Rossiter Pintail Mortagne sur Gironde, near Bordeaux |
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Laser 28 - Excellent example of this great design Hamble le rice |
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Laser 140101 Tynemouth |
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List classes of boat for sale |
Olympic 'finals' proposal |
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lssyac ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 25 Jun 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 18 |
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[I'm not 100% clear what you are arguing here but I'll respond anyway.] My point is why do the TV companies want this... to make money. I guess the ISAF and China have an interest too, but i feel that the ISAF have succored to TV companies in a vain attempt to gain from it. As i see it the TV companies will always gain and the ISAF or sailors in general will get a small gain. I am all for bringing monies into the sport and especially to fund grass root levels, who knows where the next Ben or Shirley or Ian are currently sailing their topper or Opi. Bring on the money, but don't do the sport an injustice by changing the format to suit one or two parties.
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Stefan Lloyd ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 03 Aug 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1599 |
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A long and complicated story, which I couldn't begin to fully describe. Historically the ORC (Offshore Racing Council, later Congress) was an independent body which ran a series of yacht racing rules (IOR, IMS and the related ORC Club) and also set the safety equipment standards for offshore racing. However number participating in IMS has been declining for some time while the two largest rating systems used in the world (IRC and PHRF) have nothing to do with ORC, which has been busy rearranging the deck-chairs on the sinking ship that is IMS. Precisely what is wrong with IMS is a very long story, but basically it's a flawed concept with even worse execution. Recently ISAF took over ORC. Hence it has taken onboard a rating approach that has been rejected by the vast majority of sailors it is aimed at. The question is why has the ISAF chosen to branch out into the specialised area of yacht rating rules, in which is has no specialised knowledge to contribute. Another area where ISAF has branched out is sailor classification. Events like Cork Week have adopted the system, which means every crew member has to be ISAF-registered according to their "professionalism". This has been hugely controversial among those adversely affected (since those working in marine-related industries have been effectively disbarred from some events). All a long way from the IYRU, which just set the racing rules. All fueled by Olympic money. |
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Stefan Lloyd ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 03 Aug 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1599 |
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So you are arguing that because some Olympic sports are flawed, sailing ought to be too? |
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Stefan Lloyd ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 03 Aug 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1599 |
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I'm not 100% clear what you are arguing here but I'll respond anyway. The Olympics does generate a large dollop of money for ISAF. To what extent this benefits the sport, I'm not so certain. When the ISAF used to be the IYRU, before it got Olympic loadsofmoney, it ran a tight ship, manned largely by a few volunteers. Now it's busy busy busy, constantly rewriting the rules, taking over other organisations like ORC, getting involved in keelboat rating rules and so forth. Does this actually benefit sailing? I'm sure they think it does but I'm not at all sure. Would I be bothered if sailing exited from the Olympics, as well it might if Beijing turns out to be a windless shambles? Reluctantly, I'd have to answer yes. The reason is that much of the government and lottery funding that comes into sailing is because it is an Olympic sport. While much of that funds professional sailors, coaches and other, who as far as I'm concerned could either find other funding or get proper jobs, it also pays for the youth training which is important for the future of the sport at the grassroots. |
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JimC ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 17 May 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 6662 |
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Tell you what, lets take the javelin as an example. Someone can get a freak throw in the first round with a lucky gust of wind (which means it wouldn't count as a record) and throw it two feet in all of the rest of thr rounds and still win. |
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lssyac ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 25 Jun 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 18 |
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I generally find myself in the lower third of an open. I wouldn't want to travel to an event and sail one less race than some. I guess even for the back of the fleet there will always be a last beat to try to get past a rival, to gain the extra position that we all strive for. If you finish 11th in the series, how gutted would you feel. If you were leading the series and ended up 10th in the Medal Race would you feel any better. I say it is a c*** way of deciding medals at the Olympics, and for any national or open meeting, not that it has to be used in national or open events. Would i like to see Olympic sailing on TV, yes. Would i like to see sailing being taken out of the Olympics, no. I see why they think they need to do it, for the viewing public.... no chance, its for the money it can generate. Which the sport needs, not the TV companies..... Radix malorum est Cupiditas. |
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Bumble ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() ![]() Joined: 12 Nov 05 Location: Taiwan Online Status: Offline Posts: 302 |
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Your quite right Stefan. I fully retract my previous ramblings..... I am the only one who wants to be champion of the world.
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Stefan Lloyd ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 03 Aug 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 1599 |
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To do the best they can, which is not the same as winning. One of the great things about sailing can be be mighty battles going on up the final beat between 19th and 20th place. It matters to the people involved, even if nobody else much cares. |
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cherkhan ![]() Newbie ![]() Joined: 12 Nov 05 Location: Ireland Online Status: Offline Posts: 1 |
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Lets hope the rest of sailing realises what a proposterous idea this is. Every sport is different. The reason that the 400m's has heats and semi's is so that they can fit everyone on the track at the same time, sailing does not have this problem. The problem sailing has is a lack of inginuety on behalf of the broadcasters. Whilst doing a world championships in South Africa SABC made a film of the week, with on board cameras the full works, it was broadcast in a 45 minute slot the following week and to be honest was superb. This was not a huge budget affair, just two guys and a couple of cameras, so why they cannot do the same for the Olymics I dont know. To change sailing when you could be comanding a championships throughout the week and then break a rope, tear a sail or get holed, none of which might be your fault and your medal is gone. When the ISAF realises that the media is not really interested in sailing because it percieves there is no interest from Joe Public then the ISAF will start to lead and not follow like lost sheep. Hopefully individual classes will not start to follow this line, or I may just retire and sit on the beach all day. |
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Bumble ![]() Far too distracted from work ![]() ![]() Joined: 12 Nov 05 Location: Taiwan Online Status: Offline Posts: 302 |
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It is different. If you take the same 400m line up and get them to run the same race over and over again (under pressure/equal coditions etc) then the same guy will come out on top. Thats not saying that its not tactical, just that the fastest man will always be the fastest man. If you take a sailing line up and get them to race in a boat like any of the olympic classes over and over the same man will not always win - in fact (while there are exceptions) often a different guy comes first each time. Sailing has many other variables which saparate it from a running race and this has always been recognised. For that reason one of the main challengers of olympic, or any yachting event, is consistency. The question should not be how can the scoring be changed to make it as easy to understand as a rowing race, but how can it best reward the consistent sailor for his efforts over the whole event. The answer is, I think, that it can't and that is one of the reasons this thread is so long and the olympic sailing is on the edge of expulsion. |
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