The road to the Buenos Aires 2018 Youth Olympic Games (YOG) will be a global adventure for the best young speedsters with a continental qualification system deciding which nations will send sailors to Argentina in October 2018.
Exactly 100 sailors aged 15-18 will sail across five events on Mar del Plata from 1-12 October 2018 and an injection of pace has been added to the Buenos Aires 2018 YOG Sailing Competition with thrills and spills expected.
The Men's and Women's Windsurfer, Techno 293+, remains on the YOG programme with the introduction of Men's and Women's Kiteboarding, IKA Twin Tip Racing and a Mixed Multihull, the Nacra 15.
Getting to YOG is an achievement in itself as sailors have to earn the right and qualify their country at key international regattas.
Sailors will have two opportunities to qualify during the qualification period of 1 April 2017 to 23 June 2018. The first chance for all will be at the Class World Championships with the second coming at a sailors' continental qualification event.
In total, there will be places for 88 sailors through the qualification system with the host country automatically qualifying six athletes, one in each boat. Six further Universality Places will be made available to eligible National Olympic Committees.
Events Director, Alastair Fox commented, "The Buenos Aires 2018 YOG is going to be a spectacular demonstration of fast paced sailing in a dynamic youthful arena. YOG provides sailors with an inspiring experience as well as offering insight into the Olympic arena. Several sailors from past editions, Singapore 2010 and Nanjing 2014, competed at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games and we hope to see further Yoggers at Tokyo 2020 and beyond."
Singapore and Nanjing played host to memorable competitions in 2010 and 2014 and many continued their adventure through to the Rio 2016 Olympic Games.
Singapore 2010 gold medallist Lara Vadlau (AUT) went on to qualify for London 2012 before winning back to back Women's 470 world titles in 2014 and 2015. Vadlau sailed at Rio 2016, finishing in the top ten of the Women's 470 and was joined by a longlist of 2010 YOG athletes at Rio 2016, including Sebastien Schneiter of the Swiss Sailing Team, Cheng Chun Leung (HKG), Audrey Yong (SGP) and Stephanie Devaux Lovell (LCA), to name but a few.
More recently, Nanjing 2014 athletes Maria Erdi (HUN), Florence Allan (CAY) and Dolores Moreira (URU) sailed at Rio 2016 in the Laser Radial.
About the Youth Olympic Games
The Youth Olympic Games brings 28 sports together in a unique multi-sport event for young athletes who are given a once in a lifetime opportunity to participate in high-level sporting competitions while also engaging in a Culture and Education Programme (CEP) focused on the Olympic spirit and Olympic values, skill development, well-being and healthy lifestyle, social responsibility and expression through digital media.
At the inaugural Youth Olympic Games, Singapore 2010, Ian Barrows (ISV) and Lara Vadlau (AUT) won gold on the Boys and Girls One Person Dinghy, Byte CII, whilst Mayan Rafic (ISR) and Siripon Kaewduang-Ngam (THA) took the honours in the Boys and Girls Windsurfer, Techno 293.
Nanjing, China hosted the second edition of the Youth Olympic Games in 2014. Singaporean sailors Bernie Chin and Samantha Yom made it double gold for their nation in the Byte CII. Argentina's Francisco Saubidet Birkner and China's Linli Wu took the honours in the Techno 293.
Buenos Aires will welcome sailors across five events in 2018. The Men's and Women's Techno293+ fleets will feature 24 athletes each, the Kiteboarding events will welcome 12 in each fleet and the Nacra 15 will see 14 boats and 28 athletes on the startline.