Kinda, but not quite. Offending boat in my case was on a port tack, not starboard as all these boats were initially.
The common element is the failure on the part of the second boat's skipper to accept the fact that they we not going to make the mark, and act accordingly.
The second boat to mark was out of control, and in their ardor to make the mark, the following boats just continued sailing into the disaster. Even the boat that tacked to port tacked back to port to avoid the mess tacked back to starboard too soon, and back into the mess.
This is what happens when competitive pressure is so high. Skippers take risks. Momentum and the desire to win trumps good judgement.
The common element is the failure on the part of the second boat's skipper to accept the fact that they we not going to make the mark, and act accordingly.
The second boat to mark was out of control, and in their ardor to make the mark, the following boats just continued sailing into the disaster. Even the boat that tacked to port tacked back to port to avoid the mess tacked back to starboard too soon, and back into the mess.
This is what happens when competitive pressure is so high. Skippers take risks. Momentum and the desire to win trumps good judgement.