News

‘Deal with the Devil’: Harvard Medical School Faculty Grapple with Increased Industry Research Funding

News

As Dean Long’s Departure Looms, Harvard President Garber To Appoint Interim HGSE Dean

News

Harvard Students Rally in Solidarity with Pro-Palestine MIT Encampment Amid National Campus Turmoil

News

Attorneys Present Closing Arguments in Wrongful Death Trial Against CAMHS Employee

News

Harvard President Garber Declines To Rule Out Police Response To Campus Protests

Johnson, Kovacs Sail Into Nationals

By Samuel C. Scott, Contributing Writer

Only 16 sailors from across the nation will have the chance to jockey for position in Laser-class dinghies for the Collegiate Singlehanded National Championships. Thanks to results from this weekend’s New England Singlehanded Qualifiers, two of those matching finely honed skill and sheer athleticism with the best in the nation will sail under a Crimson aegis.

Both sophomore Clay Johnson and freshman Kyle Kovacs earned berths to the nationals, to be held Oct. 22-24 in Minnetonka, Minn., by finishing in the top four in the qualifiers, held at Roger Williams University in Bristol, R.I.

Johnson won individual honors as top male sailor in New England, while Kovacs took fourth.

“We all had to qualify to go to the actual qualifiers, so everyone at the regatta was really good,” said Johnson. “It really came down to consistency. My goal was just to be in the top five every single race.”

Johnson’s regatta was a maritime family feud, as he dueled for top position with his brother Reed, a Boston College freshman.

Reed Johnson had a seven-point lead going into Sunday’s racing, during which he built his lead up as high as 10 points.

When with two races to go, both Johnson brothers were assured of qualifying for the national championships, Clay struck.

“I decided to go after him a little,” said Clay Johnson. “I was able to hold him off and put some points between us....We had a little match race for the entire [final] race. We actually ended up being last and second to last, but it was all in good fun.”

The younger Johnson finished second, with 92 points to his brother’s 85.

Clay Johnson finished third in last year’s singlehanded nationals.

Kovacs rallied from a nearly insurmountable deficit to take fourth for the last qualifying berth.

With only one day left on the water, he was down 25 points, languishing at seventh in the regatta rankings. “I had six races to get my act together on the second day,” said Kovacs. “I got more aggressive with tactics and strategy....I had nothing to lose at that point. It was qualify or go home.”

After posting solid finishes in five of six final races, Kovacs entered the final race of the regatta tied for fifth with Yale’s Matt Berry and nine points behind Dartmouth’s Mike Wilde. Kovacs led the pack into the finish, edging out Berry by taking his third first-place finish in the regatta, and Wilde retired after the race’s finish in penance for questionable sportsmanship to take sixth overall.

Alexander Kirkland of Tufts University also qualified, finishing third with 97 points.

HAP MOORE TEAM RACE TROPHY REGATTA

Eight more Crimson sailors spent the weekend sailing at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn., for the Hap Moore Team Race Trophy.

Harvard finished ninth of eleven teams in the regatta.

Sailing Flying Juniors and 420s under a shifty south-southwesterly breeze, Harvard fell behind the first day, winning three races and losing seven to tie with Coast Guard ahead of MIT. On the next day, the north wind didn’t blow any more favorably for the Crimson, which finished 7-11. Boston College finished 5-0 to win the regatta with a 16-4 overall record.

In team racing, three boats from one team compete against three from another head-to-head, and the team with the lowest combined score wins. Team racing, usually a rite of the spring season, places a premium on a team’s strategy, tactics and experience.

“The three boats we sent didn’t have a lot of experience sailing team racing at this level, and we hadn’t practiced together all that much,” said captain Laura Schubert, who sailed with senior Genny Tulloch. Junior Sloan Devlin sailed with sophomore Christine Dahlman and junior Jess Baker sailed with junior Ruth Schlitz; alternate crews, senior Jenny Wong and junior Mallory Greimann, completed the Crimson fleet.

METRO SERIES FIVE

Four Harvard sailors also plied familiar waters, sailing the Charles River on a warm day with eight to 15-knot breezes for the Metro Series Five on Saturday.

The Crimson finished seventh in a twelve-team field. Sophomore skipper Kristen Lynch and junior crew Anjali Salooga took seventh in the A-division, with 66 points. Sailing in the B-division, sophomore skipper Marion Guillaume and junior crew Fran Moore also took seventh, with 75 points.

Boston College dominated the regatta, winning both divisions and posting an overall score of 38 points. The Eagles’ A-division won three of ten races and posted a final score of 24 points, while the B-division finished first in seven races, racking up 14 total points.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags
Sailing