Two boats are approaching a leeward mark to be left to port.
- Both boats are running dead downwind.
- Boat A is on starboard tack, Boat B is on port tack.
- Both boats enter the zone, Boat A is slightly ahead and Boat B has overlap when A enters the zone.
- Boat B (port) claims inside overlap and hails for mark-room to round.
- Boat A denies mark-room claiming she has the right of way because she is on starboard tack.
- There is no collision and Boat A eventually avoids Boat B and both boats round.
Questions:
Does rule 10 (port-starboard) apply here or does Rule 18 come into play somehow.
Is Boat A correct? Should this have gone to protest?
A boat has right of way over another boat when the other boat is required to keep clear of her. However, some rules in Sections B, C and D limit the actions of a right-of-way boat.
So when R 18 applies and grants Mark Room then the ROW boat must provide that room.
Should it go to a protest - Yes - protests are a great way for the competitors to improve their understanding of the rules - and in this scenario, if STBD pushed Port off her proper course in the zone, but subsequently left room and let her in to round the mark, STBD still broke R 18.2(b)
John
Whether it should go to a protest depends on the details of 5 and 6. "denied" suggest that B should protest A if A didn't provide "mark room", but no collision and that "both boats rounded" might suggest that "mark room" was provided (and that no foul occurred). So, I think "it depends" might be the answer and it would depend on what actually happened in 5) and 6).
Mark Room
Room for a boat to leave a mark on the required side. Also,
(a) room to sail to the mark when her proper course is to sail close to it, and
(b) room to round or pass the mark as necessary to sail the course without touching the mark
However, mark-room for a boat does not include room to tack unless she is overlapped inside and to windward of the boat required to give mark-room and she would be fetching the mark after the tack.
The parties in this situation are likely conflating the concept of right-of-way with the concept of mark room.
Right of way rules are port/starboard, windward/leeward, ahead/astern, and while tacking.
Mark Room is a limitation on a right-of-way boat, it does not change who has right-of-way.
Put another way, right-of-way is only part of a situation and while you can often have right-of-way, Rules 14-20 limit or demand action of a right-of-way boat in certain scenarios.
Be careful here. Mark-room does not include room to sail your proper course. See def: Mark-Room for what it actually does include.
We have no contact between boats or the mark .. so whether or not Boat A broke a rule might depend upon the avoiding actions of Boat B and the details of how they eventually rounded the mark.
If Boat B still rounded inside Boat A, then it might be found that A gave MR and Boat B kept clear.
If Boat B had to take A’s stern when avoiding Boat A, then it might likely be found that Boat A did not give MR.
I believe that rule 10 applies, and I also believe that rule 18 applies, but what is the mechanism over giving priority to one or the other.
To clarify the situation:
Boat A (starboard) is about to make a tight rounding and boat B, (port) is claiming inside overlap. During the mark rounding boat A will have to gybe onto port to round up.
But the assumption is that boat A is trying to shut boat B out of the mark rounding by bearing off by the lee and then gybing at the last possible moment, thereby forcing boat B to avoid and go behind. The issue of entering the zone and activating Rule 18 is what is confusing to me.
The solution is to apply both rules separately but then go on to apply the the exoneration rules. If I add to or clarify the facts to say that the starboard boat pushed the inside port tack boat off its course to the mark (adding facts, agreeing with Angelo) and then headed up to avoid a collision with the port tack boat, then the port tack boat did not keep clear of the starboard tack boat and so breaks rule 10. However, since the port tack boat is sailing within the room to which she is entitled, she is exonerated by rule 43.1(b). Since mark room includes room to sail to the mark, the starboard tack boat did not allow this room and breaks rule 18.2(b). When we look through the exoneration rules, there is nothing to save the right of way boat from such a rule breach and so they will be disqualified.
Since P doesn’t have to gybe at the mark in this scenario, can you elaborate on how P breaks 18? Seems to me we only have an unexonerated 10 breach.
P is entitled to mark room but is on port, so must give way to S.
There is an explicit exception to Rule 18 at a windward mark involving port-starboard situations in the Zone, but none at a leeward mark.
To Henry, pragmatically, turning off rule 18 'between boats on opposite tacks on a beat to windward' is a rational approach if some modicum of collision avoidance exists in the RRS. Applying the same principle to a leeward mark would be an invitation to chaos as it would encourage some pretty aggressive gybing. There may be a better reason, but I have always been happy with 'just because.' I think it makes racing better, assuming that the sailors recognise the distinction.
Henry .. look at it this way….
Put boat A on port tack … so now both boats are on port … with B on the inside and A on the outside. You might look at that scenario and say … ‘oh .. of course … B needs to keep clear of A and A needs to give MR. ‘
Putting A on port doesn’t really change much though … except the rule by which B has to keep clear of A (rule 11 vs rule 10). Otherwise it’s the same …
So the only boat that broke a rule and is not exonerated is A.
Decision: Penalise A.
43.1.
a) When as a consequence of breaking a rule a boat has compelled another boat to break a rule, the other boat is exonerated for her breach.
b) When a boat is sailing within the room or mark-room to which she is entitled and, as a consequence of an incident with a boat required to give her that room or mark-room, she breaks a rule of Section A of Part 2, rule 15, 16, or 31, she is exonerated for her breach.
c) A right-of-way boat, or one sailing within the room or mark-room to which she is entitled, is exonerated for breaking rule 14 if the contact does not cause damage or injury.
One explanation is, as Warren has said is "because it does".
Maybe this rationale will help.
Boats approaching a leeward mark running downwind, even if on opposite tacks, will be travelling more or less in the same direction, will clearly have the appearance of Clear Ahead, Clear Astern and Overlapped that we would intuitively expect, and will be changing course in the same direction around the mark, so a rule allowing the inside boat mark-room, depending on Clear Ahead or Overlap at the zone will work and be useful.
Boats on opposite tacks approaching a windward mark, OTOH, are travelling at 90 degrees to one anothe, so one will need to make a radical change in course, including a tack and an extended RRS 13 obligation to keep clear in order to get around the mark. A rule for Mark-room between these boats on opposite tacks is going to be difficult to devise and implement.
Then perhaps protest room situations could be avoided.
I appreciate everyone's input into this matter.
Considering John Ball's first comment and Angelo's "careful here" - I've shown the above drawing of the incident (or what might have been - using RC 4 boat lengths). At P3, Red luffs slightly to her windward, towards the Mark, thus denying Blue the opportunity to sail direct to the Mark (her "Proper Course"?) but then bears away to give adequate Mark Room at the Mark. So has Red denied Blue "Mark Room" at P3? I.e. is Blue entitled to sail direct to the Mark, or only Room to actually sail round it? I fully understand the R43 implications, but my point is, could Red enforce her ROW to take Blue to the right so long as she ultimately allows Mark Room at the Mark. It seems that Angelo and John B disagree, and as I read the rule, I'm not sure. Are there Calls/Cases to clarify?
In your original scenario the Starboard boat has ROW and port must keep clear, but P’s entitlement to mark-room limits the course S can sail. S can sail any course she pleases as long as she doesn’t deny mark-room to P. P is protected as long as she’s sailing in the mark-room she’s entitled to, but if she sails outside that “corridor” she has to keep clear of S.
At P1, the boats reach the zone of a downwind mark to be rounded to port, with Green outside and on stbd, and Red, overlapped inside on port. At after P1 to P2 Green alters course, causing Red to stay clear, but now Red is sailing towards the wrong side of the mark. At P3, Green provides mark room and Red is able to pass on the correct side of the mark. There was no contact.
My view was that in the scenario, Green breaks R18.2(b) after P1 by causing Red to sail off her 'proper course' which was to sail close to the mark.
I agree with Bob's comments about the importance of exoneration and R 43 in the mark room rights of Red.
John
Between positions 1 and 2 when S altered course in the zone, she broke 18.2(b) by not allowing P to sail to the mark when P's proper course was to sail to it. At that moment P could have protested S.
By position 3 it looks like S was acting right and giving mark-room, as long as P could get around without contacting S or the mark.
Angelo's advice to be careful about applying the term 'proper course' in mark-room situations is to an extent a semantic quibble, but judges are suppossed to be semantic quibblers.
There is no entitlement for a boat to sail her proper course (except in the MR definition of mark-room).
'Proper course' is used in the Definition mark-room to define a particular space.
True, once the mark-room corridor is defined by reference to proper course, a boat sailing within it will usually be sailing her proper courses, but an exception might be an assy boat, whose proper course might still be to remain on her hot powered up course, then gybe back to he mark.
Also on semantics and catch words:
I like your diagram at 1 .. and Boat A would not provide Boat B MR if she simply held her course at #1 all the way to the mark and rounded.
"A boat has right of way over another boat when the other boat is
required to keep clear of her. However, some rules in Sections B, C
and D limit the actions of a right-of-way boat."
required to keep clear of her. However, some rules in Sections B, C
and D limit the actions of a right-of-way boat."
This is the problem with the current rule set that I've had all along. Many places in Sections B, C, and D do describe how they limit the actions of a right of way boat.
The mark-room rule doesn't do it very well at all, which creates issues like Tad experienced on the water, and this case in this thread. I suspect there are lots of instances on the racecourse that have disadvantaged boats unnecessarily because it is very difficult to interpret rule 18 vis-a-vis rule 10 when you have to make a rules decision in a few seconds while negotiating a mark rounding in traffic.