Chris 249
Well-Known Member
I think that invoking the word "can" here is dangerously optimistic! As it involves people who are currently doing very well thank you driving the cup this way to accept that they need to do a little bit less well to drive the cup that way. And the nature of the cup is such that those people are setting the rules....
The entire history of racing is chock full of examples of a decent fleet of fun boats springing up, almost organically, and everyone having a lot of fun until the "wrong" people get involved and outspend everyone and spoil the fun.
Just in my time racing in the solent I can think of so many examples of that. A look at the number of boats entered this season compared to last, and the number for sale, suggests that the Cape 31s might be the latest example.
Good points about the particular classes, but I was unclear. I meant that the way of thinking in its wider application - ie that promoting extreme performance will lead to more people taking up sailing - has been adopted by people like World Sailing and the sailing media and that’s harmed the sport. We’ve had decades of evidence that promoting extreme performance types does not promote the sport, but those runnng the sport still manage to ignore it.
Classic examples can be seen to be the collapse of windsurfing when it shifted to promoting high performance, and the failure of the high-performance skiff types and hydrofoiling boats to become “the future of the sport” as their promoters said they would be. The basis of the competitive sport is still racer/cruiser monos and hiking medium-speed dinghies and yet the “leaders” of the sport seem to keep on ignoring that and promoting types that most people just don’t want.