Andy Maloney and Josh Junior can often be found together and they've transferred that to the race course at the Hempel World Cup Series Final where they have won all five Finn races between them.

Junior won two of the three races on the third day in Marseille, with Maloney taking out the other, which leaves Maloney with a one-point lead over his fellow Kiwi. Sweden's Max Salminen is eight points behind Junior in third.

Only 12 boats are competing in the Finn class in Marseille but the dominance of the Kiwis is impressive. Maloney has finished in the top two in all five races to carry on his terrific form of late which has seen him win the Princess Sofia Regatte in Palma and finish second at the Finn European championships in Athens.

Junior has won three of the five races but was disqualified from the second race today for being over the start line so has a much bigger discard for his worst result on his score sheet.

"Josh and I both had really good days today," Maloney said. "We had about 12-16 knots of breeze, onshore, with some really big waves so it was really fun, physical sailing out there.

"It was obviously a good day with Josh taking a couple of wins and myself winning the middle race so both of us found ourselves at the front of the fleet pretty much in every race. We managed to extend in a couple of them and had some pretty good battles between us.

"In the first race, Josh managed to sneak across the line about half a boat length in front of me, which was a pretty exciting finish. We were both going 100 to try to beat one another and we are having a lot of fun out there."

The pair have developed a very close working relationship, sharing everything in training in the belief it will give whoever goes to next year's Olympics the best chance of winning gold. They understand the brutal reality that only one of them can go to Tokyo but will work as a team until the Olympics roll around.