SituationOn the first day of a regatta, three races are sailed. Each race has two windward
mark roundings, so six in total for the day.
Question 1A delivered
protest refers to an incident at the first windward
mark rounding but does not indicate the race number. Is the
protest valid, if the
protest time limit and notification requirements have been met?
Answer 1Under rule
60.3(a), the protestor is required to identify the incident upon delivery of a
protest. The term ‘identify’ is used in the sense ordinarily understood in general use, meaning to recognize something and say what it is.
If the details included remove any ambiguity about which incident the delivered
protest is referring to, then the
protest fulfils the requirements of rule
60.3(a) and should be found valid.
Question 2A delivered
protest refers to an incident in race 1 at a windward
mark rounding but does not indicate which of the two
mark roundings. Is the
protest valid, if the
protest time limit and notification requirements have been met?
Answer 2See Answer 1.
Question 3A delivered
protest for an incident states that it occurred in race 2, but after the hearing has started, the protestor determines that the incident actually occurred in race 1. Is the
protest valid, if the
protest time limit and notification requirements have been met?
Answer 3If details other than the race number included in the delivered
protest remove any ambiguity about which incident it is referring to, then the
protest fulfils the requirements of rule
60.3(a) and should be found valid.