Sailing at the 1932 Summer Olympics – Snowbird explained

Event:Snowbird
Games:1932 Summer
Dates:First race:
Last race:
Competitors:12
Nations:11
Teams:11
Goldnoc:FRA
Silvernoc:NED
Bronzenoc:ESP

The Snowbird was a sailing event on the Sailing at the 1932 Summer Olympics program in Los Angeles Harbor. Eleven races were scheduled. 12 sailors, on 11 boats, from 11 nation competed.

Race schedule

- bgcolor=#3399ff align=center ● Event competitions bgcolor=#ffcc00 align=center ● Event finals
- !rowspan = 2Date !colspan = 7August - !5th
Fri
6th
Sat
7th
Sun
8th
Mon
9th
Tue
10th
Wed
11th
Thu
- align="center" Snowbird bgcolor=#3399ff bgcolor=#3399ff bgcolor=#3399ff ●● bgcolor=#3399ff bgcolor=#3399ff bgcolor=#3399ff ●● bgcolor=#ffcc00 ●●● - align="center" - ! Total gold medals 1 -

Course area and course configuration

The courses had been well prepared. The marks were laid by the United States Lighthouse Service in the form of large Government. Visiting yachts were kept at a safe distance from the racing boats by the US Coast Guard. Tows were arranged by the US Navy to and from Los Angeles Harbor to the race area. The Snowbird stayed inside the breakwater to protect them from the ocean swell. Unfortunately no documentation is found about the course configuration(s) yet.

Weather conditions

Due to the normal afternoon sea breeze in Los Angeles Harbor it was decided to race the Snowbirds in the morning. However it turned out that in various morning there was no wind at all. This made it necessary to run the Snowbirds races in the afternoon in windy conditions. It also made id difficult for several sailors to sail the races in the Snowbird as well in one of the other classes.

Daily standings

Notes

Other information

During the Sailing regattas at the 1932 Summer Olympics among others the following persons were competing in the Snowbird:After the finish of the last race, Maas seemed to have won the gold medal. His French opponent Jacques Baptiste Lebrun, however, successfully had a protest re-opened about an earlier penalty after the competition had ended, which moved him into first place, and put Maas back to second place.

Further reading