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Sailing on TV

Posted: Sat Aug 21, 2010 11:25 am
by Bob Carter
BBC to broadcast British sailing documentaries

Part 1 of "Olympic Sailing" will air this Saturday, 21 August at 1pm on BBC 1.

It tells the story of Britain's medal winners at the Skandia Sail for Gold Regatta where nearly 1000 sailors from 57 nations competed at the Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy, the venue for the sailing competition for the London 2012 Games.

The documentary follows the highs and lows of this international competition that includes Britain's Beijing gold medallists Ben Ainslie Iain Percy and Sarah Ayton plus a host of medallists from the 2008 Games, as they compete on home waters exactly two years ahead of the London 2012 sailing competition.

BBC cameras were invited behind the scenes into the Skandia Team GBR camp for an exclusive tour of the new team accommodation just metres away from the Olympic venue where Shirley Robertson - herself a double Olympic gold medallist - discovers the systems the British team have put in place in order to have the best chance of winning medals. She meets Skandia Team GBR's newest support crew member, falconer Brian Williams, who with his birds of prey at six o'clock in the morning take on the dawn chorus of local seagulls in a bid to provide the sailors with their last hours of valuable sleep.

The documentary catches up with medal-winning husband and wife team Nick Dempsey and Sarah Ayton, and joins Ainslie, Percy and his crew Andrew 'Bart' Simpson for an insight into what makes this renowned team tick. Shirley also meets the young British team sailors looking to challenge for 2012 places in a squad where no stone is left unturned in the quest for medals.

The Skandia Sail for Gold regatta was the largest ISAF Sailing World Cup event in 2010, and provided an insight for many 2012 teams into the future Olympic venue.

On Sunday 5 September at 2pm on BBC 2, "Olympic Sailing" (Part 2) will come from Hayling Island on the final day of the Laser World Championships where Beijing gold medallist Paul Goodison is out to defend his title. The programme will also include features on the man to break Ben Ainslie's six-year winning record in the Olympic Finn class, 23 year-old British sailor Giles Scott, and on perhaps the happiest medal winner of all at the last Games - Britain's Bryony Shaw who windsurfed to bronze in China.

It's often said that sailing doesn't get sufficient coverage on mainstream TV, so either make an appointment to view our sport at it's very best or set your recorders to see the best of the action of this spectacular event!

BROADCAST TIMES:
"OLYMPIC SAILING" (Part 1) Saturday 21 August 1pm, BBC1
"OLYMPIC SAILING" (Part 2) Sunday 5 September 2pm, BBC2
Both programmes can be watched on BBC iPLAYER after transmission dates.

For full results visit www.skandiasailforgoldregatta.co.uk.

Posted: Sat Aug 21, 2010 4:55 pm
by Martin Searle
Wot no cats!, definately missed having something faster than a 49er in the races. But otherwise it was a good programme. Particulary liked Ben Anslie just sailing straight into his opponent and then the commentator lamenting the resulting penalty for Ben :lol:

Martin S.

Posted: Sat Aug 21, 2010 6:59 pm
by Bob Carter
Yep - sorry that the posting was so late.
Never mind catch it on BBC IPlayer in the coming week folks :wink:
Bob
PS Giles Scott was a Grafham sailor :lol:

Posted: Sat Aug 21, 2010 7:31 pm
by Robert
Nice one Bob! I just happened to see this today and enjoyed some rare TV sailing. :D

Posted: Sat Aug 21, 2010 10:50 pm
by Jim Coleman
The medal races at the end were streamed live on the inet by the Sail for Gold outfit. I watched Scott et al iin the Finns. No doubt the Laser comp next weekend will be streamed. But apart from a few mins at the start it is not great TV.

Posted: Sun Aug 22, 2010 10:18 am
by Bob Carter
Jim Coleman wrote:The medal races at the end were streamed live on the inet by the Sail for Gold outfit. I watched Scott et al iin the Finns. No doubt the Laser comp next weekend will be streamed. But apart from a few mins at the start it is not great TV.
Hi jim, that's interesting. How do you access this? Is it via a website?
Cheers
Bob

Posted: Mon Aug 23, 2010 10:29 pm
by Jim Coleman
Hi Bob,

On online Y&Y there was a write up about Sail for Gold which said that the medal races were being streamed live from there and giving the start time for the Finn race which was the one I was interested in. A link was also provided to the Sail for Gold site. The latter was a bit of a dog's breakfast and it took me some time to find the live stream. But luckily the Finn start was postponed. The videos and commentary were pretty good.