Personal information | |
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Full name | David J. Mendelblatt |
Nationality | U.S.A. |
Residence | St. Petersburg, Florida |
Sport | |
Sport | Sailing |
Event(s) | Sunfish |
College team | Tufts University |
Club | St. Petersburg Yacht Club |
Achievements and titles | |
World finals |
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National finals |
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David J. Mendelblatt is an American yachtsman and ophthalmologist.
He is a former Optimist Pram National Champion. He came in second in the Sunfish World Championship in 2006, third in 2009, and second again in 2010.
Mendelblatt is the older brother of Olympic sailor Mark Mendelblatt. He attended Tufts University, where he was an All-American in 1992.
He received his medical degree from the University of South Florida College of Medicine, performed his residency at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, and is an ophthalmologist. His father, Frank, is also an ophthalmologist, and his mother, Kathy, supervises their practice. He lives in St. Petersburg, Florida.
In 1985, at the age of 15, Mendelblatt was part of a five-person U.S. Optimist dinghy team, along with his brother Mark, that took third place in the 25th International Optimist World Championships in team racing in Finland. It was the best U.S. finish ever in dinghy racing. He also won the Optimist Pram National Championship, over his brother Mark who came in second.
In 1987, Mendelblatt and Caj Flyn won the Bemis Cup, the most prestigious junior sailing race in the US, in Massachusetts. In 1988, Mendelbatt was part of a four-person team from St. Petersburg High School that won the 1988 National Interscholastic High School Sailing Championships, in Annapolis, Maryland. He was a winner of the ISSA's Mallory Trophy, school sailing’s oldest trophy.
In 1989, at the age of 19, he teamed with his 16-year-old brother Mark to outrace 21 other entries and win the Laser II North American Championships in Maryland. In 1990, he was honored as first-place skipper in the Laser II North American Championships. In 1991, he was part of the team that won the US Sailing Team Racing Championship, the "George R. Hinman Trophy".