A leading member of the International Sailing Federation (ISAF) council has offered to change her vote in favour of windsurfing at the annual meeting in November.
As the ruckus gathers pace over the ISAF decision by a two-vote margin to replace windsurfing with kiteboarding for the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics, Canadian Fiona Kidd, the chairwoman of the 58-strong ISAF women's forum, has admitted she changed her vote between two important meetings.
At the ISAF events committee vote, she plumped for windsurfing. However, when the full council met and it was decided to push for a definitive vote, she switched to vote for the kites.
Had Kidd stuck to her original vote, there would have been an 18-all deadlock, which might have heldoff the vote until the November meeting in Ireland.
In a letter, Kidd wrote she was persuaded by the arguments at the council meeting, saw it as a chance to bring more women into sailing, and noted that earlier decisions on costly equipment for two other new classes - the women's skiff and mixed multihull - had effectively ruled out emerging nations.