I'm currenlty righting sailing instructions for an event and I am confused about Appendix LG SI 16.3. The SI states "The Finishing Window is the time for boats to finish after the first boat sails the course and finishes. Boats failing to finish within the Finishing Window, and not subsequently retiring, penalized or given redress, will be scored Time Limit Expired (TLE) without a hearing. A boat scored TLE shall be scored points for the finishing place [one][two] more than the points scored by the last boat that finished within the Finishing Window. This changes RRS 35, A5.1, A5.2 and A10." Does this mean that a boat normally scored OCS would now be scored TLE because she failed to finish within the time limit (because she did not start) and was not subsequently retiring, penalized or given redress. Let's assume that there are 100 boats and 99 of them finish within the Finishing Window. The 99th boat is given redress and is therefore scored 1 point. Is a boat scored TLE subsequently scored 2 or 3 points? If the two last boats are scored 98.5, what is "the finnishing place 100.5"? Does that even exist? What if the last boat is scored UFD but she still started and finnished? Is TLE then scored 102 or 103 points?
“...shall be scored points for the finishing place...”
(my emphasis). The TLE score is not affected by anything except the simple count of how many boats finished, which does not include OCS boats (as they have not finished). Subsequent actions like redress or disqualification do not affect the number of boats that finished.
Nonetheless, I would suggest not using TLE at all.
Here is the instruction: "The Finishing Window is the time for boats to finish after the first boat sails the course and finishes. Boats failing to finish within the Finishing Window, and not subsequently retiring, penalized or given redress, will be scored Time Limit Expired (TLE) without a hearing. A boat scored TLE shall be scored points for the finishing place [one][two] more than the points scored by the last boat that finished within the Finishing Window. This changes RRS 35, A5.1, A5.2 and A10."
The wording seems confusing to me. It's not clear whether TLE is based on the finishing place of the last boat to finish within the limit or the points awarded to that boat (which would, I think, include any redress or penalties). It would be more clear if it read "...scored points for the finishing place [one][two] more than the finishing place of the last boat to finish...". I think if I were going to use TLE I'd write the SI that way rather than the way WS wrote it in Appendix LG.
There's also the question of whether an OCS boat should be counted. I think not - under definition of Finish a boat must first start so an OCS boat has not started, cannot finish, so will not have a finishing place.
To your point, Jaakko, instead of "boats failing to finish", we say "boats that are still racing". Thus, a boat that has previously retired is no longer racing and is not subject to TLE. Similarly, boats scored DNC or DNS are not racing.
Here is an example of our SI rule: "Within each class, boats that are still racing thirty (30) minutes after the first boat sails the course and finishes, and are not subsequently retired, penalized or given redress, shall be scored Time Limit Expired (TLE) without a hearing and receive points equal to two (2) places behind the last boat scored as finished, but not worse than last place among the boats that came to the starting area. This alters RRS 35, A5.1, A5.2 & A10.
In my opinion, the setup and use of the term "Finishing Window" is unnecessarily complex.
In the example of only one boat finishing on time, a boat that would have finished 99th is scored 2 or 3.
In a subsequent race in the series, the boat that scored the legitimate "1" stands at a clear disadvantage if she finishes anything worse than the top 3.
Of course, realistically, if it looks like there's a chance that the majority of the fleet may not finish in time, the RC should abandon the race before the first boat finishes. TLE is more useful when it affects just a few back-markers and is used to keep a regatta on schedule.
You are right that abandonment is likely the fairest route.
But could there be a better way that this crowd might brainstorm?
I think it means that a boat that retires after (subsequent to) the close of the finishing window would be scored RET. A boat that retired prior to the finishing window would also be scored RET. I believe only a boat that continued to race and finish after the close of the time limit would be scored TLE.
Which seems like it would be a nuisance for the boats who would rather fire up the motor and head in, and an inconvenience for the race committee who would have to remain on station until all of the late boats either finished or retired.
I’m in a five race series on 5 points ahead of second place on 22 and third place on 27 going into the fourth race with a 30 boat fleet. It is light airs and getting lighter. I’ve spent my Annapolis years learning how to sail in nothing, and I take my boat around the course impeccably with myself and my crew exhausted from hiking on the low side and moving around the boat like the cockpit sole is covered in broken glass. I’m wrecking a nearly new main by pulling the clew outhaul so tight it makes an audible ‘twang’ when we tack, and my experience of the sailing area lets me get tiny but significant advantage from current back-eddies and shallow patches.
As we approach the finish line, we look back and our second and third place boats are miles behind: near the back of the fleet. The nearest boat is 500m behind and went into this race in 23td on 57 points, but they too have worked hard to deal with the light airs.
We finish and the boat behind is the only other boat to finish, exhausted from doing the hard work of light air sailing. Everyone behind has had a great fun day on the water taking swims and dragging their feet in the water knowing that every one of them is going to get their best result of the series without any effort at all. What is worse is that the second boat will end up with their best result of the week reduced to a two point win.
Sailing is a sport of skill, and to stop it becoming a leisure activity based on ‘deferred success’ skill should be rewarded. Sometimes, like doing a really good job of dealing with really hard circumstance, that reward should be huge: like getting one point when almost everyone else gets 31.
I’ll admit that some races end up being lotteries won by shear luck. A good race committee has every opportunity to abandon such races either before or after finishing the race. But a race won by skill should be rewarded as such, and not diluted by a misplaced desire to reduce the effect of difficult conditions.
Disclaimer: I have written this in the first person, but anyone that knows me well can testify that I am not that light-air specialist so this is a purely fictional case.
Anthony, now we also get crosswise with the definition of racing. A boat can't simply be declared "not racing" after the time limit expires, so a boat that fires up the motor at that point must be considered to have retired before finishing (and, in my view, "subsequently" to the finishing window) so not eligible for TLE score.
Seems like the more we look at this SI the more problematic it appears to be.
OCS isn’t actually a “penalty” is it? Isn’t it a scoring documentation that the boat did not start in compliance with 29.1 or 30.1? I think of OCS as a variation of DNS and is different in that regard from ZPF, UFD, BFD in that those others represent starting penalties that the RC has authority to apply.
Therefore, I don’t think OCS is captured by the “... or penalized ..” carve-out in the sample language.
In the previous quad, a boat could have a finish-place without starting .. therefore if the boat finished and then was scored OCS, that could be interpreted as a "penalty" because their finish place was made worse by the RC scoring action. However, with the new finish, a boat can not have a finish place without starting. Therefore OCS does not make her finish-place worse because she can't have a finish-place.
In that regard, it seems under the new quad especially, OCS is simply a specific type of DNS (unless the SI's provide for a scoring penalty for OCS as is an option under the new test-rule .. DR20-01 Alternate Starting Penalty).
pen·al·ty
1. A punishment imposed for a violation of law.
2. A sum established by a contract to be forfeited in lieu of actual damages in the event of a breach of the contract.
3. The disadvantage or painful consequences resulting from an action or condition: neglected his health and paid the penalty.
4. Sports
a. A punishment, handicap, or loss of advantage imposed on a team or competitor for infraction of a rule.
b. An infraction of a rule; a foul.
c. A penalty kick.
d. A penalty shot.
5. Games Points scored in contract bridge by the opponents when the declarer fails to make a bid.
That's approblem, I think. But it could be considered that a boat that is OCS hasn't complied with 28.1.
On the other hand, A5.1 describes OCS &NSC as scoring actions, not a penalties.
Yes, under the 2017 quad .. but I would say 'maybe not' under the 2021 quad.
A boat does not finish if they did not start. Therefore a boat that is OCS does not have a finish place .. they 'did not start'. This is a change from the previous quad where start was not a requirement for finish. Previously RC's were required to record the finish place of all boats that finish .. but the previous def: finish didn't require that a boat started.
I'm suggesting that a score of OCS does not change their finish place because they do not have a finish place ... and therefore is not a "penalty" but rather simply an "RC scoring action".
There is two issues; points determined by race committee and penalties given by the PC. RC can give certain "penalties" like 30.1/2/3/4 but no more. Only PC can give scoring worse than that.
One response was that OCS falls within “penalized”. ... and so on ...
She fails the time limit but is still OCS.
Right I agree .. “if she finishes” is the point .. there is no “if” because finishing is no longer possible for an OCS boat in the new quad.
A5.1 -> A boat that did not start, sail the course, or finish
Now I ask you to bring the baskets with apples .. which do you bring?
63.1 makes sense as long as A5.1 contains at least one penalty as 63.1 lists a whole series of rules ( 30.2, 30.3, 30.4, 64.4(d), 64.5(b), 64.6, 69, 78.2, A5.1 and P2)
Everything in A5.1 does not need to be a penalty for A5.1 to make that list (NSC is a penalty).
PS: Last sentence of A5.1 ... “Only the protest committee may take other scoring actions that worsen a boat’s score.”
DNS and OCS do not “worsen a boat’s score” because a boat that does not start, can not have a finish-place. This is a change in the new quad.