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PY Numbers for 2017

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    Posted: 07 Mar 17 at 10:13pm
And PY will be back in it's proper place - enabling Club members of diverse body shapes to race each other.

The irony of this debate is that as I look at results at my Club the past NAtional Champs / Olympic coaches take races off each other in the ratios/conditions I would expect despite being in Musto Skiffs, 300s and 200s.  So my conclusion is it's really not that bad.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Sam.Spoons Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 07 Mar 17 at 10:24pm
Originally posted by mozzy

No the logical conclusion isn't that we all sail lasers, it's that we should all sail scratch, whatever class that may be, often they will be suited to local conditions. If numbers support it, we can split the fleets to cover more specific weight / body types. But... if you've only got four boats turning up to a handicap race, then yes, maybe you should all get lasers...

That would be nice but what if you don't like the local class? One of my local clubs has finally, last year I think, given and offered handicap racing after at least 50 years of racing only a restricted number of classes. I'd guess that's because they couldn't attract enough members to be viable with the classes they sailed (and it was a good range for the lake they sail on).

At the club as a junior when i first started there were a couple of toppers. But latter none (a few more came through a year or so after me). So I decided to sail a radial and full rig, despite being only 55-62 kg. It was much more fun than sailing in a menagerie against comets and mirrors.

Good choice if that boat suits you. Class racing is always going to be 'better' (in many ways) than handicap.

I think it's damaging for the sport because there is too much emphasis on it. It would be fine if it was a charity race here or there, but to be the mainstay of so many peoples sailing?

Maybe but I don't think there is any deliberate emphasis on handicap racing rather that clubs have to provide what the local sailors want, and unless they persuade enough members to sail a few specific classes PY is the only way to go racing.

And yes, even to beginners it makes little sense. What other sports have a handicapped equipment where results are worked out hours or days after the race has finished? As a beginner you want to watch and learn techniques used by others. You want clear and immediate feedback on what you're doing... sailing is hard enough as it without telling someone they have to wait until Tuesday to find out how they did!

I agree that beginners don't understand he intricacies of handicapping but that shouldn't be something that puts them off racing. To take a very crude analogy, if you said to a novice pool player that if they managed a clearance on a pool table they should be capable of doing the same on a snooker table they would look at you as if you were a idiot, why, if they have a little knowledge of boats (keen beginner, read a lot, watched a bit at the club, probably gets that a 400 is faster than a Topper) would they not understand that a 400 is going to get around faster than their Topaz. Start them off in a pursuit race or two and the principle is simple to understand. It's the minor detail we are discussing here.

I do agree that waiting 'till Tuesday for the result is discouraging but does that ever happen anymore? My Club have the results up on the VDU in the clubhouse 10 minutes after the committee boat hits the jetty.....
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Post Options Post Options   Quote iGRF Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 07 Mar 17 at 10:25pm
The simple nub of this debate, is that there is of course and always has been good class racing, hell even I could travel to events to compete in the same boat, I might even do the nationals this year as they seem close enough not to have to endure sideswiping trucks and Northern hemisphere nosebleeds for too long to get to, but...

There isn't good handicap racing controlled by a body with a vested interest in its success and enthusiasts guarding and promoting it like any other class.

If you don't like it, fine, don't do it, but hey give those of us a break that have no other choice on a weekly basis but to endure and sometimes enjoy it.

Edited by iGRF - 07 Mar 17 at 10:27pm
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Post Options Post Options   Quote rb_stretch Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 07 Mar 17 at 10:44pm
Originally posted by Sam.Spoons

So, is there anybody here who has consciously sold one boat and bought another just because of the PN (and I don't mean to buy a boat that has local class racing)?


In my club I'm hearing of Solo sailors moving to an Aero 7 because they feel they can do better on handicap. That impression started because our best Solo sailor was the first to transition and therefore Solos weren't getting wins anymore and Aeros were.

Even accounting for the above the Aero 7 does appear to have an advantageous handicap on our waters. The same sailors I've raced against for years just seem to be doing consistently better by quite some margin. The 2017 handicap is even higher now....

Personally, as a Phantom sailor, I don't really have any choice, There aren't other heavyweight boats around except for a Finn and there is no way I can haul a Finn up a steep sided reservior.


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Post Options Post Options   Quote sargesail Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 07 Mar 17 at 10:55pm
Originally posted by rb_stretch

Originally posted by Sam.Spoons

So, is there anybody here who has consciously sold one boat and bought another just because of the PN (and I don't mean to buy a boat that has local class racing)?


In my club I'm hearing of Solo sailors moving to an Aero 7 because they feel they can do better on handicap. That impression started because our best Solo sailor was the first to transition and therefore Solos weren't getting wins anymore and Aeros were.

Even accounting for the above the Aero 7 does appear to have an advantageous handicap on our waters. The same sailors I've raced against for years just seem to be doing consistently better by quite some margin. The 2017 handicap is even higher now....

Personally, as a Phantom sailor, I don't really have any choice, There aren't other heavyweight boats around except for a Finn and there is no way I can haul a Finn up a steep sided reservior.



Something that is often missed in the whole Crew Skill Factor debate is the effect that the boat you sail has on your development as a sailor.  I attribute much of the 300's 'speed increase' to this.  It's just possible that the Aero 7 is getting a better performance out of sailors who have been stuck in a Solo rut for years.  Even that they are rubbing off on some of the mental boost from the top Solo sailor transitioning.  So much of sailing is in the mind.

Especially the obsession with handicaps!
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Sam.Spoons Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 07 Mar 17 at 11:09pm
Originally posted by sargesail

I think we're in one of those cyclical periods when the aberration that is widespread handicap racing is in a stronger period than class racing.  You can trace this through the history of sailboat racing.  What has brought it about at the moment:
1.  Increased cost of travel which means sailors are less inclined to cover distances to sail against other 'class racers'.
2.  A longer season due to improved kit which as enabled the surge in Winter handicap events.
3.  Aggressive promotion of handicap racing by an interested group in the industry.
4.  Some high volume sales of new classes which nevertheless take time to build class racing mass (Aeros and Zeros)

But I think we'll begin to see a swing back in the next couple of years because:
1.  Class fragmentation / new boat launch fratricide will slow down - why - because the industry will milk foiling for cash rather than launching new boats in the same numbers (and foiling will be found not to be the future for lot's of the reasons already covered on this forum (plus the fact that as a number of my friends have commented it's 'fast but dull'.
2.  They'll be a resurgence in some SMODs like the 800.
3.  The RS Games in 2018 will have a big influence - because people will go and class race but also have the sure side fun with mates from other classes.  This will become an alternative model to big handicap racing.
4.  The momentum of the Winter Handicaps will fall off and be replaced, for some keen classes, by Winter Class racing (note the numbers of D Zeros in their Class within a HAndicap Winter racing).

I'm not sure 'aberration' is the correct word to describe handicap racing, historically class racing is more likely to be a fit for the word if you look at it numerically. However I agree that foiling is another dead end (like Formula Windsurfing and Sinclair C3s).

And, as the number of new (and, therefore, old) classes increases there will be more of a market for handicap racing as the classes become more diluted.
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Do Different Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08 Mar 17 at 6:51am
For the life of me I can never understand the intensity of these PY debates.
It obvious that any form of handicapping will always have flaws when related to specific situations, unless mired in endless variables it can only ever be about averages.
It is the contradiction of emotions that confuses me; if you really care so much about precise results and absolute comparative performance then why not put that amount of energy into making class racing happen for yourself? 
edited @ 7.11 for typos & clarity.


Edited by Do Different - 08 Mar 17 at 7:11am
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Post Options Post Options   Quote getafix Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08 Mar 17 at 8:32am
Originally posted by Do Different

For the life of me I can never understand the intensity of these PY debates.
It obvious that any form of handicapping will always have flaws when related to specific situations, unless mired in endless variables it can only ever be about averages.
It is the contradiction of emotions that confuses me; if you really care so much about precise results and absolute comparative performance then why not put that amount of energy into making class racing happen for yourself? 
edited @ 7.11 for typos & clarity.


For all of the 30 ish years I've been racing dinghies and keelboats I've found with just one or two exceptions that the 'emotional' side of the debate about handicap 'bandits' and rating 'cheats' is usually perpetuated by a small but vocal minority, who's real beef is "I should have won this or that but the system cheated me or let someone else cheat me out of it".

The rest of us, as posted above (nice posts Sargesail) just look forward to going down to our clubs, having some races, a bit of banter and a pint as an antedote to work, DIY etc... and don't let the handicap system get that much in the way of it all.

I'm far more vocal if I think someone has 'accidentally forgotten' to put the 15kg of lead correctors back into their boat than about some PY number or other - that to me is blatant cheating
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08 Mar 17 at 9:34am
Originally posted by iGRF


There isn't good handicap racing controlled by a body with a vested interest in its success and enthusiasts guarding and promoting it like any other class.
Because handicap racing should be a bit of fun on an bank holiday charity race; it's not worth the, blood, sweat and tears.

Originally posted by iGRF


If you don't like it, fine, don't do it, but hey give those of us a break that have no other choice on a weekly basis but to endure and sometimes enjoy it.

But, people do have a choice. Go to your local club, look at the results sheet and buy the boat with the largest number of entries. If you find you need to get heavier or lighter to be more competitive, and winning is worth that much to you, do that. 

People should be encouraged to spend energy practicing, learning from others and that will lead to enjoyment. It's tempting to say, for example, 'if we only sailed asymmetrics, then I'd do much better'. Blaming external factors can be comforting when you first don't succeed, it takes the edge off, but ultimately, those are negative and not constructive thoughts.

I think where handicap racing is the mainstay of club racing, then it sends out the message that sailing is about 'finding the boat that makes you do well'. 

I get it, sometimes a better boat comes along which is more suited to racing at your club. But hard questions should asked about how the boat is actually going to make sailing more fun, more accessible; what is it actually adding to the experience?




Edited by mozzy - 08 Mar 17 at 9:51am
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Post Options Post Options   Quote iGRF Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 08 Mar 17 at 9:41am
Originally posted by PeterG

I used to race in a fleet which was mostly a few Contenders and a few more Lasers.
We all knew that in light winds we'd be thrashed on handicap by the Lasers, but we could have fun trying to race them on the water - if you could stay ahead of a Laser in light winds you were doing well. We also all knew that if the wind increased a bit (and as long as you didn't decide to have a cooling dip) the Lasers would in turn get thrashed.
We all knew that, we all accepted that, and we all enjoyed the racing. That surely is what handicap racing is about. There's no viable real world  handicapping system that is going to level that one out. Any handicapping system is a compromise to allow people to choose to both sail the boat they want and to make at least an attempt at allowing interesting non class racing. It will never do more than that so why waste so much effort worrying about it?

Agreed, until come the day when the so called governing handicap body sets the bar so high you don't get to beat the Lasers on a windy day.
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