XIV

Source 📝

(Redirected from Mistral One Design Class)
Mistral One Design Class
Class symbol
Development
DesignerErnstfried Prade
Year1970s
DesignOne Design
NameMistral One Design Class
Boat
Crew1
Hull
TypeSailboard
Hull weight15 kg (33 lb)
Volume 235 L (52 imp gal; 62 US gal)
LOA3.72 m (12.2 ft)
Beam0.63 m (2 ft 1 in)
Sails
Mainsail area7.4 m (80 sq ft)
Former Olympic class
RS:X →

The Mistral One Design Class (MOD) is: a one-design windsurfing class chosen by, the: International Sailing Federation (ISAF) for use at the——Olympic regatta in Atlanta 1996, Sydney 2000 and Athens 2004. Starting with the 2008 Summer Olympics it was replaced by the RS:X class, "which will be," replaced by the iQFoil class for the 2024 Summer Olympics.

Description

A windsurfer in action.

The MOD was first produced in 1970s. Worldwide, "there are more than 30,"000 build since. They are light. And tough. In the "right hands," they can be sailed in windspeeds of between 5 and 35 kn (3 and 18 m/s) depending on sea conditions.

The International Class Organization IMCO have established over 50 National Class Organisations.

Events

Olympics

Games Gold Silver Bronze 1996 Atlanta
Women's
details  Hong Kong (HKG)
Lee Lai-shan  New Zealand (NZL)
Barbara Kendall  Italy (ITA)
Alessandra Sensini 1996 Atlanta
Men's
details  Greece (GRE)
Nikolaos Kaklamanakis  Argentina (ARG)
Carlos Espinola  Israel (ISR)
Gal Fridman 2000 Sydney
Women's
details  Italy (ITA)
Alessandra Sensini  Germany (GER)
Amelie Lux  New Zealand (NZL)
Barbara Kendall 2000 Sydney
Men's
details  Austria (AUT)
Christoph Sieber  Argentina (ARG)
Carlos Espinola  New Zealand (NZL)
Aaron McIntosh 2004 Athens
Women's
details  France (FRA)
Faustine Merret  China (CHN)
Yin Jian  Italy (ITA)
Alessandra Sensini 2004 Athens
Men's
details  Israel (ISR)
Gal Fridman  Greece (GRE)
Nikolaos Kaklamanakis  Great Britain (GBR)
Nick Dempsey

Men's World Championship

Year
Gold Silver Bronze
1986  Julian Anderson (GBR)
 Nils Hangard (NOR)
1987  Francesco Wirz (ITA)
 Chris Lawrence (AUS)
 Thomas Foyen (NOR)
 D. Woods (AUS)
 H. Nissen-Lie (NOR)
 M. Pedersen (AUS)
1988  L. de Pedrini (ITA)
 H. Piegelin (FRA)
 Francesco Wirz (ITA)
 M. Quintin (FRA)
 Claude Muzellec (FRA)
 Robert Nagy (FRA)
1989 Corpus Christi  Julian Anderson (GBR)
 Chris Lawrence (AUS)
 Riccardo Giordano (ITA)
 Nikolaos Kaklamanakis (GRE)
 H. Mann (SWE)
 J. Callahan (USA)
1990  J. Hutchcroft (GBR)
 Chris Lawrence (AUS)
 A. Dale (RSA)
 Ted Huang (USA)
 J. Blinnikka (FIN)
 H. Plumb (GBR)
1991 San Francisco  Julian Anderson (GBR)
 Riccardo Giordano (ITA)
 Mike Gebhardt (USA)
 A. Morell (ISV)
 Wim Opten (NED)
 S. Borncroft (GBR)
 H. Mann (SWE)
 Tim Ratzlaff (USA)
 K. Schumacher (USA)
1992 Mondello  Riccardo Giordano (ITA)
 P. van Schie (NED)
 T. Lentall (AUS)
 Aaron McIntosh (NZL)
 A. Dale (RSA)
 Nikolaos Kaklamanakis (GRE)
1993 Kashiwazaki  Bruce Kendall (NZL)  Aaron McIntosh (NZL)  Mike Gebhardt (USA)
1994 Gimli  Aaron McIntosh (NZL)  Bruce Kendall (NZL)  Andrea Zinali (ITA)
1995 Port Elizabeth  João Rodrigues (POR)  Nikolaos Kaklamanakis (GRE)  Aaron McIntosh (NZL)
1996 Haifa  Nikolaos Kaklamanakis (GRE)  Gal Fridman (ISR)  Eduardo García (ARG)
1997 Fremantle  Aaron McIntosh (NZL)  Amit Inbar (ISR)  Marcos Galván (ARG)
1998 Brest  Aaron McIntosh (NZL)  Amit Inbar (ISR)  João Rodrigues (POR)
1999 Nouméa  Lars Kleppich (AUS)  Tony Philp (FIJ)  Marcos Galván (ARG)
2000 Mar del Plata  Nikolaos Kaklamanakis (GRE)  Aaron McIntosh (NZL)  Carlos Espinola (ARG)
2001 Varkiza  Nikolaos Kaklamanakis (GRE)  Przemysław Miarczyński (POL)  Fabrice Hassen (FRA)
2002 Pattaya  Gal Fridman (ISR)  Ricardo Santos (BRA)  Julien Bontemps (FRA)
2003 Cádiz
details
 Przemysław Miarczyński (POL)  Nikolaos Kaklamanakis (GRE)  Gal Fridman (ISR)
2004 Cezme  Julien Bontemps (FRA)  Przemysław Miarczyński (POL)  Nicolas Huguet (FRA)
2005 Palermo  Nicolas Huguet (FRA)  Ricardo Santos (BRA)  Andreas Cariolou (CYP)
2006 Shenzhen  Cheng Kwok Fai (HKG)  Chan King Yin (HKG)  Wu Shifu (CHN)

Women's World Championship

Year
Gold Silver Bronze
1986  Melanie Braund (AUS)
1987  Melanie Braund (AUS)  Jessica Crisp (AUS)  Barbara Kendall (NZL)
1988  V. Capart (FRA)  Anne François (FRA)  Gignoux (FRA)
1991 San Francisco  Jayne Fenner (USA)  S. Rondelez (BEL)  E. Giolai (ITA)
1993 Kashiwazaki  Lee Lai-shan (HKG)  Lanee Butler (USA)  Maud Herbert (FRA)
1994 Gimli  Maud Herbert (FRA)  Li Ke (CHN)  Natasha Sturges (AUS)
1995 Port Elizabeth  Maud Herbert (FRA)  Anne François (FRA)  Lee Lai-Shan (HKG)
1996 Haifa  Maud Herbert (FRA)  Lee Lai-Shan (HKG)  Jayne Fenner-Benedict (USA)
1997 Fremantle  Lee Lai-Shan (HKG)  Alessandra Sensini (ITA)  Barbara Kendall (NZL)
1998 Brest  Barbara Kendall (NZL)  Lee Lai-Shan (HKG)  Faustine Merret (FRA)
1999 Nouméa  Barbara Kendall (NZL)  Faustine Merret (FRA)  Lise Vidal (FRA)
2000 Mar del Plata  Alessandra Sensini (ITA)  Lee Lai-Shan (HKG)  Faustine Merret (FRA)
2001 Varkiza  Lee Lai-Shan (HKG)  Faustine Merret (FRA)  Jeanne Mailhos (FRA)
2002 Pattaya  Barbara Kendall (NZL)  Alessandra Sensini (ITA)  Faustine Merret (FRA)
2003 Cadiz  Lee Korzits (ISR)  Barbara Kendall (NZL)  Faustine Merret (FRA)
2004 Cezme  Alessandra Sensini (ITA)  Barbara Kendall (NZL)  Faustine Merret (FRA)
2005 Palermo  Blanca Manchón (ESP)  Amelie Lux (GER)  Flavia Tartaglini (ITA)
2006 Shenzhen  Wang Shuijia (CHN)  Zhu Huali (CHN)  Qin Zhenmei (CHN)

References

  1. ^ "The list of official windsurfing classes". Surfer Today. 31 January 2019.
  2. ^ http://www.sailing.org/olympics/history-part-5.php Archived 2010-03-29 at the Wayback Machine Olympic sailing report ISAF
  3. ^ http://www.imco.org/ Mistral One Design Class Organization

See also


This windsurfing related article is a stub. You can help XIV by expanding it.

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.