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Ken Smith US4137: Racing Ethics and Sportsmanship


Ken Smith’s US4137 reflections about the 2021 U.S. Nationals Regatta.

Racing Ethics and Sportsmanship

The Situation. You are at a regatta in a substantial fleet. Racing is competitive and the committee includes scorers and starters. The course marks include weather and leeward orange triangle mark with green Darling marks set 50 yards from the turning marks. A fleet lines up and is started. The racers notice that the weather orange mark has fallen and is not visible.

The Competitor‘s View. A competitor (Z) in the top third observes several of the top boats rounding the green mark, and others rounding a spot in a drift where he thinks the fallen mark should be. He heads for that spot and sees then rounds the fallen mark. This repeats during the subsequent laps, some rounding the fallen mark and some the green mark. After finishing, Z tells the PRO what he observed. Z could not identify what boats failed to round the fallen mark and stated he intended to protest. Several competitors overheard this exchange and acknowledged they had rounded the green mark.

No one withdrew. No protest was filed.

Some observations:

1. Rounding the green mark shortened the race by 300 yards.
2. No one was stationed at the weather mark observing roundings.
3. The fleet sailed two different courses.
4. When the marks were set, no cone or other marker was placed at or near the weather mark. Having something else nearby is common practice. Often the race instructions identify such things as “considered as part of the mark.”
5. COVID and two launch areas made filing and hearing protests difficult.

Competitors’ Sporting Obligation. Upon learning one has not sailed the proper course, or one committed an error on the course (a foul, striking a mark, missing a mark, etc.), the expected sporting thing to do is notify the PRO or other race official and withdraw from that race.

Race Committee’s Obligation. Once the race officials are made aware of an error like this, they are obligated to take action to make the race fair. Their options include:

a. Throw out the race.
b. Have a skipper meeting and ask who improperly rounded the weather mark.
c. Convene the protest committee and they assign appropriate penalties or redress.
d. Re-run the race.

Race Committee Avoidance Strategies. Place secondary cones. These keep competitors away from the marks and are visible should a mark go down. Place mark observers at weather mark. I am sure there would have been one there had one been available.

My Takeaway. I am disappointed with my fellow competitors. Failing to acknowledge the unfair-ness of the race and take public responsibility is a breach of sportsmanship. Sorry, but I think less of some as a result.

Looking at the final standings, with so many races, dropping a race or a competitor dropping out of that race would have changed the outcome and final standings little, if at all.

The Race Committee could have avoided the issue had a cone been placed near the mark, and this was suggested during the event well prior to the offending race.  It is disappointing that no action was taken even after the events as described and acknowledged came to the Race Committee’s attention.

After an otherwise excellent regatta, it’s a shame to leave with any ill feelings.

Ken Smith US4137

Matt Struble Interview: Fast Starting in a DN

Thunder Bay’s Mike Madge KC5449 interviews one of the best DN racers in the world, Matt Struble US183. Matt is a 3 time Gold fleet champion and 4 time North American champion.
UPDATE: Do you have questions for Matt Struble? Mike Madge will interview Matt for Part 2 on Friday, February 5, 2021. Please send any questions for Matt to Mike themadges@tbaytel.net

 

2021 U.S. Nationals: Congratulations Ron Sherry US44 Gold & Andy Allen US5451 Silver

2021 Nationals Results
Thank you to all competitors, Vice Commodore Jody Kjoller, PRO Dan Heaney, with assistance from George Gerhardt, Dave Ray, and Brian, for making an effort to race and help run an exciting regatta in some of the coldest conditions we’ve seen in a while. Stay tuned for some photo galleries from Gretchen Dorian, who is not only an ace photographer; she also makes sure the weather marks don’t fly away when the wind knocks them down.

U.S. Nationals: Day 2 PM Report, Results, & Day 3 Schedule

Day 1 Gold Fleet Race. Photo: Gretchen Dorian
Preliminary Results

Patience paid off this morning as the Race Committee postponed racing on the half-hour because of lack of wind. Finally, at 11:30, Dan Heaney and George Gerhardt, who had been standing in the middle of Black Lake watching the wind readings, reported that the breeze had filled in and there was enough to race. The wind was about 10 – 15 mph, and between the intermittent snow squalls, each fleet went around the track for a total of 3 races. Both of my weather apps failed to predict the wind today, showing that getting to the lake is the only way to know if the wind is there. Temperatures were frigid again, but it seemed like everyone has adapted to the conditions.

U.S. Nationals
SCHEDULE FOR DAY 3
Thursday, January 28
10 AM First Race
Gold Fleet
Three races are planned for each fleet.
Be prepared for possible postponement onshore with the light wind forecast.

U.S. Nationals: Day 1 PM Report, Results, & Day 2 Schedule

 

Preliminary Results

It was a long cold day on the ice with a good breeze, excellent racing action. Manageable snowdrifts on the course made for challenging sailing, especially if sailors have never had to deal with the art of dodging drifts and keeping a DN up speed. I wish I had photos to post, but the cold meant economizing movements, focusing on writing numbers, and taking pictures of the score sheets for our tabulators, Ann and Bob Foeller. I know I speak for everyone when I say how tired I am tonight.
SCHEDULE FOR DAY 2
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26

10 AM First Race
Silver Fleet

2021 U.S. Nationals Day 1 AM Report

Photo: Gretchen Dorian

Preliminary Results

Time for a quick update from Cheboygan, MI before heading to Black Lake, site of the U.S. Nationals, a non-ranking DN regatta. The breeze finally came up yesterday afternoon which allowed for some training races. Winds look better today but it’s going to be cold out there. Follow along with as-they-happen results from our off shore race committee tabulators, Ann and Bob Foeller, who are in Toledo, OH.

 

2021 U.S. Nationals Starting Line Up for Day 1


The starting line-up for the mini-qualifier and the first Gold fleet race is posted below.
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS:
Day 1
Tuesday, January 26, 2021
9 AM: Skippers’ Meeting out on the race course, (NOTE: Skippers’ meeting will not be in the pits because there are different launches.)
10 AM First race, mini-qualifier

Silver Fleet/
Gold Qualifier
FleetSailNoHelmNameStart Pos.
SUS 1576BRIAN JONES1
SUS 5498RICHARD GORDON2
SUS 5608NICK HOVLAND3
SUS 5630KAREN BINDER4
SUS 4789CHRIS CLARK5
SUS 445BOB CAVE6
SUS 3433ROBERT CUMMINS7
SUS 5127HUGH STEVENS8
SUS 216RICHARD POTCOVA9
SUS 530BOBBY CUTTING10
SUS 2500ERIC SMITH11
SUS 5397ERIN BURY12
SUS 4137KEN  SMITH13
SUS 4974STAN JONES14
SUS 4532BILL EKLUND15
SUS 5647MATT MEYER16
SUS 4783RHEA NICHOLAS17
SUS 5435JODY KJOLLER18
SUS 5824ROLF VAN HOUTEN19
SUS 294LOU LOENNEKE20
SUS 1277HAL BOWMAN21
SUS 5470THOMAS DAWSON22
SUS 5760NOAH JONES23
SUS 4203PAT FITZGERALD24
SUS 5358DAVID FROST25
SUS 5486DAVE ELSMO26
SUS 5652SAMUEL BARTEL27
SUS 5451ANDREW ALLEN28
SUS 5053GEORGE REIS29
SKA 2PETER NORTON30
SUS 4192RANDY ROGOSKI31
SUS 5654GAIL TURLUCK32
SUS 5219KENT BAKER33
SUS 1313BOB RAST34
SUS 2237MIKE STEWART35
SUS 4155RICK LEMBERG36
SUS 5430BILL CUTTING37
SUS 637JOSEPH MEADE38

 

GOLD FLEET
FleetSailNoHelmNameStart Pos.
GUS 3283JOHN WILLIAMS1
GQ 112
GUS 4926STEVE ORLEBEKE3
GUS 3JIM GROGAN4
GUS 4GRIFFIN SHERRY5
GUS 60JOHN HARPER6
GQ 87
GUS 4638GUY LOVEJOY8
GUS 5166CHRIS BERGER9
GUS 807ROBERT FRANCIS10
GUS 5352DANIEL HEARN11
GQ 1212
GUS 4882RICHARD WOLLAM13
GQ 914
GUS 321MIKE BLOOM15
GUS 3705ROBERT HOLMAN16
GUS 5224JAMES THIELER17
GQ 318
GUS 44RON SHERRY19
GQ 1020
GUS 5633PETER JOHANSON21
GQ 522
GQ 223
GQ 724
GQ 425
GQ 626
GQ 127

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