert: Day 3 at Dutch Water Week: Shaping the Future of Olympic Sailing with New Formats

VNR Alert: Day 3 at Dutch Water Week: Shaping the Future of Olympic Sailing with New Formats






VNR Alert: Day 3 at Dutch Water Week: Shaping the Future of Olympic Sailing with New Formats





VNR Alert: Day 3 at Dutch Water Week: Shaping the Future of Olympic Sailing with New Formats

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 

Friday, 19th of September 2025

VNR Alert: Day 3 at Dutch Water Week: Shaping the Future of Olympic Sailing with New Formats

Day Three of the Dutch Water Week, the last stop of the Sailing Grand Slam 2025, brought sunshine and light winds to Almere. After two cooler, breezier days, sailors and fans finally enjoyed almost summer-like conditions. The event offers the opportunity to test new formats for future finals in sailing, windsurfing and kite foiling.

Britain’s Michael Beckett continues to lead the ten-sailor fleet in the ILCA 7. Danish windsurfer Johan Søe tops the iQFOiL Men’s class and Ireland’s Eve McMahon is the one to beat in the ILCA 6.
 

ILCA 7


In the ILCA 7, Michael Beckett (GBR) underlined his quality with another strong day, keeping a firm hold on the overall lead. With Nicholas Halliday (HKG) and Lorenzo Chiavarini (ITA) in the chase, Dutch sailor Duko Bos held on to joint 5th, while Willem Wiersema followed in 8th.

Reflecting on the format trials, Beckett said:

“It’s great that we’re using this event to test new formats. Sailing needs to keep moving forward, and experiments like this are important if we want the sport to stay exciting and attractive at the Olympics.”

ILCA 6


In the ILCA 6, the leader is Eve McMahon (IRL) with Agata Barwinska (POL) in second. Maxime Jonker (NED) climbed into 3rd overall and Roos Wind (NED) also impressed, sitting close behind in 4th.

Norwegian sailor Line Flem Høst, in fifth place, praised the format innovations in her class:

“For us in the ILCA 6, it feels like a full event of medal race sailing, which is pretty cool. The two upwind marks give us a lot more to think about. Every rounding, every tack, every small manoeuvre suddenly becomes crucial. It takes away some of the advantages we older, more experienced sailors usually have, but that’s a cool challenge. What’s most exciting is that everyone has a chance until the last few days — and the one who crosses the finish line first is the one who wins the race. That makes it a lot easier for spectators to understand.”

iQFOiL


In the iQFOiL Men, Johan Søe (DEN) stayed out in front, with Nacho Baltasar Summers (ESP) in 2nd and Max Castelein climbing into the top 3. Olympic champion Kiran Badloe (NED) sits 5th, and Joost Vink (NED) is 6th.

Baltasar Summers enjoyed the chance to try new courses:

“We started trying a new school racing course and it’s super fun. Because we are only ten riders, it’s easy to test. At a world championship with 35 this wouldn’t work. But maybe for the medal race or even the Olympics, something like this could really work.”

 

Shaping the future of the sport


The real headline is innovation. These Pilot Finals are being used to test new competition formats designed to make sailing more exciting, easier to understand, and fit for the Olympic stage.

Linda Bomhof, event director, explains how new scoring systems and the decision to race without discards are being trialled this week — experiments aimed at keeping the sport dynamic, attractive for sailors, and crucially, appealing to television audiences:

“With only ten athletes on the start line, this week gives us the perfect chance to try different systems. We are testing both low-point scoring, where every finishing position counts, and high-point scoring, where only the top three in each race get points. We’ve also removed discards after analysing years of data that showed they made no difference to the overall result. On top of that, we are trying new course layouts such as Course X, which put sailors under constant pressure and make the racing easier to follow for spectators. All of this is about shaping formats that are fair for the athletes and exciting for the Olympic stage.”

That innovative spirit is nothing new in the Netherlands. Under earlier names — Spa Regatta and later Delta Lloyd Regatta — this event has always been on the brink of change, introducing fresh ideas to improve the sport’s appeal. With Olympic sailing heavily dependent on TV coverage and broadcasting rights, making the racing more straightforward and thrilling remains an essential mission.

Finals on inland lake at Almere’s City Centre


For the last two days, the Dutch Water Week leaves Marina Muiderzand and moves inland to the Weerwater in Almere’s city centre. The shift brings top-level sailing right into the heart of the city, making it easier for the public to watch the action up close.

Looking ahead to the change of venue, Dutch ILCA 7 sailor Duko Bos said:

“I trained a bit on the Kralingse Plas (small inland lake in my hometown Rotterdam) to prepare for the switch to the Weerwater in the city centre. Hopefully that gives me a little advantage.”

On Sunday, the five best-ranked in the High Points Scoring format (iQFOiL and ILCA 7) will battle it out on the Weerwater in the ultimate final. In the Low Points Scoring format (ILCA 6) all nine will compete to decide who takes the honours — and the €1,500 prize money for the winner.

Text Credits: Simon Keijzer / Dutch Water Week
Photo Credits:
Sailing Energy
Video Credits: ICARUS Sports

To keep up to date with SGS Dutch Water Week 2025 please visit https://dutchwaterweek.com/
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TV broadcasters: ICARUS Sports’ output from the SGS Dutch Water Week 2025  is now uploaded on ICARUS Sports SERVER:


VNR SHOTLIST:

SGS Dutch Water Week 2025 – 19.09 – Direct download* HERE

00:00 – 00:06: ILCA 6 Qualification Series Aerial Shot
00:07 – 00:10: Agata Barwinska POL
00:11 – 00:16: Clara Gravely CAN
00:17 – 00:21: Line Flem Hoest NOR
00:22 – 00:27: Agata Barwinska POL
00:28 – 00:31: Line Flem Hoest NOR Aerial Shot
00:32 – 00:37: ILCA 6 Qualification Series Racing Shots
00:38 – 00:49: Maxime van de Werken – Jonker NED
00:50 – 00:54: ILCA 6 Qualification Series Racing Shots
00:55 – 00:59: Line Flem Hoest NOR Aerial Shot
01:00 – 01:10: Eve McMahon IRL
01:11 – 01:20: ILCA 7 Qualification Series Racing Shots
01:21 – 01:33: iQFOiL Qualification Series Racing Shots

 

INTERVIEWS:

DUTCH: Maxime van de Werken / Jonker (NED, ILCA 6) – Direct download HERE

DUTCH: Roos Wind (NED, ILCA 6) – Direct download HERE

ENGLISH: Eve McMahon (IRL, ILCA 6) – Direct download HERE

ENGLISH: Line Flem Høst (NOR, ILCA 6) – Direct download HERE

ENGLISH: Maxime van de Werken / Jonker (NED, ILCA 6) – Direct download HERE

NORWEGIAN: Line Flem Høst (NOR, ILCA 6) – Direct download HERE

*direct download links expire in 30 days

Please find here the link in order to register and use ICARUS Sports server:
http://portal.icarus-sports.com/

As long as you register, you will get access to our folder with the Events 2025.
Subfolder: SGS Dutch Water Week 2025 /Day 3


Please note that the direct download links might not work with all browsers such as Google Chrome. You may use an alternative browser such as Mozilla Firefox, alternatively visit the ICARUS Sports server directly to access our content.

Notes to Editors | About ICARUS Sports

ICARUS Sports stands out as a leading Sports Media company, with a dynamic portfolio that spans over 200 international events annually and delivers more than 2,800 hours of filmed content. The company specializes in producing original in-house TV shows, including The Sports Rundown, The Outdoor Sports ShowGearing UpInside Sailing &Sailing to the Games – LA Edition and more than 100 documentaries per year. With a robust media distribution network reaching over 160 countries, ICARUS Sports collaborates with some of the most prominent global broadcasters. Its end-to-end media services encompass high-quality video production, strategic media distribution, and impactful brand promotion. 

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