The Official
|
|
www.sailing.org |
The 6-metre continued to be sailed at the Olympic Games whilst the Dragon, Firefly, Star and Swallow were on show. View full results from the 1948 Olympics on the ISAF website here.
Elvstrom's Reign Begins
The Danish Olympic Committee had some reservations about sending Paul Elvstrom (pictured right) to London 1948 as the 18-year-old spoke no English and was shy and sensitive.
After a shaky start in the Firefly, which saw Elvstrom retire after a port and starboard incident with a Finnish competitor, he bounced back scoring RT-6-3-12-5-1-1 to clinch his maiden gold.
Bomb Scare Favour
The Bahamas Durward Knowles had to sail for Great Britain in 1948 as the Islands did not have separate representation. For Knowles to reach the UK he had to ship his Star boat from Nassau to Miami, trail it to New York before a crossing on the Queen Mary to Great Britain.
Knowles would have missed his crossing on the Queen Mary but for a delay due to a bomb scare.
London 1948 was Knowles' only Olympics for Great Britain, he finished fourth, and he went on to sail in a further seven Olympics for Bahamas picking up a Star bronze in 1956 and Star gold in 1964.
What They Said
"Before I left Denmark, everybody said, "If you will not be the last we'll be happy," and I felt I couldn't disappoint anyone, and so when I had to leave the course [In Race 1] I was feeling very low inside. Then I said, "OK, you shall not the last," and in the next race I came sixth.
"After that it went quite well." Paul Elvstrom (Elvstrom Speaks On Yacht Racing)
The Future
The Games became truly international in 1952 with 69 nations competing. Sailing took place at Harmaja, not far from Helsinki and the Finn class made its Olympic Games debut.