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Sailing Posts Strong Results at Four Regattas

The Harvard coed sailing team finished in second place at the Nevins Trophy Regatta, topping off a weekend that resulted in four top-10 overall team finishes for the Crimson sailors.

NEVINS TROPHY

The squad’s best performance this weekend was the Nevins Trophy Regatta at King’s Point, N.Y., where Harvard’s coed team, led by senior Brian Drumm, junior Marek Zeleski and junior captain Andrew Mollerus as skippers sailed the team to a second-place finish out of 20 college teams. After a gusty day on Saturday, the regatta was cut short on Sunday to one race due to a lack of wind.

Drumm and junior crew Jake Bradt were among the most consistent boats in the A-division, finishing within top-five in four of their races and taking a third-place finish overall.

“It was great to have [Bradt] back in the boat this weekend,” said Drumm, who has not sailed with Bradt since last spring. “Our main goal was to get back to where we were last season and develop consistency.”  

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The biggest surprise of the regatta came out of the Laser C-division, where Zeleski came in a close second to Georgetown’s boat.

Zeleski won two of the first five races on Saturday, and his performance has excited Harvard coach Mike O’Connor.

“Of all of our players, [Zeleski] put in the most time and effort this summer,” O’Connor said. “His execution is very good right now, and his performance was an important part of our finish at King’s Point.”

The Nevins Trophy Regatta is one that the Crimson has dominated in recent years, finishing within the top two at each of its last four showings at King’s Point.

CENTRAL SERIES 2

In a more local affair, Harvard participated this weekend in the Central Series 2, the second of a two-part series hosted by Boston College on the Charles River. Unlike the first part of the series, in which the Crimson won the overall team event, this weekend Harvard finished in eighth place.

In the A-division, the Crimson was led by freshman Nick Sertl with sophomore crew Nomin Jagdagdorj, whose boat finished second by placing within the top-10 in all of the 15 races.

“One of the biggest keys for me was having [Jagdagdorj] as my crew,” Sertl said. “We did not try to win any races, and I think that that mentality is the reason we did so well.”

Junior skipper Adam Brodheim and junior crew Cara Kennedy Cuomo sailed in the B-division, where they came in 12th overall, finishing within the top-10 in seven races.

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