Onboard, Volvo Champion Club |
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Webmuppet ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 11 Mar 06 Location: Suffolk Online Status: Offline Posts: 534 |
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This thread is proving to be very interesting - The club where I sail has just been granted RYA "Champion Club" status and is already involved in the "OnBoard" scheme. I understood that the "OnBoard" scheme was about attracting young people into the sport and that the "Champion Club" status was a targetting a more general participation, however according to the RYA's website:
Nigel |
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I am the milkman of human kindness, I will leave an extra pint (Billy Bragg)
Graduate 2530 'Galaxy' |
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Rupert ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 11 Aug 04 Location: Whitefriars sc Online Status: Offline Posts: 8956 |
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We have also started down the RYA junior coaching route, but not the Squad system route at all. We have a very active junior group which isn't pushed into racing, but is supported if they want to go that way, and a Youth Development Squad for those who have their Level 4 qualification and want to carry on with both racing and teaching the younger ones. It can work well, and we have very good adult/junior intergration.
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Firefly 2324, Puffin 229, Minisail 3446 Mirror 70686
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G.R.F. ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 10 Aug 08 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 4028 |
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Well as a parent who's daughter having won a national youth
champonship event first time on the water beating a young Bryony Shaw, who was the then leading light, she got absorbed straight into the squad system, after one training weekend at the hands of the RYA, she came back and begged me never to make her do that again, so I didn't, never having been one to force his own sport on his kids. What went on that weekend she never told me, but other parental tales are legion and for as many as stick, ten times are lost to our sport forever. They do it because getting funding for kids is easy and keeps them all in jobs, it's worth nothing to individual adults and is absolutely devastating to the club scene, with the various parental rivalry, inteference, self centred own child interest. So be very wary is my advice. |
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catmandoo ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 16 Mar 04 Online Status: Offline Posts: 545 |
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Exactly my thoughts and worries of great concern !!!!!, its happened at our club too, and again now , The RYA scheme ,setup etc is destroying Clubs , We were the first "Champion Club in Scotland " looking back -overall has it done any good ?---- NO . We can't even get money to train instructors anymore !!, whilst RYA are more than happy to take our top radial,Oppie , Topper sailors in uk squads. From an initial input of over 80 children when my kids started to sail we only have 3 regularily sailing now (in their late teens) .
The current crop has been decimated allready , with club races in these classes often having NO entries and parents don't race either as they clock up the miles driving to RYA events !. In my opinion clubs would be better fostering their own training schemes , perhaps interacting with nearby clubs to create a talent share and benefit the clubs as a whole . THE RYA is a kiss of death to club developement in my opinion and experience. Dabble at your peril |
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GraemeB ![]() Groupie ![]() Joined: 21 Aug 06 Location: Scotland Online Status: Offline Posts: 84 |
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here here catmandoo - well said
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craiggo ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 01 Apr 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 1810 |
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This subject has come up more and more at our club, due to loosing a fair few keen sailors to the taxi trade, transporting their kids and toppers to events all over the UK. We have probably one of the largest contingents of zone squad kids in the South West, and unfortunately none of the events are ever at our club so the result is the kids hardly ever sail at home anymore and neither do their parents.
Club sailing is loosing out, as has been noted by others in this thread, and I do wonder whether the RYA are actually aware of what they are doing to small clubs. I can understand the desire to build your kids with talent into the next gold medal hopefuls but this should not be to the detriment of local sailing clubs. My own personal feeling is that the regional development coaching team should instead be the ones doing the travelling, and should come and provide coaching at kids home club. Perhaps once a month they could hold a regional event at a club that has zone squad members, but the aim should be to keep the kids racing at home for as long as possible. In the long term the damage, being done to the sport is probably more than the good being done by the medal haul. Over the last few years the efforts made by the RYA to encourage clubs to employ professionals, overtrain kids, remove families from their local club, have all failed to improve the sport at grass roots levels. Unfortunately all their efforts just go to show how they have failed to identify those whom they are supposed to represent. Edited by craiggo |
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RS400atC ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 04 Dec 08 Online Status: Offline Posts: 3011 |
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The RYA is only concerned with East German style 'medal farming' for the Olympics, as this is what raises their profile and allows them to tap into lottery funds. The aim is find the stars, not let everyone have a go. Much like the premier league. They don't really do much for ordinary plebs who take part as a relaxation rather than a career option. There is money to be had from these schemes, but there may be strings attached. There may be better ways of tapping into lottery money, our local Sea Scouts seem to acquire Picos, RIB's etc with very little interference. |
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GarethT ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 21 Apr 07 Online Status: Offline Posts: 714 |
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Maybe it's your clubs that are doing something wrong rather than the RYA. At our club we have a number of junior national squad sailors that take part in club activities - racing and messing around. They raise the bar generally in terms of performance, and also inspire the upcoming generation to go out and do well too. Back to the question about VCC ....... we've recently been awarded it at our club, and it has enabled our local coaches to work alongside the pros, and pick up a lot of good exercises, techniques, etc that then get shared around a wider audience increasing both the quality and quantity of local coaching on offer. The purpose of it is to set us up to stand on our own two feet rather than depend on the RYA for our coaching. If our juniors go on to get into squads then great. We'll all be very proud of them, and they'll come back and help the others along. PS. If, as alluded to further up the board, there is nothing in this to help the more 'mature' sailor, why not organise something? If someone from my club asked me to run a coaching session for adults I would be more than happy to, but I don't have the time to proactively arrange coaching for anyone that might want it. If you went to one of your local coaches and asked if they would run some coaching if you were to do all the donkey work in terms of organisation, I'm sure they would be more than happy to. Edited by GarethT |
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craiggo ![]() Really should get out more ![]() ![]() Joined: 01 Apr 04 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 1810 |
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I firmly believe that VCC can work, the coaching assistance that is provided can be used to help all members of the club and I agree with Gareth that some onus is on the clubs to make it work, but there needs to be some realisation that removing the young guys (zone squad, development squad etc.) from small clubs, leaves those small clubs struggling to get numbers on the startline.
When the Topper kids are at home (it does occasionally happen) it does raise the performance of the others but it also puts other kids off (those that cant afford to travel and cant join the various conversations about what happened two weeks ago at Bowmoor blah blah blah!) (sorry to use Bowmoor as an example it just came into my head). Edited by craiggo |
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RS400atC ![]() Really should get out more ![]() Joined: 04 Dec 08 Online Status: Offline Posts: 3011 |
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In the RS Classes, the class association is pretty good at providing some coaching. I'm sure more could be done on a local basis though. Particularly at the level of club sailors who are not far enough down the line to join class associations. |
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