For 17 other sports this meant using the city's Olympic venues, but for sailing - making its first appearance at the Paralympic Games as a demonstration sport - the temporary facilities in Savannah were deemed unsuitable. Instead competition would take place out of the Aqualand Marina, Lake Lanier in the foothills of the Georgia Blue Ridge Mountains. The location made for unpredictable sailing conditions which, in such a close fleet, translated into dramatic place changes and medals being decided in the final race.
At first New Zealand seemed to have mastered the tricky breeze best of the 15 nations taking part in the mixed crew Sonar fleet. The Kiwis were the early leaders after pulling out a first and a second in the first two races. However, consistency was lacking from the team of Christopher Wornall, Derek Stewart, Cameron Scott and Andrew Mayand and they surrendered their lead in race 4, dropping to third. Two more lacklustre results from the New Zealand boat saw them drop out of the medals into sixth place. Armenia also got off to a strong start which saw them hold on to second place until disqualification from races 4 and 5 dropped them from the top of the table. A third and a sixth from Stasik Nazaryan, Armen Martirosyan, Garush Danielyan and Hayk Abgaryan in the final two races couldn't redeem their medal hopes; the clock had struck midnight on what had looked like a fairytale for the four athletes from a nation only recently emerged from the former Soviet Union.
Luck went the other way for the Canadian team. David Cook, Kirk Westergaard, John McRoberts and Ken Kelly fought back from a DNS in race 3 with a win in race 4 and two seconds in five and six to put themselves firmly in contention for a medal in the final race. Their strong chance at silver could be upgraded to gold if they could beat the Great British team by four places.
The British team of Andy Cassell, Kevin Curtis, Tony Downs and Ian Harrison had other ideas. Luck played no part as, in a wire-close final race, the Brits pulled out all the stops to hold the Canadian boat off. As they crossed the finish in ninth and tenth place, gold was Great Britain's, silver for Canada. The American boat Waldo Esparza, James Leatherman, Chris Murphy and John Ross-Duggan completed the podium while fourth place Åsa Llinares (SWE) was the highest place female.
The quality and closeness of racing on Lake Lanier helped convince the International Paralympic Committee that sailing should be included in future Games and, soon after the competition concluded, the full inclusion of the sport for Sydney 2000 was announced.
The Rio 2016 Paralympic Games will take place between 7-18 September in Rio de Janeiro and the sailing is scheduled to be raced between 12-17 September in Guanabara Bay.
World Sailing Newsletter
World Sailing Newsletter is the weekly online newsletter of World Sailing.
It features the latest news and events from the sailing world together with features and info in an easy-to-use format.
It features the latest news and events from the sailing world together with features and info in an easy-to-use format.