Hannah Mills Still Leads Gold Chase After Race Error

RYA Cymru Wales logo

RYA Cymru Wales logo

Hannah Mills and Saskia Clark admitted they needed to overcome a sloppy start to stay on course for another Olympic medal in Rio. Welsh sailor Mills and Clark finished on top of the leaderboard on Sunday night in the 470 class.

Hannah Mills and Saskia Clark admitted they needed to overcome a sloppy start to stay on course for another Olympic medal in Rio.

Welsh sailor Mills and Clark finished on top of the leaderboard on Sunday night in the 470 class.

But the pair who won silver in London four years ago and are desperate to go one better this time, got it wrong in the first of their three races of the day.

Clark said: “We were pleased with our day overall but we made a bit of a mistake in the first one; we really knocked in a really solid race but went to the finish line instead of the leeward gate.

“But we were actually really pleased with how we got our heads around that and got our heads back in the game for the final race and got a first.

“It’s a big day tomorrow, three races so that’s another 60 points it is possible to get on the scoreboard.

“We’re on the Escola Naval course, which is tight, tricky racing so we will keep our heads down, try to stay solid and see what we leave the day with.

“The chasing pack aren’t that far behind and everyone really wants this badly so we have to just keep to what we know, keep doing our processes and go from there.”

The Great Britain crew followed up a first race eighth with a victory in the two of the three races to remain at the top of the leaderboard, with Annie Haeger and Briana Provancha (USA) four points behind.

But having enjoyed the stable breeze outside of Guanabara Bay on the Copacabana ocean course , the class is now set to move back inside the bay onto the Escola Naval course for another three races.

The 470 Women’s class is scheduled to contest an 11 race series, with two races per day on 10, 11, 12, 14 and 15 August before the final one off medal race on Wednesday 17 August.

Mills, 28, from Cardiff, and Clark had to settle for silver behind New Zealand in London four years ago.

 

Related News

Wales' Jonny Clayton celebrates after winning. Pic. Alamy

The Ferret Digs in . . . Jonny Clayton Proves he Can Play Through the Pain

Jonny Clayton insists he has learned to battle through the pain barrier when gout strikes after limping his way to a dominant victory on night six of the Premier League Darts in Nottingham.

David Parsons | Mar 13, 2026
Rosie Eccles. Pic. Alamy

Rosie Eccles Ends Olympic Dream . . . But Will Fight for Wales at Commonwealth Games

Rosie Eccles has decided to step away from the GB Boxing World Class Programme and will not chase qualification for the 2028 Summer Olympics.

David Williams | Mar 06, 2026
Luke Littler (L) shakes the hand of Johnny Clayton (R). Pic. Alamy

Jonny Was Good . . . But Luke Littler was Something Special in Cardiff

The roar that greeted Jonny Clayton inside the Utilita Arena Cardiff suggested Welsh darts fans believed this might finally be his night.

Paul Jones | Mar 06, 2026
Jonny Clayton. Pic. Alamy

The Ferret and The Ice Man Hope to Bring a Welsh Duel to the Boil in Cardiff

Jonny Clayton admits he has no idea who the Cardiff crowd would side with if he and Gerwyn Price set up an all-Welsh final on Premier League night five.

Gareth James | Mar 05, 2026
Glamorgan Cricket. Pic. Alamy

Glamorgan Call off Oman Tour as Dan Cherry Outlines Safety Concerns

Glamorgan have abandoned their pre-season trip to Oman with chief executive Dan Cherry making it clear that events in the Middle East left the club with little alternative.

David Williams | Mar 05, 2026
Mark Williams. Pic. Alamy

Triple Blow as Mark Williams, Jak Jones and Jackson Page are Sent Packing from the Welsh Open

Welsh hopes at the 2026 Welsh Open were extinguished in a single evening as Mark Williams, Jak Jones and Jackson Page all crashed out on Thursday.

Gareth James | Feb 27, 2026