I was once told by a small-boat racer in a championship class of a local yacht club here in So. Cal. that the "game" of winning in such races is to push the boat to the limit of where it can go (= speed) w/o "wiping out." Essentially, the winning boats are often on the very verge of wiping out at any time and whether they do or not depends on crew skill and probably some luck. I recalled this once when reading from a book entitled: Embarcadero: True Tales of Sea Adventure 1849-1906 by Richard Dillon. I don't recall the chapter but probably the one on Clipper Ships where the best (and most famous) skippers/captains were those who made the fastest transits, naturally. How did they do this? All other things being equal by keeping up a lot of sail--essentially, always as much as the ship could bear w/o cracking a yard or springing a mast, etc. Ah!--- I thought to myself--the origin of modern sailboat racing!! The best skippers apparently knew what the boat (and crew) could take and put it, and them, always on the edge of it "to win." In comparison, whether or not a race boat is being sailed "safely" would therefore, IMHO, be a matter of the personal judgment of the skipper. So, it's not necessarily true that safety is willfully or purposely being "compromised" just b/c a yacht in a race is on or near the edge of its performance capability.