Sailing at the 2016 Summer Olympics

Dates 8 – 18 August 2016
Medal Events 10

Sailing was contested at Marina da Gloria in Guanabara Bay, off the eastern shore of Rio de Janeiro, thus making it the first sailing venue since Athens in 2004 to be staged at the main Olympic city. Restoring the water quality in the bay was one of the major environmental promises in connection with the bid to host the 2016 Olympics, but due to the country’s financial crisis, this was never achieved. Untreated sewage from the city was discharged into the bay via biologically dead tributaries, and so-called super bacteria were detected, as were antibiotic-resistant agents that entered the bay via hospital sewage. Prior to the Olympics, many athletes complained about the pollution. However, during the Olympic regatta, the conditions appeared to be better, and the only reported case of infection was to the Belgian sailor Evi Van Acker, who acquired a gastric disease, probably during training on the bay. Like at most Olympics, some events were changed from to the previous Olympic regatta. While the number of events remained the same (10), the keelboat type classes disappeared completely. There had been one event each for women and men in London. The men’s keelboat, the Star, was the best known class in sailing and was was first contested at the 1932 Games and was on the Olympic program 18 times. Unchanged were the following events: Windsurfer (men and women: RS:X), One Person Dinghy (men: Laser; women: Laser Radial), Two Person Dinghy (men and women: 470), Skiff (men: 49er), One Person Heavyweight Dinghy (men: Finn). In 2012, the international sailing federation ISAF announced the course racing style of kitesurfing would replace windsurfing as a discipline at the 2016 Rio Olympics. But later that year, members of the general assembly of the ISAF did not approve this decision and windsurfing remained on the program. In addition to the men’s skiff, the 49er, a women’s class, the 49erFX was added. For the first time, a mixed team event, the Nacra17, was introduced, as a replacement for open events, similar to those in Beijing, and this marked the return of the multihull (catamaran) type. The medals were distributed among 17 nations. Only two, Great Britain and the Netherlands won two golds. Four countries won three or more medals: Great Britain (2/1/0), Australia (1/3/0), New Zealand (1/2/1) and France (1/0/2), while ten teams won just one. One of the losers was Spain, which ranked high on the table with two gold in 2012, but returned from Rio empty-handed. Host Brazil celebrated with the gold medal of its 49erFX team Martine Grael and Kahena Kunze. A total of 381 competitors (218 men and 163 women) represented 66 countries.

Events

Event Status Date Participants NOCs
Windsurfer (Neil Pryde RS:X), Men Olympic 8 – 14 August 2016 36 36
One Person Dinghy (Laser), Men Olympic 8 – 16 August 2016 46 46
Two Person Dinghy (470), Men Olympic 10 – 18 August 2016 52 26
Skiff (49er), Men Olympic 12 – 18 August 2016 40 20
One Person Heavyweight Dinghy (Finn), Men Olympic 9 – 16 August 2016 23 23
Windsurfer (Neil Pryde RS:X), Women Olympic 8 – 14 August 2016 26 26
One Person Dinghy (Laser Radial), Women Olympic 8 – 16 August 2016 37 37
Two Person Dinghy (470), Women Olympic 10 – 18 August 2016 40 20
Skiff (49er FX), Women Olympic 12 – 18 August 2016 40 20
Multihull (Nacra 17), Mixed Olympic 10 – 16 August 2016 40 20
380 (217/163) 66 (63/51)

Medals

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Windsurfer, Men Dorian van RijsselbergheNED Nick DempseyGBR Pierre Le CoqFRA
One Person Dinghy, Men Tom BurtonAUS Tonči StipanovićCRO Sam MeechNZL
Two Person Dinghy, Men CroatiaCRO AustraliaAUS GreeceGRE
Skiff, Men New ZealandNZL AustraliaAUS GermanyGER
One Person Heavyweight Dinghy, Men Giles ScottGBR Vasilij ŽbogarSLO Caleb PaineUSA
Windsurfer, Women Charline PiconFRA Chen PeinaCHN Stefaniya YelfutinaRUS
One Person Dinghy, Women Marit BouwmeesterNED Annalise MurphyIRL Anne-Marie RindomDEN
Two Person Dinghy, Women Great BritainGBR New ZealandNZL FranceFRA
Skiff, Women BrazilBRA New ZealandNZL DenmarkDEN
Multihull, Mixed ArgentinaARG AustraliaAUS AustriaAUT

Medal table

NOC Gold Silver Bronze Total
Great Britain GBR 2 1 0 3
Netherlands NED 2 0 0 2
Australia AUS 1 3 0 4
New Zealand NZL 1 2 1 4
Croatia CRO 1 1 0 2
France FRA 1 0 2 3
Argentina ARG 1 0 0 1
Brazil BRA 1 0 0 1
Ireland IRL 0 1 0 1
People's Republic of China CHN 0 1 0 1
Slovenia SLO 0 1 0 1
Denmark DEN 0 0 2 2
Austria AUT 0 0 1 1
Germany GER 0 0 1 1
Greece GRE 0 0 1 1
Russian Federation RUS 0 0 1 1
United States USA 0 0 1 1