Ireland's Finn Lynch won a Silver medal today at the Laser World Championships in Barcelona and with it, the National Yacht Club solo ace sailed into the history books with the best ever result by an Irish sailor at a Laser World Championships.
Although the Carlow sailor finished the regatta with the best scores across all eight races, New Zealand's Thomas Saunders took Gold after allowance for worst race discard was applied.
Double Olympic Silver medallist Tonci Stipanovic from Croatia placed third ahead of a star-studded field.
Lynch's Silver at World championship level is the best ever achieved by an Irish sailor in any Olympic discipline, eclipsing Mark Mansfield and David O'Brien's third overall in the Star keelboat World championships won in 2000 and David Burrows' 2004 Finn Gold Cup bronze medal result.
This week's world championship was beset by light winds that delayed or postponed racing since last Friday. However, Tuesday's racing saw Lynch deliver his best day yet that ended with a race win in a fleet of 135 boats from 44 countries. He sailed an ultra-consistent eight-race series across all wind strengths.
Fresh winds were forecast for Wednesday to complete the regatta when a duel between Saunders and Lynch was on the cards but the weather again failed to deliver and Tuesday's overall results remain unchanged.
“I'm extremely happy with the result but it didn't come by coincidence or some luck - it came after a lot of work after not being able to qualify for the Olympics which was really hard on Finn," said Vasilij Zbogar, the Slovenian triple Olympic medallist who is Lynch's coach.
"This was something that Finn needed so that he can start to believe. He was good already last year but mentally he wasn't ready to be in the front. This week was really solid sailing all week and he didn't make any mistakes. He had the lowest point score of the entire fleet meaning he was really consistent."
The result is redemption for Rio 2016 veteran Lynch who missed out on qualification for Tokyo 2020 just six months ago. He adds it to the seventh scored last month at the European Championships in Bulgaria.
"We still have things to work on but good to confirm that we're going in the right direction and we will continue pushing. Finn did an amazing job and now he can start to believe that a medal at Paris 2024 can be achieved," said Zbogar. "A few things had to come together and they come together here at the right time. I knew this result would come one day - I was 100 per cent sure!"
Of the other Irish sailors competing in Barcelona, Howth YC's Ewan McMahon ended 25th overall in the Gold fleet with the loss of racing on the final day denying him a chance at finishing in the top 20 boats.
Under 21 sailors Tom Higgins of the Royal St. George YC finished 47th overall in the Gold fleet while Jamie McMahon (Howth YC), younger brother of Ewan placed 14th overall in the Silver fleet.