THE
RACING RULES
OF
SAILING
for 2021-2024
Including US Sailing Prescriptions
and changes made by World Sailing as of 1 January 2022
United States Sailing Association
ussailing.org
1 (800) US-SAIL-1
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Contact Details:
The Racing Rules of Sailing for 2021-2024
Including US Sailing Prescriptions
ISBN (paper): 978-1-938915-44-4
ISBN (waterproof): 978-1-938915-45-1
Issue Date: October 2020
Frequency: Quadrennially
Authorizing Organization: United States Sailing Association
1 Roger Williams University Way
Bristol, RI 02809
Issue Number: Issue No. 1
© World Sailing Limited, June 2020
Reprinted by permission of World Sailing (UK) Limited
Foreword, Prescriptions and Index © United States Sailing Association, 2020
All rights reserved.
Front cover image: JH Peterson
Back cover images: Cindy Cady, Matthew Cohen, Mauricio Arregui, Nancy Mazzuli, and Stacey Gibb
Greetings to all US Sailors:
Every four years The Racing Rules of Sailing are revised with input from competitors and US Sailing’s Racing Rules Committee. This quadrennial revision to our racing rules is the result of suggestions made by sailors and race officials from around the world. Please visit the US Sailing website at rules.ussailing.org for publications about the rules and for additional information about the Racing Rules Committee. If you would like to suggest an improvement in a rule, please contact the Rules Committee at rules@ussailing.org.
Our US Sailing trained and certified officials – race officers, judges, umpires, classifiers and measurers – are experts on the rules. They are volunteers who work hard to provide safe, fair and fun sailing for you. When you see them at regattas, please thank them for their service. Our only repayment to them is our appreciation, so please be generous with it. We all hope to avoid protests at regattas, but when they happen it is comforting to know that these experts, who are also experienced racing sailors, will ensure that you receive a fair hearing.
Special thanks to the Racing Rules Committee, whose countless hours of discussions and reflection on how we play the game have led to this final product.
And my deepest thanks to you, the racing sailor, for your membership and support of US Sailing’s mission. I wish you continued enjoyment of sailboat racing and look forward to meeting you on the water.
Sincerely,
Cory Sertl, President of US Sailing
This 2021-2024 edition of The Racing Rules of Sailing was produced by US Sailing under license from World Sailing and is the result of four years of careful review of the 2017-2020 rules. Here are some changes of interest:
Exoneration has been incorporated into the Basic Principle of Sportsmanship. When a boat breaks a rule but is exonerated, she need not take a penalty for breaking that rule. New rule 43 places all the conditions for exoneration in one rule.
Rule 18.1 now has a final sentence indicating that rule 18 no longer applies between boats when mark-room has been given to the boat entitled to it.
The protest form that was included in previous editions of this book has been replaced by two separate forms, a hearing request form and a hearing decision form. These new forms are not in the book but are available for download and printing on the US Sailing website at rules.ussailing.org.
The Notice of Race Guide (Appendix K) and the Sailing Instructions Guide (Appendix L) are no longer in the rule book but are available for download and printing on the US Sailing website at rules.ussailing.org.
In addition to the World Sailing rules, this rulebook contains prescriptions, which are rules adopted by US Sailing for events held in the United States. These prescriptions appear in bold italics. They do not apply when racing at a regatta in another country; in that case, refer to the prescriptions in that country’s rulebook.
Several rules that used to require additional instructions or specific information to be stated in the sailing instructions now indicate that these may be stated in either the notice of race or the sailing instructions. As a result of this change, US Sailing has added an important new prescription to rule 25.1: US Sailing prescribes that the race committee shall ensure that the notice of race and sailing instructions are readily available to competitors throughout the event.
Many of the rule changes in this book are the result of suggestions from competitors and race officials. The US Sailing Racing Rules Committee welcomes your ideas on how to improve the racing rules for the next rulebook. Please email comments and proposals to rules@ussailing.org.
Peter Wilson, Chairman, US Sailing Racing Rules Committee
Jim Capron, David Dellenbaugh, Arthur Engel, Kevin Hawkins, Robert Long, Rob Overton, Dick Rose, and Mary Savage.
World Sailing has established a single internet address at which readers will find links to all the documents available on the World Sailing website that are mentioned in this book. Those documents are listed below. Links to other rules documents will also be provided at that address.
The address is: sailing.org/racingrules/documents
US Sailing Note: Links to documents referred to in US Sailing prescriptions and notes can be found at rules.ussailing.org. However, links to documents referred to in Appendix R, Procedures for Appeals and Requests, can be found at appeals.ussailing.org.
The Racing Rules of Sailing includes two main sections. The first, Parts 1-7, contains rules that affect all competitors. The second, the appendices, provides details of rules, rules that apply to particular kinds of racing, and rules that affect only a small number of competitors or officials.
Terminology A term used in the sense stated in the Definitions is printed in italics or, in preambles, in bold italics (for example, racing and racing).
Each of the terms in the table below is used in The Racing Rules of Sailing with the meaning given.
Term | Meaning |
Boat | A sailboat and the crew on board. |
Competitior | A person who races or intends to race in the event. |
National authority |
A World Sailing member national authority. |
Race committee | The race committee appointed under rule 89.2(c) and any other person or committee performing a race committee function. |
Racing rule | A rule in The Racing Rules of Sailing. |
Technical committee | The technical committee appointed under rule 89.2(c) and any other person or committee performing a technical committee function. |
Vessel | Any boat or ship. |
Other words and terms are used in the sense ordinarily understood in nautical or general use.
Hails A language other than English may be used for a hail required by the rules provided that it is reasonable for it to be understood by all boats affected. However, a hail in English is always acceptable.
Notation The notation ‘[DP]’ in a rule means that the penalty for a breach of the rule may, at the discretion of the protest committee, be less than disqualification. Guidelines for discretionary penalties are available on the World Sailing website.
Revision The racing rules are revised and published every four years by World Sailing, the international authority for the sport. This edition becomes effective on 1 January 2021 except that for an event beginning in 2020 the date may be postponed by the notice of race or sailing instructions. Marginal markings indicate important changes to Parts 1-7 and the Definitions in the 2017-2020 edition. No changes are contemplated before 2025, but any changes determined to be urgent before then will be announced through national authorities and posted on the World Sailing website.
Appendices When the rules of an appendix apply, they take precedence over any conflicting rules in Parts 1-7 and the Definitions. Each appendix is identified by a letter. A reference to a rule in an appendix will contain the letter and the rule number (for example, ‘rule A1’). The letters I, O and Q are not used to designate appendices in this book.
World Sailing Regulations The Regulations are referred to in the definition Rule and in rule 6, but they are not included in this book because they can be changed at any time. The most recent versions of the Regulations are published on the World Sailing website; new versions will be announced through national authorities.
Interpretations World Sailing publishes the following authoritative interpretations of the racing rules:
- •
- The Case Book – Interpretations of the Racing Rules,
- •
- The Call Books, for various disciplines,
- •
- Interpretations of Rule 42, Propulsion, and
- •
- Interpretations of the Regulations, for those Regulations that are rules.
These publications are available on the World Sailing website. Other interpretations of the racing rules are not authoritative unless approved by World Sailing in accordance with Regulation 28.4.
US Sailing Prescriptions US Sailing prescriptions are printed in bold italics, except Appendices R, U and V. Those three appendices are, nevertheless, US Sailing prescriptions. No changes in the prescriptions are contemplated before 2025, but any change determined to be urgent before then will be posted in a document titled “Changes and Corrections to the US Sailing Prescriptions.” Go to rules.ussailing.org to find this document.
A term used as stated below is shown in italic type or, in preambles, in bold italic type. The meaning of several other terms is given in Terminology in the Introduction.
Abandon A race that a race committee or protest committee abandons is void but may be resailed.
Clear Astern and Clear Ahead; Overlap One boat is clear astern of another when her hull and equipment in normal position are behind a line abeam from the aftermost point of the other boat’s hull and equipment in normal position. The other boat is clear ahead. They overlap when neither is clear astern. However, they also overlap when a boat between them overlaps both. These terms always apply to boats on the same tack. They apply to boats on opposite tacks only when rule 18 applies between them or when both boats are sailing more than ninety degrees from the true wind.
- (a)
- may gain or lose as a result of a decision to which he contributes,
- (b)
- may reasonably appear to have a personal or financial interest which could affect his ability to be impartial, or
- (c)
- has a close personal interest in a decision.
Fetching A boat is fetching a mark when she is in a position to pass to windward of it and leave it on the required side without changing tack.
- (a)
- takes a penalty under rule 44.2,
- (b)
- corrects an error in sailing the course made at the line, or
- (c)
- continues to sail the course.
- (a)
- if the right-of-way boat can sail her course with no need to take avoiding action and,
- (b)
- when the boats are overlapped, if the right-of-way boat can also change course in both directions without immediately making contact.
Leeward and Windward A boat’s leeward side is the side that is or, when she is head to wind, was away from the wind. However, when sailing by the lee or directly downwind, her leeward side is the side on which her mainsail lies. The other side is her windward side. When two boats on the same tack overlap, the one on the leeward side of the other is the leeward boat. The other is the windward boat.
Mark An object the sailing instructions require a boat to leave on a specified side, a race committee vessel surrounded by navigable water from which the starting or finishing line extends, and an object intentionally attached to the object or vessel. However, an anchor line is not part of the mark.
- (a)
- room to sail to the mark when her proper course is to sail close to it, and
Obstruction An object that a boat could not pass without changing course substantially, if she were sailing directly towards it and one of her hull lengths from it.An object that can be safely passed on only one side and an object, area or line so designated by the sailing instructions are also obstructions. However, a boat racing is not an obstruction to other boats unless they are required to keep clear of her or, if rule 22 applies, avoid her. A vessel under way, including a boat racing, is never a continuing obstruction.
Overlap See Clear Astern and Clear Ahead; Overlap.
- (a)
- for a protest hearing: a protestor, a protestee;
- (c)
- for a redress hearing under rule 62.1(a): the body alleged to have made an improper action or omission;
- (d)
- a person against whom an allegation of a breach of rule 69.1(a) is made; a person presenting an allegation under rule 69.2(e)(1);
Postpone A postponed race is delayed before its scheduled start but may be started or abandoned later.
Proper Course A course a boat would choose in order to sail the course and finish as soon as possible in the absence of the other boats referred to in the rule using the term. A boat has no proper course before her starting signal.
Protest An allegation made under rule 61.2 by a boat, a race committee, a technical committee or a protest committee that a boat has broken a rule.
Racing A boat is racing from her preparatory signal until she finishes and clears the finishing line and marks or retires, or until the race committee signals a general recall, postponement or abandonment.
Room The space a boat needs in the existing conditions, including space to comply with her obligations under the rules of Part 2 and rule 31, while manoeuvring promptly in a seamanlike way.
- (a)
- The rules in this book, including the Definitions, Race Signals, Introduction, preambles and the rules of relevant appendices, but not titles;
- (c)
- the prescriptions of the national authority, unless they are changed by the notice of race or sailing instructions in compliance with the national authority’s prescription, if any, to rule 88.2;
- (d)
- the class rules (for a boat racing under a handicap or rating system, the rules of that system are ‘class rules’);
- (e)
- the notice of race;
- (f)
- the sailing instructions; and
- (g)
- any other documents that govern the event.
Start A boat starts when, her hull having been entirely on the pre-start side of the starting line at or after her starting signal, and having complied with rule 30.1 if it applies, any part of her hull crosses the starting line from the pre-start side to the course side.
- provides, or may provide, physical or advisory support to a competitor, including any coach, trainer, manager, team staff, medic, paramedic or any other person working with, treating or assisting a competitor in or preparing for the competition, or
- is the parent or guardian of a competitor.
Tack, Starboard or Port A boat is on the tack, starboard or port, corresponding to her windward side.
Windward See Leeward and Windward.
Zone The area around a mark within a distance of three hull lengths of the boat nearer to it. A boat is in the zone when any part of her hull is in the zone.
SPORTSMANSHIP AND THE RULES
Competitors in the sport of sailing are governed by a body of rules that they are expected to follow and enforce. A fundamental principle of sportsmanship is that when a boat breaks a rule and is not exonerated she will promptly take an appropriate penalty or action, which may be to retire.
ENVIRONMENTAL RESPONSIBILITY
Participants are encouraged to minimize any adverse environmental impact of the sport of sailing.
- 1.1
- Helping Those in Danger
A boat, competitor or support person shall give all possible help to any person or vessel in danger.
- 1.2
- Life-Saving Equipment and Personal Flotation Devices
A boat shall carry adequate life-saving equipment for all persons on board, including one item ready for immediate use, unless her class rules make some other provision. Each competitor is individually responsible for wearing a personal flotation device adequate for the conditions.
- 2
- FAIR SAILING
A boat and her owner shall compete in compliance with recognized principles of sportsmanship and fair play. A boat may be penalized under this rule only if it is clearly established that these principles have been violated. The penalty shall be a disqualification that is not excludable.
The rules of Part 2 apply between boats that are sailing in or near the racing area and intend to race, are racing, or have been racing. However, a boat not racing shall not be penalized for breaking one of these rules, except rule 14 when the incident resulted in injury or serious damage, or rule 23.1.
When a boat sailing under these rules meets a vessel that is not, she shall comply with the International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea (IRPCAS) or government right-of-way rules. If the notice of race so states, the rules of Part 2 are replaced by the right-of-way rules of the IRPCAS or by government right-of-way rules.
SECTION A
RIGHT OF WAY
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.
- 13
- WHILE TACKING
After a boat passes head to wind, she shall keep clear of other boats until she is on a close-hauled course. During that time rules 10, 11 and 12 do not apply. If two boats are subject to this rule at the same time, the one on the other’s port side or the one astern shall keep clear.
SECTION B
GENERAL LIMITATIONS
- 14
- AVOIDING CONTACT
A boat shall avoid contact with another boat if reasonably possible. However, a right-of-way boat, or one sailing within the room or mark-room to which she is entitled, need not act to avoid contact until it is clear that the other boat is not keeping clear or giving room or mark-room.
- 17
- ON THE SAME TACK; PROPER COURSE
If a boat clear astern becomes overlapped within two of her hull lengths to leeward of a boat on the same tack, she shall not sail above her proper course while they remain on the same tack and overlapped within that distance, unless in doing so she promptly sails astern of the other boat. This rule does not apply if the overlap begins while the windward boat is required by rule 13 to keep clear.
SECTION C
AT MARKS AND OBSTRUCTIONS
Section C rules do not apply at a starting mark surrounded by navigable water or at its anchor line from the time boats are approaching them to start until they have passed them.
- 18.1
- When Rule 18 Applies
Rule 18 applies between boats when they are required to leave a mark on the same side and at least one of them is in the zone. However, it does not apply
- (d)
- if the mark is a continuing obstruction, in which case rule 19 applies.
- Rule 18 no longer applies between boats when mark-room has been given.
- 18.2
- Giving Mark-Room
- (c)
- When a boat is required to give mark-room by rule 18.2(b) ,
- (1)
- she shall continue to do so even if later an overlap is broken or a new overlap begins;
- (2)
- if she becomes overlapped inside the boat entitled to mark-room, she shall also give that boat room to sail her proper course while they remain overlapped.
- 18.3
- Passing Head to Wind in the Zone
If a boat in the zone of a mark to be left to port passes head to wind from port to starboard tack and is then fetching the mark, she shall not cause a boat that has been on starboard tack since entering the zone to sail above close-hauled to avoid contact and she shall give mark-room if that boat becomes overlapped inside her. When this rule applies between boats, rule 18.2 does not apply between them.
- 19.2
- Giving Room at an Obstruction
- (c)
- While boats are passing a continuing obstruction, if a boat that was clear astern and required to keep clear becomes overlapped between the other boat and the obstruction and, at the moment the overlap begins, there is not room for her to pass between them,
- (1)
- she is not entitled to room under rule 19.2(b), and
- (2)
- while the boats remain overlapped, she shall keep clear and rules 10 and 11 do not apply.
- 20.3
- Passing On a Hail to an Additional Boat
When a boat has been hailed for room to tack and she intends to respond by tacking, she may hail another boat on the same tack for room to tack and avoid her. She may hail even if her hail does not meet the conditions of rule 20.1. Rule 20.2 applies between her and a boat she hails.
SECTION D
OTHER RULES
When rule 21 or 22 applies between two boats, Section A rules do not.
- 25.1
- The notice of race shall be made available to each boat that enters an event before she enters. The sailing instructions shall be made available to each boat before a race begins.
US Sailing prescribes that the race committee shall ensure that the notice of race and sailing instructions are readily available to competitors throughout the event.
- 26
- STARTING RACES
Races shall be started by using the following signals. Times shall be taken from the visual signals; the absence of a sound signal shall be disregarded.
*or as stated in the notice of race or sailing instruction
The warning signal for each succeeding class shall be made with or after the starting signal of the preceding class.
- 27.1
- No later than the warning signal, the race committee shall signal or otherwise designate the course to be sailed if the sailing instructions have not stated the course, and it may replace one course signal with another and signal that wearing personal flotation devices is required (display flag Y with one sound).
- 27.3
- Before the starting signal, the race committee may for any reason postpone (display flag AP, AP over H, or AP over A, with two sounds) or abandon the race (display flag N over H, or N over A, with three sounds).
- 29.1
- Individual Recall
When at a boat’s starting signal any part of her hull is on the course side of the starting line or she must comply with rule 30.1, the race committee shall promptly display flag X with one sound. The flag shall be displayed until the hull of each such boat has been completely on the pre-start side of the starting line or one of its extensions, and until all such boats have complied with rule 30.1 if it applies, but no later than four minutes after the starting signal or one minute before any later starting signal, whichever is earlier. If rule 29.2, 30.3 or 30.4 applies this rule does not.
- 29.2
- General Recall
When at the starting signal the race committee is unable to identify boats that are on the course side of the starting line or to which rule 30 applies, or there has been an error in the starting procedure, the race committee may signal a general recall (display the First Substitute with two sounds). The warning signal for a new start for the recalled class shall be made one minute after the First Substitute is removed (one sound), and the starts for any succeeding classes shall follow the new start.
- 30.1
- I Flag Rule
If flag I has been displayed, and any part of a boat’s hull is on the course side of the starting line or one of its extensions during the last minute before her starting signal, she shall sail across an extension so that her hull is completely on the pre-start side before she starts.
- 30.2
- Z Flag Rule
If flag Z has been displayed, no part of a boat’s hull shall be in the triangle formed by the ends of the starting line and the first mark during the last minute before her starting signal. If a boat breaks this rule and is identified, she shall receive, without a hearing, a 20% Scoring Penalty calculated as stated in rule 44.3(c). She shall be penalized even if the race is restarted or resailed, but not if it is postponed or abandoned before the starting signal. If she is similarly identified during a subsequent attempt to start the same race, she shall receive an additional 20% Scoring Penalty.
- 30.3
- U Flag Rule
If flag U has been displayed, no part of a boat’s hull shall be in the triangle formed by the ends of the starting line and the first mark during the last minute before her starting signal. If a boat breaks this rule and is identified, she shall be disqualified without a hearing, but not if the race is restarted or resailed.
- 30.4
- Black Flag Rule
If a black flag has been displayed, no part of a boat’s hull shall be in the triangle formed by the ends of the starting line and the first mark during the last minute before her starting signal. If a boat breaks this rule and is identified, she shall be disqualified without a hearing, even if the race is restarted or resailed, but not if it is postponed or abandoned before the starting signal. If a general recall is signalled or the race is abandoned after the starting signal, the race committee shall display her sail number before the next warning signal for that race, and if the race is restarted or resailed she shall not sail in it. If she does so, her disqualification shall not be excluded in calculating her series score.
- 32.1
- After the starting signal, the race committee may shorten the course (display flag S with two sounds) or abandon the race (display flag N, N over H, or N over A, with three sounds),
- 32.2
- If the race committee signals a shortened course (displays flag S with two sounds), the finishing line shall be,
The shortened course shall be signalled before the first boat crosses the finishing line.
US Sailing prescribes that, if the sailing instructions so state, the race committee may display flag A (with no sound) while boats are finishing to signal that there will be no more races that day.
- 33
- CHANGING THE NEXT LEG OF THE COURSE
While boats are racing, the race committee may change a leg of the course that begins at a rounding mark or at a gate by changing the position of the next mark (or the finishing line) and signalling all boats before they begin the leg. The next mark need not be in position at that time.
- 34
- MARK MISSING; RACE COMMITTEE ABSENT
If a mark is missing or out of position while boats are racing, the race committee shall, if possible,
US Sailing prescribes that, if a finishing mark is missing but another one remains in place, the finishing line is a line through the remaining mark at a 90° angle to the last leg and of the shortest practicable length. If the race committee is absent when a boat finishes, she should at the first reasonable opportunity report to the race committee her finishing time and her position in relation to nearby boats.
- 35
- RACE TIME LIMIT AND SCORES
If one boat starts, sails the course and finishes within the time limit for that race, if any, all boats that finish shall be scored according to their finishing places unless the race is abandoned. If no boat finishes within the race time limit, the race committee shall abandon the race.
Part 4 rules apply only to boats racing unless the rule states otherwise.
SECTION A
GENERAL REQUIREMENTS
- 42.1
- Basic Rule
Except when permitted in rule 42.3 or 45, a boat shall compete by using only the wind and water to increase, maintain or decrease her speed. Her crew may adjust the trim of sails and hull, and perform other acts of seamanship, but shall not otherwise move their bodies to propel the boat.
- 44.1
- Taking a Penalty
A boat may take a Two-Turns Penalty when she may have broken one or more rules of Part 2 in an incident while racing. She may take a One-Turn Penalty when she may have broken rule 31. Alternatively, the notice of race or sailing instructions may specify the use of the Scoring Penalty or some other penalty, in which case the specified penalty shall replace the One-Turn and the Two-Turns Penalty. However,
- 44.2
- One-Turn and Two-Turns Penalties
After getting well clear of other boats as soon after the incident as possible, a boat takes a One-Turn or Two-Turns Penalty by promptly making the required number of turns in the same direction, each turn including one tack and one gybe. When a boat takes the penalty at or near the finishing line, her hull shall be completely on the course side of the line before she finishes.
- 44.3
- Scoring Penalty
- (b)
- When a boat has taken a Scoring Penalty, she shall keep the yellow flag displayed until finishing and call the race committee’s attention to it at the finishing line. At that time she shall also inform the race committee of the identity of the other boat involved in the incident. If this is impracticable, she shall do so at the first reasonable opportunity and within the protest time limit.
- (c)
- The race score for a boat that takes a Scoring Penalty shall be the score she would have received without that penalty, made worse by the number of places stated in the notice of race or sailing instructions. When the number of places is not stated, the penalty shall be 20% of the score for Did Not Finish, rounded to the nearest whole number (0.5 rounded upward). The scores of other boats shall not be changed; therefore, two boats may receive the same score. However, the penalty shall not cause the boat’s score to be worse than the score for Did Not Finish.
- 45
- HAULING OUT; MAKING FAST; ANCHORING
A boat shall be afloat and off moorings at her preparatory signal. Thereafter, she shall not be hauled out or made fast except to bail out, reef sails or make repairs. She may anchor or the crew may stand on the bottom. She shall recover the anchor before continuing in the race unless she is unable to do so.
- 47
- TRASH DISPOSAL
Competitors and support persons shall not intentionally put trash in the water. This rule applies at all times while afloat. The penalty for a breach of this rule may be less than disqualification.
SECTION B
EQUIPMENT-RELATED REQUIREMENTS
- 48.2
- No person on board shall intentionally leave, except when ill or injured, or to help a person or vessel in danger, or to swim. A person leaving the boat by accident or to swim shall be back in contact with the boat before the crew resumes sailing the boat to the next mark.
- 49.2
- When lifelines are required by the class rules or any other rule, competitors shall not position any part of their torsos outside them, except briefly to perform a necessary task. On boats equipped with upper and lower lifelines, a competitor sitting facing outboard with his waist inside the lower lifeline may have the upper part of his body outside the upper lifeline. Unless a class rule or any other rule specifies a maximum deflection, lifelines shall be taut. If the class rules do not specify the material or minimum diameter of lifelines, they shall comply with the corresponding specifications in the World Sailing Offshore Special Regulations.
Note: Those regulations are available at the World Sailing website.
- 50.1
-
- (b)
- Furthermore, a competitor’s clothing and equipment shall not weigh more than 8 kilograms, excluding a hiking or trapeze harness and clothing (including footwear) worn only below the knee. Class rules or the notice of race may specify a lower weight or a higher weight up to 10 kilograms. Class rules may include footwear and other clothing worn below the knee within that weight. A hiking or trapeze harness shall have positive buoyancy and shall not weigh more than 2 kilograms, except that class rules may specify a higher weight up to 4 kilograms. Weights shall be determined as required by Appendix H.
- (c)
- A trapeze harness worn by a competitor which may be used to support the competitor on a trapeze shall be of the quick release variety complying with ISO 10862 which allows the competitor to detach from the hook or other method of attachment at any time. A class rule may change this rule to permit trapeze harnesses that are not of the quick release variety, but a class rule may not change the requirement that a quick release harness comply with ISO 10862.
Note: Rule 50.1(c) does not take effect until 1 January 2023.
- 51
- MOVABLE BALLAST
All movable ballast, including sails that are not set, shall be properly stowed. Water, dead weight or ballast shall not be moved for the purpose of changing trim or stability. Floorboards, bulkheads, doors, stairs and water tanks shall be left in place and all cabin fixtures kept on board. However, bilge water may be bailed out.
- 56.2
- A boat shall comply with rule 10, Traffic Separation Schemes, of the IRPCAS.
Note: Appendix TS, Traffic Separation Schemes, is available at the World Sailing website. The notice of race may change rule 56.2 by stating that Section A, Section B or Section C of Appendix TS applies.
The protest form that was included in previous editions of this book has been replaced by two forms, a hearing request form and a hearing decision form. The new forms, in various formats, are available at the World Sailing website at sailing.org/racingrules/documents. They may be downloaded and printed.
Note that The Racing Rules of Sailing does not require a particular form to be used.
Suggestions for improving these forms are welcome and should be sent to rules@sailing.org.
SECTION A
PROTESTS; REDRESS; RULE 69 ACTION
- 60.3
- A protest committee may
- (a)
- protest a boat, but not as a result of information arising from a request for redress or an invalid protest, or from a report from a person with a conflict of interest other than the representative of the boat herself. However, it may protest a boat
- (1)
- if it learns of an incident involving her that may have resulted in injury or serious damage, or
- (2)
- if during the hearing of a valid protest it learns that the boat, although not a party to the hearing, was involved in the incident and may have broken a rule;
- (b)
- request redress for a boat or call a hearing to consider redress;
- 60.4
- A technical committee may
- (a)
- protest a boat, but not as a result of information arising from a request for redress or an invalid protest, or from a report from a person with a conflict of interest other than the representative of the boat herself. However, it shall protest a boat if it decides that a boat or personal equipment does not comply with the class rules or with rule 50;
- 61.1
- Informing the Protesee
- (a)
- The protesting boat shall inform the other boat at the first reasonable opportunity. When her protest will concern an incident in the racing area, she shall hail ‘Protest’ and conspicuously display a red flag at the first reasonable opportunity for each. She shall display the flag until she is no longer racing. However,
- (1)
- if the other boat is beyond hailing distance, the protesting boat need not hail but she shall inform the other boat at the first reasonable opportunity;
- (2)
- if the hull length of the protesting boat is less than 6 metres, she need not display a red flag;
- (3)
- if the incident was an error by the other boat in sailing the course, she need not hail or display a red flag but she shall inform the other boat either before or at the first reasonable opportunity after the other boat finishes;
- (b)
- If the race committee, technical committee or protest committee intends to protest a boat concerning an incident the committee observed in the racing area, it shall inform her after the race within the time limit of rule 61.3. In other cases the committee shall inform the boat of its intention to protest as soon as reasonably possible. A notice posted on the official notice board within the appropriate time limit satisfies this requirement.
- 61.2
- Protest Contents
A protest shall be in writing and identify
However, if requirement (b) is met, requirement (a) may be met at any time before the hearing, and requirements (d) and (e) may be met before or during the hearing. Requirement (c) may also be met before or during the hearing, provided the protestee is allowed reasonable time to prepare for the hearing.
- 61.3
- Protest Time Limit
A protest by a boat, or by the race committee, technical committee or protest committee about an incident observed in the racing area, shall be delivered to the race office within the protest time limit stated in the sailing instructions. If none is stated, the time limit is two hours after the last boat in the race finishes. Other protests shall be delivered to the race office no later than two hours after the protestor receives the relevant information. The protest committee shall extend the time if there is good reason to do so.
- 62.2
- A request shall be in writing and identify the reason for making it. If the request is based on an incident in the racing area, it shall be delivered to the race office within the protest time limit or two hours after the incident, whichever is later. Other requests shall be delivered as soon as reasonably possible after learning of the reasons for making the request. The protest committee shall extend the time if there is good reason to do so. No red flag is required.
SECTION B
HEARINGS AND DECISIONS
- 63.1
- Requirement for a Hearing
A boat or competitor shall not be penalized without a protest hearing, except as provided in rules 30.2, 30.3, 30.4, 64.4(d), 64.5(b), 64.6, 69, 78.2, A5.1 and P2. A decision on redress shall not be made without a hearing. The protest committee shall hear all protests and requests for redress that have been delivered to the race office unless it allows a protest or request to be withdrawn.
US Sailing prescribes that:
- (a)
- No person who brings an incident to the attention of the protest committee or who will give evidence regarding an incident shall, when practicable, be a member of the protest committee for a hearing involving that incident.
- (b)
- A request for redress based on a protest committee decision shall, when practicable, be heard by a committee that contains no members of the committee that made the original decision.
- 63.2
- Time and Place of the Hearing; Time for Parties to Prepare
All parties to the hearing shall be notified of the time and place of the hearing, the protest or redress information or the allegations shall be made available to them, and they shall be allowed reasonable time to prepare for the hearing. When two or more hearings arise from the same incident, or from very closely connected incidents, they may be heard together in one hearing. However, a hearing conducted under rule 69 shall not be combined with any other type of hearing.
US Sailing prescribes that when redress has been requested or is to be considered for one or more boats:
- (a)
- Any other boat may participate in the hearing.
- (b)
- The protest committee shall make a reasonable attempt to notify all boats of the time and place of the hearing and the reason for the request or for considering redress, and boats shall be allowed reasonable time to prepare for the hearing.
- (c)
- The protest committee shall request redress for boats
- (1)
- that participate in the hearing, or
- (2)
- that request in writing to do so before the hearing begins, mmaking them parties to the hearing. It need not state a reason for such a request; this changes rule 62.2.
- 63.3
- Right to Be Present
- (a)
- A representative of each party to the hearing has the right to be present throughout the hearing of all the evidence. When a protest claims a breach of a rule of Part 2, 3 or 4, the representatives of boats shall have been on board at the time of the incident, unless there is good reason for the protest committee to rule otherwise. Any witness, other than a member of the protest committee, shall be excluded except when giving evidence.
- 63.4
- Conflict of Interest
- (a)
- A protest committee member shall declare any possible conflict of interest as soon as he is aware of it. A party to the hearing who believes a member of the protest committee has a conflict of interest shall object as soon as possible. A conflict of interest declared by a protest committee member shall be included in the written information provided under rule 65.2.
- 63.5
- Validity of the Protest or Request for Redress
At the beginning of the hearing the protest committee shall take any evidence it considers necessary to decide whether all requirements for the protest or request for redress have been met. If they have been met, the protest or request is valid and the hearing shall be continued. If not, the committee shall declare the protest or request invalid and close the hearing. If the protest has been made under rule 60.3(a)(1), the committee shall also determine whether or not injury or serious damage resulted from the incident in question. If not, the hearing shall be closed.
- 63.7
- Conflict Between Rules
If there is a conflict between two or more rules that must be resolved before the protest committee makes a decision, the committee shall apply the rule that it believes will provide the fairest result for all boats affected. Rule 63.7 applies only if the conflict is between rules in the notice of race, the sailing instructions, or any of the other documents that govern the event under item (g) of the definition Rule.
- 63.9
- Hearings under Rule 60.3(d) — Support PersonsIf the protest committee decides to call a hearing under rule 60.3(d), it shall promptly follow the procedures in rules 63.2, 63.3, 63.4 and 63.6, except that the information given to the parties shall be details of the alleged breach and a person may be appointed by the protest committee to present the allegation.
- 64.2
- Penalties
When the protest committee decides that a boat that is a party to a protest hearing has broken a rule and is not exonerated, it shall disqualify her unless some other penalty applies. A penalty shall be imposed whether or not the applicable rule was mentioned in the protest. If a boat has broken a rule when not racing, her penalty shall apply to the race sailed nearest in time to that of the incident. However,
- 64.3
- Decisions on Redress
When the protest committee decides that a boat is entitled to redress under rule 62, it shall make as fair an arrangement as possible for all boats affected, whether or not they asked for redress. This may be to adjust the scoring (see rule A9 for some examples) or finishing times of boats, to abandon the race, to let the results stand or to make some other arrangement. When in doubt about the facts or probable results of any arrangement for the race or series, especially before abandoning the race, the protest committee shall take evidence from appropriate sources.
- 64.4
- Decisions on Protests Concerning Class Rules
- (a)
- When the protest committee finds that deviations in excess of tolerances specified in the class rules were caused by damage or normal wear and do not improve the performance of the boat, it shall not penalize her. However, the boat shall not race again until the deviations have been corrected, except when the protest committee decides there is or has been no reasonable opportunity to do so.
- (b)
- When the protest committee is in doubt about the meaning of a class rule, it shall refer its questions, together with the relevant facts, to an authority responsible for interpreting the rule. In making its decision, the committee shall be bound by the reply of the authority.
US Sailing prescribes that the authority responsible for interpreting the rules of a handicap or rating system is the organization that issued the handicap or the rating certificate involved.
- (d)
- When a boat penalized under a class rule states in writing that she intends to appeal, she may compete in subsequent races without changes to the boat. However, if she fails to appeal or the appeal is decided against her, she shall be disqualified without a further hearing from all subsequent races in which she competed.
- 65.2
- A party to the hearing is entitled to receive the above information in writing, provided she asks for it in writing from the protest committee no later than seven days after being informed of the decision. The committee shall then promptly provide the information, including, when relevant, a diagram of the incident prepared or endorsed by the committee.
- 67
- DAMAGES
The question of damages arising from a breach of any rule shall be governed by the prescriptions, if any, of the national authority.
US Sailing prescribes that:
- (a)
- A boat that retires from a race or accepts a penalty does not, by that action alone, admit liability for damages.
- (b)
- A protest committee shall find facts and make decisions only in compliance with the rules. No protest committee or US Sailing appeal authority shall adjudicate any claim for damages. Such a claim is subject to the jurisdiction of the courts.
- (c)
- A basic purpose of the rules is to prevent contact between boats. By participating in an event governed by the rules, a boat agrees that responsibility for damages arising from any breach of the rules shall be based on fault as determined by application of the rules, and that she shall not be governed by the legal doctrine of ‘assumption of risk’ for monetary damages resulting from contact with other boats.
Note: There is no rule 68.
SECTION C
MISCONDUCT
- 69.2
- Action by a Protest Committee
- (e)
- If the protest committee decides to call a hearing, it shall promptly inform the person in writing of the alleged breach and of the time and place of the hearing and follow the procedures in rules 63.2, 63.3(a), 63.4, 63.6, 65.1, 65.2, 65.3 and 66, except that:
- (1)
- unless a person has been appointed by World Sailing, a person may be appointed by the protest committee to present the allegation.
- (2)
- a person against whom an allegation has been made under this rule shall be entitled to have an advisor and a representative with him who may act on his behalf.
- (g)
- The standard of proof to be applied is the test of the comfortable satisfaction of the protest committee, bearing in mind the seriousness of the alleged misconduct. However, if the standard of proof in this rule conflicts with the laws of a country, the national authority may, with the approval of World Sailing, change it with a prescription to this rule.
- (h)
- When the protest committee decides that a competitor or boat owner has broken rule 69.1(a), it may take one or more of the following actions
- (1)
- issue a warning;
- (2)
- change their boat’s score in one or more races, including disqualification(s) that may or may not be excluded from her series score;
- (3)
- exclude the person from the event or venue or remove any privileges or benefits; and
- (4)
- take any other action within its jurisdiction as provided by the rules.
- (j)
- If the protest committee
- (1)
- imposes a penalty greater than one DNE;
- (2)
- excludes the person from the event or venue; or
- (3)
- in any other case if it considers it appropriate, it shall report its findings, including the facts found, its conclusions and decision to the national authority of the person or, for specific international events listed in the World Sailing Regulations, to World Sailing. If the protest committee has acted under rule 69.2(f)(2), the report shall also include that fact and the reasons for it.
- (k)
- If the protest committee decides not to conduct the hearing without the person present, or if the protest committee has left the event and a report alleging a breach of rule 69.1(a) is received, the race committee or organizing authority may appoint the same or a new protest committee to proceed under this rule. If it is impractical for the protest committee to conduct a hearing, it shall collect all available information and, if the allegation seems justified, make a report to the national authority of the person or, for specific international events listed in the World Sailing Regulations, to World Sailing.
- 69.3
- Action by a National Authority and World Sailing
The disciplinary powers, procedures and responsibilities of national authorities and World Sailing that apply are specified in the World Sailing Disciplinary Code. National authorities and World Sailing may impose further penalties, including suspension of eligibility, under that code.
SECTION D
APPEALS
- 70.3
- An appeal under rule 70.1 or a request by a protest committee under rule 70.2 shall be sent to the national authority with which the organizing authority is associated under rule 89.1. However, if boats will pass through the waters of more than one national authority while racing, an appeal or request shall be sent to the national authority where the finishing line is located, unless the sailing instructions identify another national authority.
- 70.5
- There shall be no appeal from the decisions of an international jury constituted in compliance with Appendix N. Furthermore, if the notice of race or the sailing instructions so state, the right of appeal may be denied provided that
- (a)
- it is essential to determine promptly the result of a race that will qualify a boat to compete in a later stage of an event or a subsequent event (a national authority may prescribe that its approval is required for such a procedure);
US Sailing prescribes that its approval is required. Go to rules.ussailing.org and click the ‘No Appeal’ link for more information or to obtain approval.
- 71.2
- The national authority may uphold, change or reverse a protest committee’s decision including a decision on validity or a decision under rule 69. Alternatively, the national authority may order that a hearing be reopened, or that a new hearing be held by the same or a different protest committee. When the national authority decides that there shall be a new hearing, it may appoint the protest committee.
- 75
- ENTERING AN EVENT
To enter an event, a boat shall comply with the requirements of the organizing authority of the event. She shall be entered by
- (a)
- a member of a club or other organization affiliated to a World Sailing member national authority,
- (b)
- such a club or organization, or
- (c)
- a member of a World Sailing member national authority.
- 76.1
- The organizing authority or the race committee may reject or cancel the entry of a boat or exclude a competitor, subject to rule 76.3, provided it does so before the start of the first race and states the reason for doing so. On request the boat shall promptly be given the reason in writing. The boat may request redress if she considers that the rejection or exclusion is improper.
US Sailing prescribes that an organizing authority or race committee shall not reject or cancel the entry of a boat or exclude a competitor eligible under the notice of race and sailing instructions for an arbitrary or capricious reason or for reason of race, color, religion, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, or age.
However, an organizing authority or race committee may exclude a competitor who is a citizen of, or holds a World Sailing ID as an MNA member of, a country listed on the US Sailing website at https://www.ussailing.org/exclusion.
- 78.1
- While a boat is racing, her owner and any other person in charge shall ensure that the boat is maintained to comply with her class rules and that her measurement or rating certificate, if any, remains valid. In addition, the boat shall also comply at other times specified in the class rules, the notice of race or the sailing instructions.
- 78.2
- When a rule requires a valid certificate to be produced or its existence verified before a boat races, and this cannot be done, the boat may race provided that the race committee receives a statement signed by the person in charge that a valid certificate exists. The boat shall produce the certificate or arrange for its existence to be verified by the race committee before the start of the last day of the event, or of the first series, whichever is earlier. The penalty for breaking this rule is disqualification without a hearing from all races of the event.
- 81
- INDEMNIFICATION OR HOLD HARMLESS AGREEMENTS
US Sailing prescribes that the organizing authority shall not require a competitor to assume any liabilities of the organizing authority, race committee, protest committee, host club, sponsors, or any other organization or official involved with the event. (This is commonly referred to as an ‘indemnification’ or ‘hold harmless’ agreement.) Go to rules.ussailing.org and click the ‘Indemnification’ link for more information.
- 85.2
- A change to one of the following types of rules may be made only as shown below.
Type of rule Change only if permitted by Racing rule Rule 86 Rule in a World Sailing code A rule in the code National authority prescription Rule 88.2 Class Rule Rule 87 Rule in the notice of race Rule 89.2(b) Rule in the sailing instructions Rule 90.2(c) Rule in any other document governing the event A rule in the document itself
- 86.1
- A racing rule shall not be changed unless permitted in the rule itself or as follows:
- (a)
- Prescriptions of a national authority may change a racing rule, but not the Definitions; the Basic Principles; a rule in the Introduction; Part 1, 2 or 7; rule 42, 43, 47, 50, 63.4, 69, 70, 71, 75, 76.3 or 79; a rule of an appendix that changes one of these rules; Appendix H or N; or a rule in a World Sailing Code listed in rule 6.1.
- 86.2
- In exception to rule 86.1, World Sailing may in limited circumstances (see World Sailing Regulation 28.1.3) authorize changes to the racing rules for a specific international event. The authorization shall be stated in a letter of approval to the organizing authority and in the notice of race or sailing instructions, and the letter shall be posted on the official notice board.
- 86.3
- If a national authority so prescribes, the restrictions in rule 86.1 do not apply if rules are changed to develop or test proposed rules. The national authority may prescribe that its approval is required for such changes.
US Sailing prescribes that:
- (a)
- In exception to rule 86.1, an organizing authority may request, and US Sailing may authorize, proposed changes to the racing rules for a specific event. The authorization shall be stated in a letter of approval to the organizing authority, and the letter shall be posted on the official notice board.
- (b)
- The proposed rules shall be stated in the notice of race and sailing instructions, and the organizing authority shall promptly report the results of the test to US Sailing.
- 88.1
- Prescriptions that Apply
The prescriptions that apply to an event are the prescriptions of the national authority with which the organizing authority is associated under rule 89.1. However, if boats will pass through the waters of more than one national authority while racing, the notice of race shall identify the prescriptions that will apply and when they will apply.
- 88.2
- Changes to Prescriptions
The notice of race or sailing instructions may change a prescription. However, a national authority may restrict changes to its prescriptions with a prescription to this rule, provided World Sailing approves its application to do so. The restricted prescriptions shall not be changed.
US Sailing prescribes that the notice of race or sailing instructions may change or delete any prescriptions except: this prescription, rule 61.4, Appendix R, and the prescriptions to rules 60.3, 67, 70.5(a) and 76.1.
- 89.1
- Organizing Authority
An event shall be organized by an organizing authority, which shall be
- 90.2
- Sailing Instructions
- (c)
- The sailing instructions may be changed provided the change is in writing and posted on the official notice board before the time stated in the sailing instructions or, on the water, communicated to each boat before her warning signal. Oral changes may be given only on the water, and only if the procedure is stated in the sailing instructions.
- 90.3
- Scoring
- (a)
- The race committee shall score a race or series as provided in Appendix A unless the notice of race or sailing instructions specify some other system. A race shall be scored if it is not abandoned and if one boat starts, sails the course and finishes within the race time limit, if any, even if she retires after finishing or is disqualified.
- 91
- PROTEST COMMITTEE
A protest committee shall be
- (b)
- an international jury appointed by the organizing authority or as prescribed in the World Sailing Regulations. It shall be composed as required by rule N1 and have the authority and responsibilities stated in rule N2. A national authority may prescribe that its approval is required for the appointment of international juries for races within its jurisdiction, except World Sailing events or when international juries are appointed by World Sailing under rule 89.2(c); or
-
- See rule 90.3.
- A2.1
- Each boat’s series score shall, subject to rule 90.3(b), be the total of her race scores excluding her worst score. However, the notice of race or sailing instructions may make a different arrangement by providing, for example, that no score will be excluded, that two or more scores will be excluded, or that a specified number of scores will be excluded if a specified number of races are completed. A race is completed if scored; see rule 90.3(a). If a boat has two or more equal worst scores, the score(s) for the race(s) sailed earliest in the series shall be excluded. The boat with the lowest series score wins and others shall be ranked accordingly.
- A3
- STARTING TIMES AND FINISHING PLACES
The time of a boat’s starting signal shall be her starting time, and the order in which boats finish a race shall determine their finishing places. However, when a handicap or rating system is used a boat’s corrected time shall determine her finishing place.
- A4
- SCORING SYSTEM
This Low Point System will apply unless the notice of race or sailing instructions specify another system; see rule 90.3(a).
- Each boat starting and finishing and not thereafter retiring, being penalized or given redress shall be scored points as follows:
Finishing Place | Points |
First | 1 |
Second | 2 |
Third | 3 |
Fourth | 4 |
Fifth | 5 |
Sixth | 6 |
Seventh | 7 |
Each place thereafter | Add 1 point |
- A5.1
- A boat that did not start, sail the course or finish, or comply with rule 30.2, 30.3, 30.4 or 78.2, or that retires or takes a penalty under rule 44.3(a), shall be scored accordingly by the race committee without a hearing. Only the protest committee may take other scoring actions that worsen a boat’s score.
- A5.2
- A boat that did not start, did not sail the course, did not finish, retired or was disqualified shall be scored points for the finishing place one more than the number of boats entered in the series. A boat that is penalized under rule 30.2 or that takes a penalty under rule 44.3(a) shall be scored points as provided in rule 44.3(c).
- A5.3
- If the notice of race or sailing instructions state that rule A5.3 will apply, rule A5.2 is changed so that a boat that came to the starting area but did not start, did not sail the course, did not finish, retired or was disqualified shall be scored points for the finishing place one more than the number of boats that came to the starting area, and a boat that did not come to the starting area shall be scored points for the finishing place one more than the number of boats entered in the series.
- A6.1
- If a boat is disqualified from a race or retires after finishing, each boat with a worse finishing place shall be moved up one place.
- A7
- RACE TIES
If boats are tied at the finishing line or if a handicap or rating system is used and boats have equal corrected times, the points for the place for which the boats have tied and for the place(s) immediately below shall be added together and divided equally. Boats tied for a race prize shall share it or be given equal prizes.
- A8.2
- If a tie remains between two or more boats, they shall be ranked in order of their scores in the last race. Any remaining ties shall be broken by using the tied boats’ scores in the next-to-last race and so on until all ties are broken. These scores shall be used even if some of them are excluded scores.
- A10
- SCORING ABBREVIATIONS
These scoring abbreviations shall be used for recording the circumstances described:
US Sailing Note on Scoring a Long Series: The scoring systems in Appendix A may be inappropriate for a long series, such as a club’s season championship held over several weeks or months, in which some boats do not compete in all of the races and in which more boats compete in some races than in others. Go to rules.ussailing.org and click the ‘Scoring a Long Series’ link for an explanation of the scoring problems that occur in such series, alternative scoring systems, and language for sailing instructions to implement them.
- Windsurfing fleet races (including marathon races) shall be sailed under The Racing Rules of Sailing as changed by this appendix. The term ‘boat’ elsewhere in the racing rules means ‘board’ or ‘boat’ as appropriate. A marathon race is a race intended to last more than one hour.
Note: Rules for Slalom, Expression (including Wave and Freestyle) and Speed disciplines are not included in this appendix. These are available at the World Sailing website.
CHANGES TO THE DEFINITIONS
- The definitions Mark-Room, and Tack, Starboard or Port are changed to:
Mark-Room Mark-Room for a board is room to sail her proper course to round or pass the mark. However, mark-room for a board does not include room to tack unless she is overlapped inside and to windward of the board required to give mark-room and she would be fetching the mark after her tack.
Tack, Starboard or Port A board is on the tack, starboard or port, corresponding to the competitor’s hand that would be nearer the mast if the competitor were in normal sailing position with both hands on the wishbone and arms not crossed. A board is on starboard tack when the competitor’s right hand would be nearer the mast and is on port tack when the competitor’s left hand would be nearer the mast.
The definition Zone is deleted.
- Add the following definitions:
- Capsized A board is capsized when she is not under control because her sail or the competitor is in the water.
- Rounding or Passing A board is rounding or passing a mark from the time her proper course is to begin to manoeuvre to round or pass it, until the mark has been rounded or passed.
- B2
- CHANGES TO THE RULES OF PART 2
- 13
- WHILE TACKING
Rule 13 is changed to:
After a board passes head to wind, she shall keep clear of other boards until her sail has filled. During that time rules 10, 11 and 12 do not apply. If two boards are subject to this rule at the same time, the one on the other’s port side or the one astern shall keep clear.
- 17
- ON THE SAME TACK BEFORE A REACHING START
Rule 17 is changed to:
When, at the warning signal, the course to the first mark is approximately ninety degrees from the true wind, a board overlapped to leeward of another board on the same tack during the last 30 seconds before her starting signal shall not sail above the shortest course to the first mark while they remain overlapped if as a result the other board would need to take action to avoid contact, unless in doing so she promptly sails astern of the other board.
- 18
- MARK-ROOM
Rule 18 is changed as follows:
The first sentence of rule 18.1 is changed to:
Rule 18 applies between boards when they are required to leave a mark on the same side and at least one of them is rounding or passing it.
Rule 18.2(b) is changed to:
- (b)
- If boards are overlapped when the first of them is rounding or passing the mark, the outside board at that moment shall thereafter give the inside board mark-room. If a board is clear ahead when she is rounding or passing the mark, the board clear astern at that moment shall thereafter give her mark-room.
- (c)
- When a board is required to give mark-room by rule 18.2(b), she shall continue to do so even if later an overlap is broken or a new overlap begins.
- (d)
- Rules 18.2(b) and (c) cease to apply if the board entitled to mark-room passes head to wind.
- 18.4
- Gybing and Bearing Away
Rule 18.4 is changed to:
When an inside overlapped right-of-way board must gybe or bear away at a mark to sail her proper course, until she gybes or bears away she shall sail no farther from the mark than needed to sail that course. Rule 18.4 does not apply at a gate mark.
- 22
- CAPSIZED; AGROUND; RESCUING
Rule 22 is changed to:
- B3
- CHANGES TO THE RULES OF PART 3
- 26
- STARTING RACES
Rule 26 is changed to:
- 26.1
- System 1 (for Upwind Starts)
Races shall be started by using the following signals. Times shall be taken from the visual signals; the absence of a sound signal shall be disregarded.
Minutes before starting signal Visual signal Sound
signalMeans 5* Class flag One Warning
signal4 P, I, U, or black flag One Preparatory
signal1 Preparatory flag removed One long One minute 0 Class flag
removedOne Starting
signal
The warning signal for each succeeding class shall be made with or after the starting signal of the preceding class.
- 26.2
- System 2 (for Reaching Starts)
Races shall be started by using the following signals. Times shall be taken from the visual signals; the absence of a sound signal shall be disregarded.
Minutes before starting signal Visual signal Sound
signalMeans 3 Class flag Attention
signal2 Red flag; attention signal removed One Warning
signal1 Yellow flag; red flag removed One Preparatory
signal1/2 Yellow flag removed 30 seconds 0 Green flag One Starting signal
- 26.3
- System 3 (for Beach Starts)
- (a)
- When the starting line is on the beach, or so close to the beach that the competitor must stand in the water to start, the start is a beach start.
- (b)
- The starting stations shall be numbered so that station 1 is the most windward one. Unless the sailing instructions specify some other system, a board’s starting station shall be determined
- (1)
- by ranking (the highest ranking board on station 1, the next highest on station 2, and so on), or
- (2)
- by draw.
- (c)
- After boards have been called to take their positions, the race committee shall make the preparatory signal by displaying a red flag with one sound. The starting signal shall be made, at any time after the preparatory signal, by removing the red flag with one sound.
- (d)
- After the starting signal each board shall take the shortest route from her starting station to the water and then to her sailing position without interfering with other boards. Part 2 rules will apply when both of the competitor’s feet are on the board.
- 30
- STARTING PENALTIES
Rule 30.2 is deleted.
- B4
- CHANGES TO THE RULES OF PART 4
- 42
- PROPULSION
Rule 42 is changed to:
A board shall be propelled only by the action of the wind on the sail and by the action of the water on the hull. However, pumping and fanning the sail is permitted. The board shall not be propelled by paddling, swimming or walking.
- 44
- PENALTIES AT THE TIME OF AN INCIDENT
Rule 44 is changed to:
- 44.1
- Taking a Penalty
A board may take a 360°-Turn Penalty when she may have broken one or more rules of Part 2 in an incident while racing. The sailing instructions may specify the use of some other penalty. However, if the board caused injury or serious damage or, despite taking a penalty, gained a significant advantage in the race or series by her breach, her penalty shall be to retire.
- 44.2
- 360°-Turn Penalty
After getting well clear of other boards as soon after the incident as possible, a board takes a 360°-Turn Penalty by promptly making a 360° turn with no requirement for a tack or a gybe. When a board takes the penalty at or near the finishing line, her hull shall be completely on the course side of the line before she finishes.
- 50
- COMPETITOR CLOTHING AND EQUIPMENT
Rule 50.1(a) is changed to:
(a) Competitors shall not wear or carry clothing or equipment for the purpose of increasing their weight. However, a competitor may wear a drinking container that shall have a capacity of no more than 1.5 litres.
PART 4 RULES DELETED
- B5
- CHANGES TO THE RULES OF PART 5
- 60
- RIGHT TO PROTEST; RIGHT TO REQUEST REDRESS OR RULE 69 ACTION
Rule 60.1(a) is changed by deleting ‘or saw’.
- 61.1
- Informing the Protestee
Rule 61.1(a) is changed to:
- (b)
-
- The protesting board shall inform the other board at the first reasonable opportunity. When her protest will concern an incident in the racing area, she shall hail ‘Protest’ at the first reasonable opportunity. She shall also inform the race committee of her intention to protest as soon as practicable after she finishes or retires. However,
-
- (1)
- if the other board is beyond hailing distance, the protesting board need not hail but she shall inform the other board at the first reasonable opportunity;
- (2)
- no red flag need be displayed;
- (3)
- if the incident was an error by the other board in sailing the course, she need not hail but she shall inform the other board either before or at the first reasonable opportunity after the other board finishes;
- (4)
- if at the time of the incident it is obvious to the protesting board that either competitor is in danger, or that injury or serious damage resulted, the requirements of this rule do not apply to her, but she shall attempt to inform the other board within the time limit of rule 61.3.
- 63.6
- Taking Evidence and Finding Facts
Add to rule 63.6:
However, for an elimination series race that will qualify a board to compete in a later stage of an event, protests and requests for redress need not be in writing; they shall be made orally to a member of the protest committee as soon as reasonably possible following the race. The protest committee may take evidence in any way it considers appropriate and may communicate its decision orally.
- 64
- DECISIONS
Rule 64.4(b) is changed to:
- (b)
- When the protest committee is in doubt about a matter concerning the measurement of a board, the meaning of a class rule, or damage to a board, it shall refer its questions, together with the relevant facts, to an authority responsible for interpreting the rule. In making its decision, the committee shall be bound by the reply of the authority.
- 70.5
- There shall be no appeal from the decisions of an international jury constituted in compliance with Appendix N, and no appeal from the decisions of the protest committee for a race in an elimination series that will qualify a board to compete in a later stage of an event. Furthermore, if the notice of race or sailing instructions so state, the right of appeal may be denied provided that
- (a)
- it is essential to determine promptly the result of a race that will qualify a board to compete in a subsequent event (a national authority may prescribe that its permission is required for such a procedure);
- B8
- CHANGES TO APPENDIX A
- A1
- NUMBER OF RACES; OVERALL SCORES
Rule A1 is changed to:
The number of races scheduled and the number required to be completed to constitute a series shall be stated in the notice of race or sailing instructions. If an event includes more than one discipline or format, the notice of race or sailing instructions shall state how the overall scores are to be calculated.
- A2
- SERIES SCORES
Rule A2.1 is changed to:
Each board’s series score shall, subject to rule 90.3(b), be the total of her race scores excluding her
- (a)
- worst score when from 5 to 11 races have been completed, or
- (b)
- two worst scores when 12 or more races have been completed.
- A8.2
- If a tie remains between two or more boards, each board’s race scores, including excluded scores, shall be listed in order of best to worst, and at the first point(s) where there is a difference the tie shall be broken in favour of the board(s) with the best score(s). These scores shall be used even if some of them are excluded scores.
- A8.3
- If a tie still remains between two or more boards, they shall be ranked in order of their scores in the last race. Any remaining ties shall be broken by using the tied boards’ scores in the next-to-last race and so on until all ties are broken. These scores shall be used even if some of them are excluded scores.
- B9
- CHANGES TO APPENDIX G
- G1.3
- Positioning
Rule G1.3 is changed to:
The class insignia shall be displayed once on each side of the sail in the area above a line projected at right angles from a point on the luff of the sail one-third of the distance from the head to the wishbone. The national letters and sail numbers shall be in the central third of that part of the sail above the wishbone, clearly separated from any advertising. They shall be black and applied back to back on an opaque white background. The background shall extend a minimum of 30 mm beyond the characters. There shall be a ‘–’ between the national letters and the sail number, and the spacing between characters shall be adequate for legibility.
- Note: A Standard Notice of Race, Standard Sailing Instructions, and Match Racing Rules for Blind Competitors are available at the World Sailing website.
- C2.1
- The definition Finish is changed to
-
- Finish A boat finishes when any part of her hull crosses the finishing line from the course side after completing any penalties. However, when penalties are cancelled under rule C7.2(d) after one or both boats have finished each shall be recorded as finished when she crossed the line. A boat has not finished if she continues to sail the course.
-
- C2.7
- Rule 16.2 is deleted.
- C2.8
- Rule 17 is deleted.
- C2.9
- Rule 18 is changed to:
- 18.1
- When Rule 18 Applies
Rule 18 applies between boats when they are required to leave a mark on the same side and at least one of them is in the zone. However, it does not apply between a boat approaching a mark and one leaving it. Rule 18 no longer applies between boats when the boat entitled to mark-room is on the next leg and the mark is astern of her.
- 18.3
- Tacking or Gybing
- (b)
- When an inside overlapped right-of-way boat must change tack at a mark to sail her proper course, until she changes tack she shall sail no farther from the mark than needed to sail that course. Rule 18.3(b) does not apply at a gate mark or a finishing mark and a boat shall be exonerated for breaking this rule if the course of another boat was not affected before the boat changed tack.
- C2.10
- Rule 20.4(a) is changed to:
- C2.11
- Rule 21.3 is deleted.
- C2.12
- Rule 23.1 is changed to:
- C2.14
- Rule 31 is changed to:
- 31
- TOUCHING A MARK
While racing, neither the crew nor any part of a boat’s hull shall touch a starting mark before starting, a mark that begins, bounds or ends the leg of the course on which she is sailing, or a finishing mark after finishing. In addition, while racing, a boat shall not touch a race committee vessel that is also a mark.
- C3.1
- Starting Signals
The signals for starting a match shall be as follows. Times shall be taken from the visual signals; the failure of a sound signal shall be disregarded. If more than one match will be sailed, the starting signal for one match shall be the warning signal for the next match.
Time in minutes Visual signal Sound
signalMeans 7 Flag F displayed One Attention signal 6 Flag F removed None 5 Numeral pennant displayed* One Warning signal 4 Flag P displayed One Preparatory signal 2 Blue or yellow flag or both displayed** One** End of pre-start entry time 1 Flag P removed One long 0 Warming signal removed One Starting signal
**These signals shall be made only if one or both boats fail to comply with rule C4.2. The flag(s) shall be displayed until the umpires have signalled a penalty or for one minute, whichever is earlier.
- C3.2
- Changes to Related Rules
- (a)
-
- Rule 29.1 is changed to:
- (1)
- When at a boat’s starting signal any part of her hull is on the course side of the starting line or one of its extensions, the race committee shall promptly display a blue or yellow flag identifying the boat with one sound. The flag shall be displayed until the hull of the boat is completely on the pre-start side of the starting line or one of its extensions or until two minutes after her starting signal, whichever is earlier.
- (2)
- When after a boat’s starting signal any part of her hull crosses from the pre-start side to the course side of the starting line across an extension without having started correctly, the race committee shall promptly display a blue or yellow flag identifying the boat. The flag shall be displayed until the hull of the boat is completely on the pre-start side of the starting line or one of its extensions or until two minutes after her starting signal, whichever is earlier.
- Rule 29.1 is changed to:
- C4.1
- At a boat’s preparatory signal, her hull shall be completely outside the line that is at a 90º angle to the starting line through the starting mark at her assigned end. In the pairing list, the boat listed on the left-hand side is assigned the port end and shall display a blue flag at her stern while racing. The other boat is assigned the starboard end and shall display a yellow flag at her stern while racing.
- C6.2
- A boat may not protest another boat under
- (a)
- rule 14, unless damage or injury results;
- C6.3
- A boat requesting redress because of circumstances that arise while she is racing or in the finishing area shall clearly display a red flag as soon as possible after she becomes aware of those circumstances, but no later than two minutes after finishing or retiring.
- C6.5
- Umpire Decisions
- (a)
- After flag Y is displayed, the umpires shall decide whether to penalize any boat. They shall signal their decision in compliance with rule C5.1, C5.2 or C5.3. However,
- (1)
- if the umpires decide to penalize a boat, and as a result that boat will have more than two outstanding penalties, the umpires shall signal her disqualification under rule C5.4;
- (2)
- when the umpires penalize a boat under rule C8.2 and in the same incident there is a flag Y from a boat, the umpires may disregard the flag Y.
- C7.2
- All Penalties
- (a)
- A penalized boat may delay taking a penalty within the limitations of rule C7.3 and shall take it as follows:
- (1)
- When on a leg of the course to a windward mark, she shall gybe and, as soon as reasonably possible, luff to a close-hauled course.
- (2)
- When on a leg of the course to a leeward mark or the finishing line, she shall tack and, as soon as reasonably possible, bear away to a course that is more than ninety degrees from the true wind.
- C7.4
- Taking and Completing Penalties
- (c)
- The umpire boat for each match shall display blue or yellow flags or shapes, each flag or shape indicating one outstanding penalty. When a boat has taken a penalty, or a penalty has been cancelled, one flag or shape shall be removed, with the appropriate sound signal. Failure of the umpires to signal correctly shall not change the number of penalties outstanding.
- C8.2
- When the umpires decide that a boat has broken rule 31, 42, C4, C7.3(c) or C7.3(d) she shall be penalized by signalling her under rule C5.2 or C5.3. However, if a boat is penalized for breaking a rule of Part 2 and if she in the same incident breaks rule 31, she shall not be penalized for breaking rule 31. Furthermore, a boat that displays an incorrect flag or does not display the correct flag shall be warned orally and given an opportunity to correct the error before being penalized.
- C8.6
- When the match umpires, together with at least one other umpire, decide that a boat has broken rule 14 and damage resulted, they may impose a points-penalty without a hearing. The competitor shall be informed of the penalty as soon as practicable and, at the time of being so informed, may request a hearing. The protest committee shall then proceed under rule C6.6. Any penalty decided by the protest committee may be more than the penalty imposed by the umpires. When the umpires decide that a penalty greater than one point is appropriate, they shall act under rule C8.4.
- C9.2
- A competitor may not base a request for redress on a claim that an action by an official boat was improper. The protest committee may decide to consider giving redress in such circumstances but only if it believes that an official boat, including an umpire boat, may have seriously interfered with a competing boat.
- C10.3
- When a single round robin is terminated before completion, or a multiple round robin is terminated during the first round robin, a competitor’s score shall be the average points scored per match sailed by the competitor. However, if any of the competitors have completed less than one third of the scheduled matches, the entire round robin shall be disregarded and, if necessary, the event declared void. For the purposes of tie-breaking in rule C11.1(a), a competitor’s score shall be the average points scored per match between the tied competitors.
- C10.4
- When a multiple round robin is terminated with an incomplete round robin, only one point shall be available for all the matches sailed between any two competitors, as follows:
Number of matches completed
between any two competitorsPoints for each win 1 One point 2 Half a point 3 A third of a point (etc.)
- C11.1
- Round-Robin Series
In a round-robin series competitors are assigned to one or more groups and scheduled to sail against all other competitors in their group one or more times. Each separate stage identified in the event format shall be a separate round-robin series irrespective of the number of times each competitor sails against each other competitor in that stage.
Ties between two or more competitors in a round-robin series shall be broken by the following methods, in order, until all ties are broken. When one or more ties are only partially broken, rules C11.1(a) to C11.1(e) shall be reapplied to them. Ties shall be decided in favour of the competitor(s) who
- (c)
- has the most points against the competitor placed highest in the round-robin series or, if necessary, second highest, and so on until the tie is broken. When two separate ties have to be resolved but the resolution of each depends upon resolving the other, the following principles shall be used in the rule C11.1(c) procedure:
- (1)
- the higher-place tie shall be resolved before the lower-place tie, and
- (2)
- all the competitors in the lower-place tie shall be treated as a single competitor for the purposes of rule C11.1(c);
- C11.3
- Remaining Ties
When rule C11.1 or C11.2 does not resolve a tie,
- (a)
- if the tie needs to be resolved for a later stage of the event (or another event for which the event is a direct qualifier), the tie shall be broken by a sail-off when practicable. When the race committee decides that a sail-off is not practicable, the tie shall be decided in favour of the competitor who has the highest score in the round-robin series after eliminating the score for the first race for each tied competitor or, should this fail to break the tie, the second race for each tied competitor and so on until the tie is broken. When a tie is partially resolved, the remaining tie shall be broken by reapplying rule C11.1 or C11.2.
Team races shall be sailed under The Racing Rules of Sailing as changed by this appendix.
- D1.1
- Definitions and the Rules of Parts 2 and 4
- (b)
- Rule 18.2(b) is changed to:
If boats are overlapped when the first of them reaches the zone, the outside boat at that moment shall thereafter give the inside boat mark-room. If a boat is clear ahead when she reaches the zone, or she later becomes clear ahead when another boat passes head to wind, the boat clear astern at that moment shall thereafter give her mark-room.
- (d)
- When stated in the sailing instructions, rule 20 is changed so that the following arm signals are required in addition to the hails:
- (1)
- for room to tack, repeatedly and clearly pointing to windward; and
- (2)
- for ‘You tack’, repeatedly and clearly pointing at the other boat and waving the arm to windward.
- D1.2
- Protests and Requests for Redress
- (d)
- The race committee or protest committee shall not protest a boat for breaking a rule of Part 2 or rule 31 or 42 except
- (1)
- based on evidence in a report from an umpire after a black and white flag has been displayed; or
- (2)
- under rule 14 upon receipt of a report from any source alleging damage or injury.
- D3.1
-
- (e)
- When a protest committee decides that a boat that is a party to a protest hearing has broken a rule and is not exonerated,
- (1)
- if the boat has not taken a penalty, 6 points shall be added to her score;
- (2)
- if the boat’s team has gained an advantage despite any penalty taken or imposed, the boat’s score may be increased;
- (3)
- when the boat has broken rule 1 or 2, rule 14 when she has caused damage or injury, or a rule when not racing, half or more race wins may be deducted from her team, or no penalty may be imposed. Race wins deducted shall not be awarded to any other team.
- D4.4
- Round-Robin Tie Breaks
Ties in a round-robin stage shall be broken using results from that stage only.
- (a)
- If the tied teams have all sailed each other at least once in the stage, the tie shall be broken in the order below.
- (1)
- Percentage of races won in all races between the tied teams, highest first;
- (2)
- Average points per race in all races between the tied teams, lowest first;
- (3)
- If two teams remain tied, the winner of the last race between them;
- (4)
- Average points per race in all races against common opponents, lowest first;
- (5)
- A sail-off if possible, otherwise a game of chance.
- D4.5
- Scoring a Knockout Stage
- (c)
-
- (1)
- Teams that win in a round shall be ranked ahead of those that lose.
- (2)
- Teams that lose in a round and do not sail again shall be equally ranked.
- (3)
- In a round that is not scored, teams shall be ranked in order of their places in the previous stage of the event, with teams from different groups ranked separately.
- D5.4
- When the race committee decides that the team’s finishing position was made significantly worse, that the breakdown was through no fault of the crew, and that in the same circumstances a reasonably competent crew would not have been able to avoid the breakdown, it shall make as equitable a decision as possible. This may be to abandon and resail the race or, when the boat’s finishing position was predictable, award her points for that position. Any doubt about a boat’s position when she broke down shall be resolved against her.
- D5.5
- A breakdown caused by defective supplied equipment or a breach of a rule by an opponent shall not normally be determined to be the fault of the crew, but one caused by careless handling, capsizing or a breach by a boat on the same team shall be. If there is doubt, it shall be presumed that the crew are not at fault.
Radio sailing races shall be sailed under The Racing Rules of Sailing as changed by this appendix.
Note: A Test Rule for Umpired Radio Sailing is available at the World Sailing website.
- E1.1
- Definitions
Add to the definition Conflict of Interest:
- However, an observer does not have a conflict of interest solely by being a competitor.
Add new definition:
- Disabled A boat is disabled while she is unable to continue in the heat.
- E1.2
- Terminology
The Terminology paragraph of the Introduction is changed so that:
- (a)
- ‘Boat’ means a sailboat controlled by radio signals and having no crew. However, in the rules of Part 1 and Part 5, rule E6 and the definitions Party and Protest, ‘boat’ includes the competitor controlling her.
- (b)
- ‘Competitor’ means the person designated to control a boat using radio signals.
- (c)
- In the racing rules, but not in its appendices, replace the noun ‘race’ with ‘heat’. In Appendix E a race consists of one or more heats and is completed when the last heat in the race is completed.
- E1.3
- Rules of Parts 1, 2 and 7
- (a)
- Rule 1.2 is deleted.
- (b)
- Hails under rules 20.1 and 20.3 shall include the words ‘room’ and ‘tack’ and the sail number of the hailing boat, in any order.
- (c)
- Rule 22 is changed to: ‘If possible, a boat shall avoid a boat that is disabled.’
- (d)
- Rule 90.2(c) is changed to:
Changes to the sailing instructions may be communicated orally to all affected competitors before the warning signal of the relevant race or heat. When appropriate, changes shall be confirmed in writing.
- E2.1
- Hailing Requirements
- (a)
- A hail shall be made and repeated as appropriate so that the competitors to whom the hail is directed might reasonably be expected to hear it.
- (b)
- When a rule requires a boat to hail or respond, the hail shall be made by the competitor controlling the boat.
- (c)
- The individual digits of a boat’s sail number shall be hailed; for example ‘one five’, not ‘fifteen’.
- E3.4
- Starting and Finishing
- (a)
- Rule 26 is changed to:
Heats shall be started using warning, preparatory and starting signals at one-minute intervals. During the minute before the starting signal, additional sound or oral signals shall be made at ten-second intervals, and during the final ten seconds at one-second intervals. Each signal shall be timed from the beginning of its sound.
- (b)
- The starting and finishing lines shall be between the course sides of the starting and finishing marks.
- E3.6
- General Recall
Rule 29.2 is changed to:
When at the starting signal the race committee is unable to identify boats that are on the course side of the starting line or to which rule 30 applies, or there has been an error in the starting procedure, the race committee may hail ‘General recall’ and make two loud sounds. The warning signal for a new start will normally be made shortly thereafter.
- E3.8
- Other Changes to the Rules of Part 3
- (a)
- Rules 30.2 and 33 are deleted.
- (b)
- All race committee signals shall be made orally or by other sounds. No visual signals are required unless specified in the sailing instructions.
- (c)
- Courses shall not be shortened.
- (d)
- Rule 32.1(a) is changed to: ‘because of foul weather or thunderstorms,’.
- E4.2
- Outside Help
Rule 41 is changed to:
A boat or the competitor controlling her shall not receive help from any outside source, except
- (a)
- help needed as a direct result of a competitor becoming ill, injured or in danger;
- (b)
- when the boat is entangled with another boat, help from the other competitor;
- (c)
- when the boat is disabled or in danger, help from the race committee;
- (d)
- help in the form of information freely available to all competitors;
- (e)
- unsolicited information from a disinterested source. A competitor is not a disinterested source unless acting as an observer.
- E4.3
- Taking a Penalty
Rule 44.1 is changed to:
A boat may take a One-Turn Penalty when she may have broken one or more rules of Part 2, or rule 31, in an incident while racing. However,
- (a)
- when she may have broken a rule of Part 2 and rule 31 in the same incident she need not take the penalty for breaking rule 31;
- (b)
- if the boat gained an advantage in the heat or race by her breach despite taking a penalty, her penalty shall be additional One-Turn Penalties until her advantage is lost;
- (c)
- if the boat caused serious damage, or as a result of breaking a rule of Part 2 she caused another boat to become disabled and retire, her penalty shall be to retire.
- E5.1
- Observers
- (a)
- The race committee may appoint observers, who may be competitors.
- (b)
- Observers shall hail the sail numbers of boats that make contact with a mark or another boat.
- (c)
- At the end of a heat, observers shall report to the race committee all unresolved incidents, and any failure to sail the course.
- E6.8
- Taking Evidence and Finding Facts
Add new rule 63.6(e):
(e) When the protest concerns an alleged breach of a rule of Part 2, 3 or 4, any witness shall have been in the control area at the time of the incident. If the witness is a competitor who was not acting as an observer, he shall also have been scheduled to race in the relevant heat.
- E7
- PENALTIES
When a protest committee decides that a boat that is a party to a protest hearing has broken a rule other than a rule of Part 2, 3 or 4, it shall either
- (a)
- disqualify her or add any number of points (including zero and fractions of points) to her score. The penalty shall be applied, if possible, to the heat or race in which the rule was broken; otherwise it shall be applied to the next heat or race for that boat. When points are added, the scores of other boats shall not be changed; or
- However, if the boat has broken a rule in Appendix G or rule E8, the protest committee shall act in accordance with rule G4.
- E8
- CHANGES TO APPENDIX G, INDENTIFICATION ON SAILS
Rule G1, except the table of National Sail Letters, is changed to:
- G1.1
- Identification
- (a)
- A boat of a World Sailing or IRSA Class shall display her class insignia, national letters and sail number as specified in rule G1, unless her class rules state otherwise.
- (b)
- At world and continental championships, sails shall comply with these rules. At other events they shall comply with these rules or the rules applicable at the time of their initial certification.
- G1.2
- National Letters
At all international events, a boat shall display national letters in accordance with the table of National Sail Letters denoting:
- (a)
- when entered under rule 75(a), the national authority of the nationality, place of residence, or affiliation of the owner or the member.
- (b)
- when entered under rule 75(b), the national authority of the organisation which entered her.
Note: An up-to-date version of the National Sail Letters table is available on the World Sailing website.
- G1.3
- Sail Numbers
- (a)
- The sail number shall be the last two digits of the boat’s registration number or the competitor’s or owner’s personal number, allotted by the relevant issuing authority.
- (b)
- When there is conflict between sail numbers, or when a sail number may be misread, the race committee shall require that the sail numbers of one or more boats be changed to numeric alternatives.
- G1.4
- Specifications
- (a)
- National letters and sail numbers shall be in capital letters and Arabic numerals, clearly legible and of the same colour. Commercially available typefaces giving the same or better legibility than Helvetica are acceptable.
- (b)
- The height and spacing of letters and numbers shall be as follows:
- G1.5
-
- (a)
- Class insignia, sail numbers and national letters shall be positioned
- (1)
- on both sides of the sail;
- (2)
- with those on the starboard side uppermost;
- (3)
- approximately horizontally;
- (4)
- with no less than 40 mm vertical spacing between numbers and letters on opposite sides of the sail;
- (5)
- with no less than 20 mm vertical spacing between class insignia on opposite sides of the sail.
-
- (b)
- On a mainsail, sail numbers shall be positioned
- (1)
- below class insignia;
- (2)
- above the line perpendicular to the luff through the quarter leech point;
- (3)
- above national letters;
- (4)
- with sufficient space in front of the sail number for a prefix ‘1’.
- G1.6
-
- (a)
- Where the size of the sail prevents compliance with rule G1.2, National Letters, then exceptions to rules G1.2, G1.4, and G1.5 shall be made in the following order of precedence. National letters shall
- (1)
- be spaced vertically below sail numbers by less than 30 mm, but no less than 20 mm;
- (2)
- be spaced on opposite sides of the sail by less than 30 mm, but no less than 20 mm;
- (3)
- be reduced in height to less than 45 mm, but no less than 40 mm;
- (4)
- be omitted.
- (b)
- Where the size of the sail prevents compliance with rule G1.3, Sail Numbers, then exceptions to rules G1.4 and G1.5 shall be made in the following order of precedence. Sail numbers shall
- (1)
- extend below the specified line;
- (2)
- be spaced on opposite sides of the sail by less than 30 mm, but no less than 20 mm apart;
- (3)
- be reduced in height to less than 90 mm, but no less than 80 mm;
- (4)
- be omitted on all except the largest sail;
- (5)
- be reduced in height until they do fit on the largest sail.
- Note: Rules for other kiteboarding racing formats (such as Short Track, Kitecross, Slalom, Boarder X) or other kiteboarding competitions (such as Freestyle, Wave, Big Air, Speed) are not included in this appendix. Links to current versions of these rules can be found on the World Sailing website.
CHANGES TO THE DEFINITIONS
- The definitions Clear Astern and Clear Ahead; Overlap, Finish, Keep Clear, Leeward and Windward, Mark-Room, Obstruction, Start, Tack, Starboard or Port and Zone are changed to:
- Clear Astern and Clear Ahead; Overlap One kiteboard is clear astern of another when her hull is behind a line abeam from the aftermost point of the other kiteboard’s hull. The other kiteboard is clear ahead. They overlap when neither is clear astern. However, they also overlap when a kiteboard between them overlaps both. If there is reasonable doubt that two kiteboards are overlapped, it shall be presumed that they are not. These terms always apply to kiteboards on the same tack. They apply to kiteboards on opposite tacks only when both kiteboards are sailing more than ninety degrees from the true wind.
- Finish A kiteboard finishes when, after starting, while the competitor is in contact with the hull, any part of her hull, or the competitor, crosses the finishing line from the course side. However, she has not finished if after crossing the finishing line she
- (a)
- takes a penalty under rule 44.2,
- (b)
- corrects an error in sailing the course made at the line, or
- (c)
- continues to sail the course.
- Keep Clear A kiteboard keeps clear of a right-of-way kiteboard
- (a)
- if the right-of-way kiteboard can sail her course with no need to take avoiding action and,
- (b)
- when the kiteboards are overlapped, if the right-of-way kiteboard can also change course in both directions or move her kite in any direction without immediately making contact.
- Leeward and Windward A kiteboard’s leeward side is the side that is or, when she is head to wind, was away from the wind. However, when sailing by the lee or directly downwind, her leeward side is the side on which her kite lies. The other side is her windward side. When two kiteboards on the same tack overlap, the one whose hull is on the leeward side of the other’s hull is the leeward kiteboard. The other is the windward kiteboard.
- Mark-Room Room for a kiteboard to sail her proper course to round or pass the mark on the required side.
- Obstruction An object that a kiteboard could not pass without substantially changing her course or the position of her kite, if she were sailing directly towards it and 10 metres from it. An object that can be safely passed on only one side and an object, area or line so designated by the sailing instructions are also obstructions. However, a kiteboard racing is not an obstruction to other kiteboards unless they are required to keep clear of her or, if rule 22 applies, avoid her. A vessel under way, including a kiteboard racing, is never a continuing obstruction.
- Start A kiteboard starts when, her hull and the competitor having been entirely on the pre-start side of the starting line at or after her starting signal, any part of her hull or the competitor crosses the starting line from the pre-start side to the course side.
- Tack, Starboard or Port A kiteboard is on the tack, starboard or port, corresponding to the competitor’s hand that would be forward if the competitor were in normal riding position (riding heel side with both hands on the control bar and arms not crossed). A kiteboard is on starboard tack when the competitor’s right hand would be forward and is on the port tack when the competitor’s left hand would be forward.
- Zone The area around a mark within a distance of 30 metres. A kiteboard is in the zone when any part of her hull is in the zone.
- Add the following definitions:
Capsized A kiteboard is capsized if
- (a)
- her kite is in the water, or
- (b)
- her lines are tangled with another kiteboard’s lines.
- Jumping A kiteboard is jumping when her hull, its appendages and the competitor are clear of the water.
- Recovering
- (a)
- A kiteboard is recovering from the time she loses steerage way until she regains it, unless she is capsized.
- (b)
- A kiteboard is recovering from the time her kite is out of the water until she has steerage way.
- F2
- CHANGES TO THE RULES OF PART 2
PART 2 – PREAMBLE
- In the second sentence of the preamble, ‘injury or serious damage’ is changed to ‘injury, serious damage or a tangle’.
- 16.2
- In addition, on a beat to windward when a port-tack kiteboard is keeping clear by sailing to pass to leeward of a starboard-tack kiteboard, the starboard-tack kiteboard shall not bear away or change the position of her kite if as a result the port-tack kiteboard must change course or the position of her kite immediately to continue keeping clear.
- 18.1
- When Rule 18 Applies
Rule 18 applies between kiteboards when they are required to leave a mark on the same side and at least one of them is in the zone. However, it does not apply
- (a)
- between a kiteboard approaching a mark and one leaving it, or
- (b)
- between kiteboards on opposite tacks.
- 18.2
- Giving Mark-Room
-
- (a)
- When the first kiteboard reaches the zone,
- (1)
- if kiteboards are overlapped, the outside kiteboard at that moment shall thereafter give the inside kiteboard mark-room.
- (2)
- if kiteboards are not overlapped, the kiteboard that has not reached the zone shall thereafter give mark-room.
- (b)
- If the kiteboard entitled to mark-room leaves the zone, the entitlement to mark-room ceases and rule 18.2(a) is applied again if required based on the relationship of the kiteboards at the time rule 18.2(a) is re-applied.
- (c)
- If a kiteboard obtained an inside overlap and, from the time the overlap began, the outside kiteboard is unable to give mark-room, she is not required to give it.
-
- 18.3
- Tacking and Gybing
When an inside overlapped right-of-way kiteboard must change tack at a mark to sail her proper course, until she changes tack she shall sail no farther from the mark than needed to sail that course. Rule 18.3 does not apply at a gate mark or a finishing mark and a kiteboard shall not be penalized for breaking this rule unless the course of another kiteboard was affected by the breach of this rule.
SECTION D — PREAMBLE
- The preamble to Section D is changed to:
When rule 21 or 22 applies between two kiteboards, Section A and C rules do not.
- F3
- CHANGES TO THE RULES OF PART 3
- 26
- STARTING RACES
Rule 26 is changed to:
Races shall be started by using the following signals. Times shall be taken from the visual signals; the absence of a sound signal shall be disregarded.
Minutes before starting signal Visual signal Sound
signalMeans 3 Class flag One Warning signal 2 U or black flag One Preparatory signal 1 U or black flag removed One long One minute 0 Class flag removed One Starting signal
- F4
- CHANGES TO THE RULES OF PART 4
- 42.2
- Exceptions
- (a)
- A kiteboard may be propelled by unassisted actions of the competitor on the kiteboard.
- (b)
- A competitor may swim, walk or paddle while capsized or recovering, provided that the kiteboard does not gain a significant advantage in the race.
- (c)
- Any means of propulsion may be used to help a person or another vessel in danger.
- 43
- EXONERATION
Rule 43.1(c) is changed to:
- (c)
- A right-of-way kiteboard, 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, injury or a tangle.
- (d)
- When a kiteboard breaks rule 15 and there is no contact, she is exonerated for her breach.
- 44.1
- Taking a Penalty
A kiteboard may take a One-Turn Penalty when she may have broken one or more rules of Part 2 or rule 31 in an incident while racing. Alternatively, the notice of race or sailing instructions may specify the use of the Scoring Penalty or some other penalty, in which case the specified penalty shall replace the One-Turn Penalty. However,
- (a)
- when a kiteboard may have broken a rule of Part 2 and rule 31 in the same incident she need not take the penalty for breaking rule 31; and
- (b)
- if the kiteboard caused injury,serious damage or a tangle or, despite taking a penalty, gained a significant advantage or caused significant disadvantage to the other kiteboard in the race or series by her breach, her penalty shall be to retire.
- 44.2
- One-Turn Penalty
After getting well clear of other kiteboards as soon after the incident as possible, a kiteboard takes a One-Turn Penalty by promptly making one turn with her hull appendage in the water. The turn shall include one completed tack and one completed gybe. When a kiteboard takes the penalty at or near the finishing line, her hull and competitor shall be completely on the course side of the line before she finishes.
- 50
- COMPETITOR CLOTHING AND EQUIPMENT
Rule 50.1(a) is changed to:
- (a)
- Competitors shall not wear or carry clothing or equipment for the purpose of increasing their weight. However, a competitor may wear a drinking container that shall have a capacity of at least one litre and weigh no more than 1.5 kilograms when full.
PART 4 RULES DELETED
- Rules 45, 48, 49, 50.2, 51, 52, 54, 55 and 56.1 are deleted.
- F5
- CHANGES TO THE RULES OF PART 5
- 61
- PROTEST REQUIREMENTS
Rule 61.1(a) is changed to:
- (a)
- The protesting kiteboard shall inform the other kiteboard at the first reasonable opportunity. When her protest will concern an incident in the racing area, she shall hail ‘Protest’ at the first reasonable opportunity. However,
- (1)
- if the other kiteboard is beyond hailing distance, the protesting kiteboard need not hail but she shall inform the other kiteboard at the first reasonable opportunity;
- (2)
- no red flag need be displayed;
- (3)
- if the incident was an error by the other kiteboard in sailing the course, she need not hail but she shall inform the other kiteboard before that kiteboard finishes or at the first reasonable opportunity after she finishes;
- (4)
- if at the time of the incident it is obvious to the protesting kiteboard that either competitor is in danger, or that injury, serious damage or a tangle resulted, the requirements of this rule do not apply to her, but she shall attempt to inform the other kiteboard within the time limit of rule 61.3.
- 64
- DECISIONS
Add new rule 64.2(c):
- (c)
- if a kiteboard has broken a rule and, as a result, caused a tangle for the second or subsequent time during the event, her penalty shall be a disqualification that is not excludable.
- (a)
- When the protest committee finds that deviations in excess of acceptable manufacturing tolerances were caused by damage or normal wear and do not improve the performance of the kiteboard, it shall not penalize her. However, the kiteboard shall not race again until the deviations have been corrected, except when the protest committee decides there is or has been no reasonable opportunity to do so.
- (b)
- When the protest committee is in doubt about any matter concerning the measurement of a kiteboard, the interpretation of a class rule, or a matter involving damage to a kiteboard, it shall refer its questions, together with the relevant facts, to an authority responsible for interpreting the rule. In making its decision, the committee shall be bound by the reply of the authority.
- F8
- CHANGES TO APPENDIX A
- A1
- NUMBER OF RACES; OVERALL SCORES
Rule A1 is changed to:
The number of races scheduled and the number required to be completed to constitute a series shall be stated in the notice of race or sailing instructions. If an event includes more than one discipline or format, the notice of race or sailing instructions shall state how the overall scores are to be calculated.
- F9
- CHANGES TO APPENDIX G
Appendix G is changed to:
Appendix G – Identification
- G1
- Every kiteboard shall be identified as follows:
- (a)
- Each competitor shall be provided with and wear a bib with a personal competition number of no more than three digits. The bib shall be worn as intended with the competition number clearly displayed.
- (b)
- The numbers shall be displayed as high as possible on the front, back and sleeves of the bib. They should be at least 20 cm tall on the back and at least 6 cm tall on the front and the sleeves.
- (c)
- The numbers shall be Arabic numerals, all of the same solid colour, clearly legible and in a commercially available typeface giving the same or better legibility as Helvetica. The colour of the numbers shall contrast with the colour of the bib.
- G1.1
- Identification
Every boat of a World Sailing Class shall carry on her mainsail and, as provided in rule G1.3(c) for letters and numbers only, on her spinnaker and headsail
- (a)
- the insignia denoting her class;
- (b)
- at all international events, except when the boats are provided to all competitors, national letters denoting her national authority from the table below. For the purposes of this rule, international events are World Sailing events, world and continental championships, and events described as international events in their notices of race and sailing instructions; and
- (c)
- a sail number of no more than four digits allotted by her national authority or, when so required by the class rules, by the class association. The four-digit limitation does not apply to classes whose World Sailing membership or recognition took effect before 1 April 1997. Alternatively, if permitted in the class rules, an owner may be allotted a personal sail number by the relevant issuing authority, which may be used on all his boats in that class.
-
- Sails measured before 31 March 1999 shall comply with rule G1.1 or with the rules applicable at the time of measurement.
Note: An up-to-date version of the table below is available on the World Sailing website.
- Sails measured before 31 March 1999 shall comply with rule G1.1 or with the rules applicable at the time of measurement.
- NATIONAL SAIL LETTERS
National authority Letters National authority Letters Algeria ALG Libya LBA American Samoa ASA Liechtenstein LIE Andorra AND Lithuania LTU Angola ANG Luxembourg LUX Antigua ANT Macau, China MAC Argentina ARG Madagascar MAD Armenia ARM Malaysia MAS Aruba ARU Malta MLT Australia AUS Mauritius MRI Austria AUT Mexico MEX Azerbaijan AZE Moldova MDA Bahamas BAH Monaco MON Bahrain BRN Montenegro MNE Barbados BAR Montserrat MNT Belarus BLR Morocco MAR Belgium BEL Mozambique MOZ Belize BIZ Myanmar MYA Bermuda BER Namibia NAM Botswana BOT Netherlands NED Brazil BRA Netherlands Antilles AHO British Virgin Islands IVB New Zealand NZL Brunei Darussalam BRU Nigeria NGR Bulgaria BUL North Macedonia MKD Cambodia CAM Norway NOR Canada CAN Oman OMA Cayman Islands CAY Pakistan PAK Chile CHI Palestine PLE China, PR CHN Panama PAN Chinese Taipei TPE Papua New Guinea PNG Colombia COL Paraguay PAR Cook Islands COK Peru PER Croatia CRO Philippines PHI Cuba CUB Poland POL Cyprus CYP Portugal POR Czech Republic CZE Puerto Rico PUR Denmark DEN Qatar QAT Djibouti DJI Romania ROU Dominican Republic DOM Russia RUS Ecuador ECU Samoa SAM Egypt EGY San Marino SMR El Salvador ESA Senegal SEN Estonia EST Serbia SRB Fiji FIJ Seychelles SEY Finland FIN Singapore SGP France FRA Slovak Republic SVK Georgia GEO Slovenia SLO Germany GER South Africa RSA Great Britain GBR Spain ESP Greece GRE Sri Lanka SRI Grenada GRN St. Kitts & Nevis SKN Guam GUM St. Lucia LCA Guatemala GUA Sudan SUD Hong Kong, China HKG Sweden SWE Hungary HUN Switzerland SUI Iceland ISL Tahiti TAH India IND Tanzania TAN Indonesia INA Thailand THA Iran IRN Timor Leste TLS Iraq IRQ Trinidad & Tobago TTO Ireland IRL Tunisia TUN Israel ISR Turkey TUR Italy ITA Turks & Caicos TKS Jamaica JAM Uganda UGA Japan JPN Ukraine UKR Kazakhstan KAZ United Arab Emirates UAE Kenya KEN United States of America USA Korea, DPR PRK Uruguay URU Korea, Republic of KOR US Virgin Islands ISV Kosovo KOS Vanuatu VAN Kuwait KUW Venezuela VEN Kyrgyzstan KGZ Vietnam VIE Latvia LAT Zimbabwe ZIM Lebanon LIB
- G1.2
- Specifications
- (a)
- National letters and sail numbers shall be:
- (1)
- in capital letters and Arabic numerals,
- (2)
- of the same colour,
- (3)
- of a contrasting colour to the body of the sail, and
- (4)
- of a sans-serif typeface.
- (b)
- The height of characters and space between adjoining characters on the same and opposite sides of the sail shall be related to the boat’s overall length as follows:
Overall length Minimum height Minimum space
between characters
and from edge of sailUnder 3.5 m 230 mm 45 mm 3.5 m - 8.5 m 300 mm 60 mm 8.5 m - 11 m 375 mm 75 mm Over 11 m 450 mm 90 mm
- G1.3
- Positioning
Class insignia, national letters and sail numbers shall be positioned as follows:
- (a)
- General
- (1)
- Class insignia, national letters and sail numbers, where applicable, shall be placed on both sides and such that those on the starboard side are uppermost.
- (2)
- National letters shall be placed above the sail numbers on each side of the sail.
- (b)
- Mainsails
- (1)
- The class insignia, national letters and sail numbers shall, if possible, be wholly above an arc whose centre is the head point and whose radius is 60% of the leech length.
- (2)
- The class insignia shall be placed above the national letters. If the class insignia is of a design that it may be placed back to back, then it may be so placed.
- (c)
- Headsails and Spinnakers
- (1)
- National letters and sail numbers are only required on a headsail whose foot length is greater than 1.3 x foretriangle base.
- (2)
- The national letters and sail numbers of headsails shall be displayed wholly below an arc whose centre is the head point and whose radius is 50% of the luff length and, if possible, wholly above an arc whose radius is 75% of the luff length.
- (3)
- The national letters and sail number shall be displayed on the front side of a spinnaker but may be placed on both sides. They shall be displayed wholly below an arc whose centre is the head point and whose radius is 40% of the foot median and, if possible, wholly above an arc whose radius is 60% of the foot median.
- G2
- OTHER BOATS
Other boats shall comply with the rules of their national authority or class association in regard to the allotment, carrying and size of insignia, letters and numbers. Such rules shall, when practicable, conform to the above requirements.
US Sailing prescribes that unless otherwise stated in her class rules, the sails of a boat that is not in a World Sailing Class shall comply with rule G1. However, offshore racing boats not in a class that is subject to rule G1 shall carry numbers allotted by US Sailing on mainsails, spinnakers and each overlapping headsail having a luff-perpendicular measurement exceeding 130% of the base of the foretriangle. This rule applies only to a boat whose owner’s national authority is US Sailing. Go to rules.ussailing.org and click the ‘Sail Numbers’ link for the full text of the Sail Numbering System for offshore racing boats in the United States and for an application for a sail number.
See rule 50. This appendix shall not be changed by the notice of race, sailing instructions or prescriptions of national authorities.
- H1
- Items of clothing and equipment to be weighed shall be arranged on a rack. After being saturated in water the items shall be allowed to drain freely for one minute before being weighed. The rack must allow the items to hang as they would hang from clothes hangers, so as to allow the water to drain freely. Pockets that have drain-holes that cannot be closed shall be empty, but pockets or items that can hold water shall be full.
See rules 89.2 and 90.2. In this appendix, the term ‘event’ includes a race or series of races.
A rule in the notice of race need not be repeated in the sailing instructions.
Care should be taken to ensure that there is no conflict between rules in the notice of race, the sailing instructions or any other document that governs the event.
- J1.2
-
The notice of race shall include any of the following that will apply:
- (4)
- categorization or classification requirements that some or all competitors must satisfy;
- (a)
- for sailor categorization (see rule 79 and the World Sailing Sailor Categorization Code), or
- (b)
- for functional classification for Para World Sailing events (see World Sailing Para Classification Rules);
- J1.3
- The notice of race shall include any of the following that will apply and that would help competitors decide whether to attend the event or that conveys other information they will need before the sailing instructions become available:
-
- (5)
- the scoring system, if different from the system in Appendix A, included by reference to class rules or other rules governing the event, or stated in full. State the number of races scheduled and the minimum number that must be completed to constitute a series. If appropriate, for a series where the number of starters may vary substantially, state that rule A5.3 applies;
-
NOTICE OF RACE GUIDE
Previously Appendix K
SAILING INSTRUCTIONS GUIDE
Previously Appendix L
These guides, updated to conform to the rules in this edition of The Racing Rules of Sailing, are available, in various formats, at the World Sailing website at sailing.org/racingrules/documents. National authorities are encouraged to translate the guides, and World Sailing will make translated versions available at that website.
The guides, which will have a two-letter designation starting with ‘K’ or ‘L’, may be downloaded either as PDF documents or as Word documents. This will enable users to easily and quickly create, using the tested wording in the guides, either the notice of race or the sailing instructions, or both, for a particular event.
Suggestions for improving these guides are welcome and should be sent to rules@sailing.org.
This appendix is advisory only; in some circumstances changing these procedures may be advisable. It is addressed primarily to protest committee chairmen but may also help judges, protest committee secretaries, race committees and others connected with protest and redress hearings.
In a protest or redress hearing, the protest committee should weigh all testimony with equal care; should recognize that honest testimony can vary, and even be in conflict, as a result of different observations and recollections; should resolve such differences as best it can; should recognize that no boat or competitor is guilty until a breach of a rule has been established to the satisfaction of the protest committee; and should keep an open mind until all the evidence has been heard as to whether a boat or competitor has broken a rule.
- M2.1
-
Make sure that
- •
- each party has a copy of or the opportunity to read the protest, request for redress or allegation and has had reasonable time to prepare for the hearing.
- •
- only one person from each boat (or party) is present unless an interpreter is needed.
- •
- all boats and people involved are represented. If they are not, however, the committee may proceed under rule 63.3(b).
- •
- boats’ representatives were on board when required (rule 63.3(a)). When the parties were in different events, both organizing authorities must accept the composition of the protest committee (rule 63.8). In a protest concerning class rules, obtain the current class rules and identify the authority responsible for interpreting them (rule 64.4(b)).
- M2.3
- Assess conflicts of interest.
- •
- Ensure that all protest committee members declare any possible conflicts of interest. At major events this will often be a formal written declaration made before the event starts that will be kept with the protest committee records.
- •
- At the start of any hearing, ensure that the parties are aware of any conflicts of interest of protest committee members. Ask the parties if they consent to the members. If a party does not object as soon as possible after a conflict of interest has been declared, the protest committee may take this as consent to proceed and should record it.
- •
- If a party objects to a member, the remainder of the protest committee members need to assess whether the conflict of interest is significant. The assessment will consider the level of the event, the level of the conflict and the perception of fairness. It may be acceptable to balance conflicts between protest committee members. Guidance may be found on the World Sailing website. Record the decision and the grounds for that decision.
- •
- In cases of doubt it may be preferable to proceed with a smaller protest committee. Except for hearings under rule 69, there is no minimum number of protest committee members required.
- •
- When a request for redress is made under rule 62.1(a) and is based on an improper action or omission of a body other than the protest committee, a member of that body should not be a member of the protest committee.
- M3.1
- Check the validity of the protest or request for redress.
- •
- Are the contents adequate (rule 61.2 or 62)?
- •
- Was it delivered in time? If not, is there good reason to extend the time limit (rule 61.3 or 62.2)?
- •
- When required, was the protestor involved in or a witness to the incident (rule 60.1(a))?
- •
- When necessary, was ‘Protest’ hailed and, if required, a red flag displayed correctly (rule 61.1(a))?
- •
- When the flag or hail was not necessary, was the protestee informed?
- •
- Decide whether the protest or request for redress is valid (rule 63.5).
- •
- Once the validity of the protest or request has been determined, do not let the subject be introduced again unless truly new evidence is available.
- M3.2
- Take the evidence (rule 63.6).
-
- •
- Ask the protestor and then the protestee to tell their stories. Then allow them to question one another. In a redress matter, ask the party to state the request.
- •
- Make sure you know what facts each party is alleging before calling any witnesses. Their stories may be different.
- •
- Allow anyone, including a boat’s crew, to give evidence. It is the party who normally decides which witnesses to call, although the protest committee may also call witnesses (rule 63.6(a)). The question asked by a party ‘Would you like to hear N?’ is best answered by ‘It is your choice.’
- •
- Call each party’s witnesses (and the protest committee’s if any) one by one. Limit parties to questioning the witness(es). (They may wander into general statements.)
- •
- Invite the protestee to question the protestor’s witness first (and vice versa). This prevents the protestor from leading his witness from the beginning.
- •
- Allow members of the protest committee who saw the incident to give evidence (rule 63.6(b)), but only while the parties are present. Members who give evidence may be questioned, should take care to relate all they know about the incident that could affect the decision, and may remain on the protest committee (rule 63.3(a)).
- •
- Try to prevent leading questions, but if that is impossible discount the evidence so obtained.
- •
- The protest committee chairman should advise a party or a witness giving hearsay, repetitive or irrelevant evidence that the protest committee must give such evidence appropriate weight, which may be little or no weight at all.
- •
- Accept written evidence from a witness who is not available to be questioned only if all parties agree. In doing so they forego their rights to question that witness (rule 63.6(c)).
- •
- Ask one member of the committee to note down evidence, particularly times, distances, speeds, etc.
- •
- Invite questions from protest committee members.
- •
- Invite first the protestor and then the protestee to make a final statement of her case, particularly on any application or interpretation of the rules.
-
- M3.5
- Inform the parties (rule 65).
- •
- Recall the parties and read them the facts found, conclusions and rules that apply, and the decision. When time presses it is permissible to read the decision and give the details later.
- •
- Give any party a copy of the decision on request. File the protest or request for redress with the committee records.
- M4.1
- When a party, within the time limit, has asked for a hearing to be reopened, hear the party making the request, look at any video, etc., and decide whether there is any significant new evidence that might lead you to change your decision. Decide whether your interpretation of the rules may have been wrong; be open-minded as to whether you have made a mistake. If none of these applies refuse to reopen; otherwise schedule a hearing
- M4.2
- Evidence is ‘new’
- •
- if it was not reasonably possible for the party asking for the reopening to have discovered the evidence before the original hearing,
- •
- if the protest committee is satisfied that before the original hearing the evidence was diligently but unsuccessfully sought by the party asking for the reopening, or
- •
- if the protest committee learns from any source that the evidence was not available to the parties at the time of the original hearing.
- M5.1
- An action under this rule is not a protest, but the protest committee gives its allegations in writing to the competitor before the hearing. The hearing is conducted under rules similar to those governing a protest hearing but the protest committee must have at least three members (rule 69.2(a)). Use the greatest care to protect the competitor’s rights.
- M5.3
- Unless World Sailing has appointed a person for the role, the protest committee may appoint a person to present the allegation. This person might be a race official, the person making the allegation or other appropriate person. When no reasonable alternative person is available, a person who was appointed as a member of the protest committee may present the allegation.
- M5.6
- When a protest committee upholds a rule 69 allegation it will need to consider if it is appropriate to report to either a national authority or World Sailing. Guidance on when to report may be found in the World Sailing Case Book. When the protest committee does make a report it may recommend whether or not further action should be taken.
- M6
- APPEALS (rule 70 and Appendix R)
When decisions can be appealed,
- •
- retain the papers relevant to the hearing so that the information can easily be used for an appeal. Is there a diagram endorsed or prepared by the protest committee? Are the facts found sufficient? (Example: Was there an overlap? Yes or No. ‘Perhaps’ is not a fact found.) Are the names of the protest committee members and other important information on the form?
- •
- comments by the protest committee on any appeal should enable the appeals committee to picture the whole incident clearly; the appeals committee knows nothing about the situation.
- M7
-
PHOTOGRAPHIC EVIDENCEPhotographs and videos can sometimes provide useful evidence but protest committees should recognize their limitations and note the following points:
- •
- The party producing the photographic evidence is responsible for arranging the viewing.
- •
- View the video several times to extract all the information from it.
- •
- The depth perception of any single-lens camera is very poor; with a telephoto lens it is non-existent. When the camera views two overlapped boats at right angles to their course, it is impossible to assess the distance between them. When the camera views them head on, it is impossible to see whether an overlap exists unless it is substantial.
- Ask the following questions:
- •
- Where was the camera in relation to the boats?
- •
- Was the camera’s platform moving? If so in what direction and how fast?
- •
- Is the angle changing as the boats approach the critical point? Fast panning causes radical change.
- •
- Did the camera have an unrestricted view throughout?
See rules 70.5 and 91(b). This appendix shall not be changed by the notice of race, sailing instructions or national prescriptions.
- N1.1
- An international jury shall be composed of experienced sailors with excellent knowledge of the racing rules and extensive protest committee experience. It shall be independent of and have no members from the race committee or the technical committee, and it shall be appointed by the organizing authority, subject to approval by the national authority if required (see rule 91(b)), or by World Sailing under rule 89.2(c).
- N1.4
-
- (b)
- The chairman of a jury may appoint panels of at least three members each, of which the majority shall be International Judges. Members of each panel shall be from at least three different national authorities except in Groups M, N and Q, where they shall be from at least two different national authorities. If dissatisfied with a panel’s decision, a party is entitled to a hearing by a panel composed in compliance with rules N1.1, N1.2 and N1.3, except concerning the facts found, if requested within 30 minutes or the time limit specified in the sailing instructions.
- N1.5
- When a full jury, or a panel, has fewer than five members, because of illness or emergency, and no qualified replacements are available, it remains properly constituted if it consists of at least three members and if at least two of them are International Judges. When there are three or four members they shall be from at least three different national authorities except in Groups M, N and Q, where they shall be from at least two different national authorities.
- N1.6
- When it is considered desirable that some members not participate in discussing and deciding a protest or request for redress, and no qualified replacements are available, the jury or panel remains properly constituted if at least three members remain and at least two of them are International Judges.
- N1.7
- In exception to rules N1.1 and N1.2, World Sailing may in limited circumstances (see World Sailing Regulation 25.8.13) authorize an international jury consisting of a total of only three members. All members shall be International Judges. The members shall be from three different national authorities (two, in Groups M, N and Q). The authorization shall be stated in a letter of approval to the organizing authority and in the notice of race or sailing instructions, and the letter shall be posted on the official notice board.
- N2.1
- An international jury is responsible for hearing and deciding all protests, requests for redress and other matters arising under the rules of Part 5. When asked by the organizing authority, the race committee or the technical committee, it shall advise and assist them on any matter directly affecting the fairness of the competition.
- N3.1
- Members shall not be regarded as having a significant conflict of interest (see rule 63.4) by reason of their nationality, club membership or similar. When otherwise considering a significant conflict of interest as required by rule 63.4, considerable weight must be given to the fact that decisions of an international jury cannot be appealed and this may affect the perception of fairness and lower the level of conflict that is significant. In case of doubt, the hearing should proceed as permitted by rule N1.6.
- N4.2
- A person shall be responsible for presenting to the hearing panel any allegations of misconduct under rule 69. This person shall not be a member of the hearing panel but may be a member of the jury. Such a person shall be required to make full disclosure of all material that may come into his possession in the course of his investigation to the person subject to allegations of a breach of rule 69.
All or part of this appendix applies only if the notice of race or sailing instructions so state.
- P1.2
- An observer appointed under rule P1.1 who sees a boat breaking rule 42 may penalize her by, as soon as reasonably possible, making a sound signal, pointing a yellow flag at her and hailing her sail number, even if she is no longer racing. A boat so penalized shall not be penalized a second time under rule 42 for the same incident.
- P2.3
- Third and Subsequent Penalties
When a boat is penalized a third or subsequent time during the event, she shall promptly retire. If she does so her penalty shall be disqualification without a hearing and her score shall not be excluded. If she fails to do so her penalty shall be disqualification without a hearing from all races in the event, with no score excluded, and the protest committee shall consider calling a hearing under rule 69.2.
- If a boat has been penalized under rule P1.2 and the race committee signals a postponement, general recall or abandonment, the penalty is cancelled, but it is still counted to determine the number of times she has been penalized during the event.
- P5.2
- Before the Starting Signal
- (b)
- If the wind speed becomes less than the specified limit after flag O has been displayed, the race committee may postpone the race. Then, before or with a new warning signal, the committee shall display either flag R, to signal that rule 42 as changed by the class rules applies, or flag O, as provided in rule P5.2(a).
- See rules 70 and 71. This appendix replaces Appendix R as adopted by World Sailing for the purpose of creating a two-level appeals system. The US Sailing Appeals Committee acts as the national authority under rule 71.
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) on the appeals system and their answers, including advice on how to prepare an appeal, can be found on the US Sailing website. Go to appeals.ussailing.org and click the ‘Appeals FAQ’ link.
- R1.1
- Send appeals, requests and the US Sailing Appeals & Requests Information Form (see rule R2.2) by email to the US Sailing Race Administration Director at submitappeal@ussailing.org. For more information about submitting appeal documents, call US Sailing at
1 (800) US SAIL-1 — (1 800 877 2451).
- R1.2
- Except as provided in rule R1.4, the Director will forward an appeal of a decision of a protest committee, an appeal under rule 70.1(b) or a request by a protest committee for confirmation or correction of its decision to the association appeals committee for the place in which the event was held. However, such an appeal or request arising from an event conducted under the procedural rules of the Intercollegiate Sailing Association or the Interscholastic Sailing Association will be forwarded to the association appeals committee for the ICSA and ISSA.
- R2.1
-
- (a)
- To appeal the decision of a protest committee or an association appeals committee, no later than 15 days after receiving the written decision being appealed or a protest committee’s decision not to reopen a hearing, the appellant shall send an appeal and a copy of the decision being appealed to US Sailing. The appeal shall state why the appellant believes that committee’s decision or its procedures were incorrect;
- (b)
- To appeal when the hearing required by rule 63.1 has not been held within 30 days after a protest or request for redress was delivered, the appellant shall, within a further 15 days, send an appeal with a copy of the protest or request and any relevant correspondence. The appeals committee to which the appeal is forwarded shall extend the time if there is good reason to do so; or
- R2.2
- The appellant shall also send, with the appeal or as soon as possible thereafter, the US Sailing Appeals & Requests Information Form. To obtain the form, go to appeals.ussailing.org and click the ‘Information Form’ link. The form requests all of the following documents and information available:
- (c)
- a diagram, prepared or endorsed by the protest committee, that shows
- (1)
- the positions of all boats involved at relevant times, and their tracks;
- (2)
- the course to the next mark and its required side;
- (3)
- the speed and direction of the wind;
- (4)
- any relevant mark, obstruction or zone; and
- (5)
- if relevant, the depth of the water and the speed and direction of any current;
- R2.3
- To request confirmation or correction of its decision, a protest committee or association appeals committee shall, no later than 15 days after making its decision, send to US Sailing a copy of its decision, the US Sailing Appeals & Requests Information Form, and all relevant documents and comments (see rule R2.2).
- R2.4
- To request an interpretation of the rules, a club or other organization affiliated to US Sailing shall send its request to US Sailing. The request shall include assumed facts and be endorsed by an officer of the club or organization. A US Sailing committee is considered to be an organization affiliated to US Sailing.
- R3.1
- If the appeal or request is being made to an association appeals committee (see rule R1.2), US Sailing charges no fee for forwarding that appeal or request. However, an association appeals committee may charge a fee, in which case the association appeals committee will send a notice to the appellant (or, for a request, to the protest committee) stating the fee, to whom the fee is payable, and the address to which the fee must be sent.
- R3.3
- A fee of $25 is charged for a request for an interpretation of the rules, but there is no fee for such a request from a US Sailing committee. There is no fee for a request from an association appeals committee for confirmation or correction of its decision. There is no fee for an appeal under rule 70.1(b).
- Upon receipt of an appeal, the appeals committee shall send a copy of the appeal to the committee whose decision is being appealed, asking it for any documents required by rule R2.2 not supplied by the appellant.
- R5.1
- Protest Committee
A protest committee whose decision is being appealed shall supply the documents requested under rule R4 and any facts or other information requested under rule R5.4. If directed to do so by the appeals committee, it shall conduct a hearing, or reopen the hearing, of the protest or request for redress, or conduct a hearing to consider redress.
- R5.3
- US Sailing Appeals Committee
The US Sailing Appeals Committee shall send to all parties to the hearing, to the protest committee and to the association appeals committee whose decision is being appealed or reviewed, copies of all relevant documents, comments and clarifications it has received, except those supplied by that party or committee.
- R5.4
- Facts and Other Information
- (b)
- When an appeals committee decides that the facts found by the protest committee are inadequate, or that it needs other information, the appeals committee shall require the protest committee to
- Title
- provide additional facts or information, or
- Title
- reopen the hearing and report any new facts or information
- The protest committee shall promptly do so and respond in writing.
- R6
- COMMENTS
The parties to the hearing, the protest committee and, if relevant, the association appeals committee may make comments on the appeal or request, on any of the documents listed in rule R2.2, and on any clarifications received under rule R7.2(d). Comments shall be sent in writing to the appeals committee no later than 15 days after the party or committee receives the document. The appeals committee need not consider comments sent after that time or comments on comments.
- R8
- EXPEDITED APPEALS
An expedited appeals process, which can only be used at US Sailing Protected Competitions (see US Sailing Regulation 12.03), can be found on the US Sailing website. Go to appeals.ussailing.org and click the ‘Expedited Appeals’ link.
This appendix applies only if the notice of race so states.
These Standard Sailing Instructions may be used at an event in place of printed sailing instructions made available to each boat. To use them, state in the notice of race that ‘The sailing instructions will consist of the instructions in RRS Appendix S, Standard Sailing Instructions, and supplementary sailing instructions that will be posted on the official notice board located at _____.’
The supplementary sailing instructions will include:
- The location of the race office and of the flag pole on which signals made ashore will be displayed (see SI 4.1 below).
- A table showing the schedule of races, including the day and date of each scheduled day of racing, the number of races scheduled each day, the scheduled time of the first warning signal each day, and the latest time for a warning signal on the last scheduled day of racing (SI 5).
- A list of the marks that will be used and a description of each one (SI 8). How new marks will differ from original marks (SI 10).
- The time limits, if any, that are listed in SI 12.
- Any changes or additions to the instructions in this appendix.
A copy of the supplementary sailing instructions will be available to competitors on request.
SAILING INSTRUCTIONS
- 1
- RULES
- 1.1
- The event will be governed by the rules as defined in The Racing Rules of Sailing.
- 2
- NOTICES TO COMPETITORS
- 2.1
- Notices to competitors will be posted on the official notice board.
- 2.2
- Supplementary sailing instructions (called ‘the supplement’ below) will be posted on the official notice board.
- 3
- CHANGES TO SAILING INSTRUCTIONS
- 3.1
- Any change to the sailing instructions will be posted before 0800 on the day it will take effect, unless this time is changed in the supplement. Any change to the schedule of races will be posted by 2000 on the day before it will take effect.
- 4
- SIGNALS MADE ASHORE
- 4.1
- Signals made ashore will be displayed from the flag pole. The supplement will state its location.
- 5
- SCHEDULE OF RACES
- 5.1
- The supplement will include a table showing the days, dates, number of races scheduled, the scheduled times of the first warning signal each day, and the latest time for a warning signal on the last scheduled day of racing.
- 5.2
- To alert boats that a race or sequence of races will begin soon, the orange starting line flag will be displayed with one sound at least five minutes before a warning signal is made.
- 6
- CLASS FLAGS
- 6.1
- Each class flag will be the class insignia on a plain background or as stated in the supplement.
- 7
- THE COURSES
- 7.1
- No later than the warning signal, the race committee will designate the course, and it may also display the approximate compass bearing of the first leg.
- 7.2
- The course diagrams are on the pages following SI 13. They show the courses, the order in which marks are to be passed, and the side on which each mark is to be left. The supplement may include additional courses.
- 8
- MARKS
- 8.1
- A list of the marks that will be used, including a description of each one, will be included in the supplement.
- 9
- THE START
- 9.1
- Races will be started by using RRS 26.
- 9.2
- The starting line will be between a staff displaying an orange flag on the race committee vessel and the course side of the starting mark.
- 10
- CHANGE OF THE NEXT LEG OF THE COURSE
- 10.1
- To change the next leg of the course, the race committee will lay a new mark (or move the finishing line) and remove the original mark as soon as practicable. When in a subsequent change a new mark is replaced, it will be replaced by an original mark.
- 11
- THE FINISH
- 11.1
- The finishing line will be between a staff displaying a blue flag on the race committee vessel and the course side of the finishing mark.
- 12
- TIME LIMITS
- 12.1
- The supplement will state which of the following time limits, if any, will apply and, for each, the time limit.
- •
- Mark 1 Time Limit Time limit for the first boat to pass Mark 1.
- •
- Race Time Limit Time limit for the first boat to start, sail the course and finish.
- •
- Finishing Window Time limit for boats to finish after the first boat starts, sails the course and finishes.
- 12.2
- If no boat has passed Mark 1 within the Mark 1 Time Limit, the race shall be abandoned.
- 12.3
- Boats failing to finish within the Finishing Window shall be scored Did Not Finish without a hearing. This changes RRS 35, A5.1 and A5.2.
- 13
- PROTESTS AND REQUESTS FOR REDRESS
- 13.1
- Hearing request forms are available at the race office. Protests and requests for redress or reopening shall be delivered there within the appropriate time limit.
- 13.2
- For each class, the protest time limit is 60 minutes after the last boat has finished the last race of the day or the race committee signals no more racing today, whichever is later.
- 13.3
- Notices will be posted no later than 30 minutes after the protest time limit to inform competitors of hearings in which they are parties or named as witnesses and where the hearings will be held.
- 13.4
- Notices of protests by the race committee, technical committee or protest committee will be posted to inform boats under RRS 61.1(b).
COURSE DIAGRAMS
This appendix applies only if the notice of race or sailing instructions so state.
Arbitration adds an extra step to the protest resolution process but can eliminate the need for some protest hearings, thus speeding up the process for events in which many protests are expected. Arbitration may not be appropriate for all events as it requires an additional knowledgeable person to act as the arbitrator. Further guidance on arbitration can be found in the World Sailing Judges Manual, which can be downloaded from the World Sailing website.
- T2
- ARBITRATION MEETING
An arbitration meeting will be held prior to a protest hearing for each incident resulting in a protest by a boat involving one or more rules of Part 2 or rule 31, but only if each party is represented by a person who was on board at the time of the incident. No witnesses will be permitted. However, if the arbitrator decides that rule 44.1(b) may apply or that arbitration is not appropriate, the meeting will not be held, and if a meeting is in progress, it will be closed.
- US Sailing prescribes that when the notice of race or sailing instructions so state the Audible-Signal Racing System described below shall be used. It is recommended primarily for small-boat racing or when race committee resources are limited. Rules in this appendix replace rule 26 and permit changes to Race Signals and the corresponding rules in Part 3.
- U3
-
The starting sequence shall consist of the following sound signals made at the indicated times. These signals shall be timed from their commencement and shall govern, even if visual signals are also used.
Signal Sound Time before start Attention Series of short sounds Before the warning Warning 3 long 3 minutes Preparatory 2 long 2 minutes 1 long, 3 short 1 minute, 30 seconds 1 long 1 minute 3 short 30 seconds 2 short 20 seconds 1 short 10 seconds 5 short, 1 second apart 5 – 4 – 3 – 2 – 1 seconds Starting 1 long 0
This appendix is a US Sailing prescription.
Rules V1 and V2 provide alternative penalties that encourage competitors to take a penalty when they may have broken one or more rules of Part 2 or rule 31 in an incident. One or both of these rules apply only if the notice of race or sailing instructions so state. When rule V2 applies it does not replace any penalty that may be taken under rule 44.1.
Please report your experiences with and evaluations of these rules to US Sailing by sending an email to rules@ussailing.org.
- V1
- PENALTY AT THE TIME OF AN INCIDENT
The first two sentences of rule 44.1 are changed to: ‘A boat may take a One-Turn Penalty when she may have broken one or more rules of Part 2 or rule 31 in an incident while racing. However, when she may have broken one or more rules of Part 2 while in the zone around a mark other than a starting mark, her penalty shall be a Two-Turns Penalty.’