Sport | Posted on July 18th, 2022 | return to news
Two-medal haul for Brits at sailing’s Youth World Championships
Windsurfer, Charlie Dixon, won gold, whilst sailors Santi Sesto Cosby and Leo Wilkinson brought home silver for Great Britain.
Dixon,17, from Essex was competing in his first ever international event. He cleaned up in the male iQFOiL class, notching up eight wins from 11 races to seal the title by a staggering 26 points.
Lymington’s Sesto Cosby and Wilkinson from Maidenhead went into the final day of the Youth World Championships regatta in The Hague with a battle on their hands, as only one point split the teams in second, third and fourth.
The duo’s fourth place finish was enough to seal silver in the male 29er fleet.
The success of the young sailors put Great Britain fourth on the overall scoreboard out of 67 nations competing.
Dixon, from Maldon, Essex, said he’s been overwhelmed with the reaction of his friends, family and followers.
“I’ve been bombarded by messages on social media, I’ve had a massive amount of support,” he said.
He sails out of Stone Sailing Club and Blackwater Sailing Club, enjoyed a welcome surprise on the fifth and final day of racing when his parents paid him a surprise visit after catching a last-minute flight to the Netherlands.
“It was a huge boost when my parents turned up,” Dixon said. “I had no idea they were coming, and to win it and for them to be waiting for me on shore made everything even more special.”
Simplicity was the key to victory explained Dixon, who has the Olympic Games in Los Angeles in 2028 firmly on his radar.
He added, “Crossing the finish line of the last race and realising I was the world champion was an incredible feeling.”
He will head to the iQFOiL International Games in Lake Garda, Italy, later this month before taking on the World Championships in Lake Silvaplana, Austria, shortly after.
Lymington’s Sesto Cosby and Maidenhead’s Wilkinson only teamed up in early 2022 but have formed a formidable partnership.
They won the RYA Youth National Championships in April, and in turn were selected to represent Great Britain at the Youth World Championships.
“We knew we had the potential to do well but it is fair to say we weren’t the favourites to win the Youth Nationals,” said 16-year-old Sesto Cosby, who has just finished his GCSEs at Southampton’s King Edward VI School.
“Since getting selected we turned up the training, and we went into the Youth Worlds aiming to sail as best as we can. As the event went on we settled into a top five position and then went into the final day trying to stay on the podium.”
With the Argentinian pair already guaranteed the gold, the race was on for the remaining podium spots with just one point splitting the next three teams.
To secure silver, Sesto Cosby and Wilkinson had to beat their Spanish rivals – who were nipping on their heels the entire race.
Henley College pupil Wilkinson, 18, said the final race was “super tense. We knew we had to keep the Spaniards behind us, so to cross the line one place ahead of them was amazing.”
Sesto Cosby will now team up with a new crew in the 29er, while Wilkinson will move into the Olympic 49er class. Both intend to campaign for Los Angeles 2028.
Great Britain fielded athletes in all but one of the 11 classes. Notable performances included Ella Geiger’s fifth in the female kite fleet, Mattia Maini’s eighth in the male kite, Lucy Kenyon’s sixth in the female iQFOiL and Ellen Moorley and Hazel McDonnell’s eighth in the female 29er.
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