Yachting New Zealand's chief executive David Abercrombie isn't about to waste time wringing his hands over the dumping of one of the country's most successful disciplines from the Olympic Games programme.
Instead Abercrombie, acknowledging there is no course of appeal to get windsurfing back on the card for the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro, is planning to make sure New Zealand is among the pre-eminent nations in kiteboarding in four years' time.
The kites are in for Rio, courtesy of a 19-17 vote by the International Sailing Federation's (ISAF) council last weekend. Abercrombie is keen to have the discipline on the Sail Auckland regatta programme early next year.
Waiting with fingers crossed for six months, until the ISAF's annual conference in November in the vain hope of a change of heart, means losing a valuable six months planning. He pointed to the failed attempts of classes such as the Tornado and Flying Dutchman to regain their Olympic spots as proof of the difficulty of changing ISAF minds.
"Our initial goal is to garner as much interest as we can, see who's out there wanting to get involved and put some resources around them," Abercrombie said yesterday. "We just need to get stuck in, roll the sleeves up and go for it."