Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Email Travel Subscribe SI About Us Olympics Sailing

 
U.S. Home Sydney 2000 Home Basketball Boxing Cycling Diving Gymnastics Soccer Swimming Tennis Track & Field Volleyball More Sports Schedules Results Medal Tracker Medal History Athletes About Australia Multimedia Central World Home World Europe Home World Asia Home CNN Europe CNN Home Home

EVENTS
 Sportsman of the Year
 Heisman Trophy
 Swimsuit 2001

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Video Plus
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Message Boards
 Email Newsletters
 Golf Guide
 Cities
 

CNNSI.com GROUP
 Sports Illustrated
 Life of Reilly
 SI Women
 SI for Kids
 Press Room
 TBS/TNT Sports
 CNN Languages

COMMERCE
 SI Customer Service
 SI Media Kits
 Get into College
 Sports Memorabilia
 TeamStore

A star is born

Reynolds claims second gold medal

Posted: Saturday September 30, 2000 4:59 AM
Updated: Tuesday November 14, 2000 11:12 AM

  Mark Reynolds The American Olympic Open Star class gold medal winners skipper Mark Reynolds on right and Magnus Liljedahl. AP

SYDNEY, Australia (CNNSI.com) - Mark Reynolds proved why he as been called the star of the Star class.

The 44-year-old San Diego sailmaker won his second gold medal Saturday.

"It is great to have come from behind," said Reynolds, a four-time Olympian. "There were probably a few people that counted us out after six races.

"I won't say that I counted myself out, but at that point I was starting to be concerned more about getting into the medals than just worrying about a gold."

After a slow start in this regatta, Reynolds and his crew, Magnus Liljedahl, 46, of Miami, rallied and were assured of at least the bronze medal when the day began.

That's what it looked like they would get after going over the starting line early in the 11th and deciding fleet race, the combination of aggressiveness and being trapped there by Gavin Brady, a New Zealander who lives in America.

Reynolds had to turn back and cross the starting line again. Instead of being buried in the 16-boat fleet, he ended up gaining from a wind shift on the right side of the course, while most everyone else thought the first shift would come on the left side.

 
From Sports Illustrated
• SI Images: Photos from the Games
• E.M. Swift: Armstrong pleased anyway as Ekimov delivers
• Jack McCallum: Second can be the loneliest place
• Medal Picks: SI's Predictions

More Features
• Sydney Scene: Luba Vangelova -- Party Games
• Day at a Glance: A place in history
• Wake-Up Call: Tracking the day in sports
• Viewers' Guide: Sept. 30
• Quiz: Today's Tester

Athletes
• Just Checking In: U.S. soccer player Josh Wolff

Multimedia
• Photo Gallery: Golden moments
• Photo Gallery: Shots of the Day
• Multimedia Central: Photo Galleries, Video and More

"We decided to really go for it at the start and unfortunately, I get a little too wound up and we kind of went over everybody and we were over the line," said Reynolds, who also is the current Star world champion.

Reynolds had enough speed to loop back around and not have that bad of a start on port tack, with clear air.

"We were really fortunate because the right side was a little favored," he said. "We got a little bit of a shift, and as soon as we got that, bang, we tacked back and we knew we were in the pack, we knew we had a chance."

Reynolds rounded the buoy at the top of the windward first leg in second place, which, as it turned out, was gold medal position. He finished second behind Canada's Ross MacDonald, holding off Britain skipper Ian Walker by one point for the gold.

Walker worked his way up to finish third in the final race. Reynolds and Walker came into the race tied for second on points.

Defending Star gold medalist Torben Grael of Brazil came in with a five-point lead. He was disqualified for being over the line early and not turning back to restart, but still got the bronze, his fourth Olympic medal.

In the America's Cup earlier this year, Grael served as tactician aboard Italy's Luna Rossa, which was swept by New Zealand in the finals.

Reynolds' gold helps restore some glitter to the American sailing team, which was embarrassed in its home waters in Savannah, Ga., in 1996 by winning just two bronzes. Four years earlier at Barcelona, the United States won medals in nine of 10 classes, including the gold won by Reynolds and his crew, Hal Haenel.

Reynolds won the gold in '92 with one race left to sail. This time, he needed all 11 races.

"We had unbelievable luck in '92," Reynolds said. "This was a lot more difficult."

Reynolds, who owns a sail loft near the San Diego Yacht Club, won the silver medal in 1988. He is a second-generation Star sailor and protege of Dennis Conner.

His father, Jim, who won a Star world championship with Conner and fell just short in three attempts to make it to the Olympics, was among several family members watching from South Head.

Reynolds sailed into the top three with three strong finishes on Friday, including a first.

He was assured of a medal in an off-the-water development. Bermuda's Peter Bromby sought and received redress for a breakdown that kept him from starting one of Friday's races, but Bromby's adjusted score wasn't enough to give him a shot at a medal.

The deciding race was sailed in moderate breeze and heavy swells off the cliffs of the Sydney Heads.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


CNNSI Copyright © 2001
CNN/Sports Illustrated
An AOL Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.