Volvo Ocean Race.... I just lost all respect

Sep 20, 2006
2,953
Hunter 33 Georgian Bay, Ontario, Canada
Ok, I am willing to be corrected here, but, the all-female team SCA blew out their Code 0 in the last leg around Cape Horn and are not permitted to replace it for the next leg.

Meanwhile, Donfeng snapped a mast and had a new one flown in after they limped into Brazil after retiring from the leg. Team Vestas literally drive their boat onto a reef :doh:sustaining major damage to the hull etc. and are rebuilding the boat to rejoin the race.

What am I missing. You can replace masts, hulls, electronics, engines, but the girls can't replace a totally unsafe and blown out sail???? I call bogus on this one. :cussing::cussing::cussing:
 
Sep 8, 2014
2,551
Catalina 22 Swing Keel San Diego
I know squat about Volvo Ocean Race rules (or any sail racing really, lol), but your argument is totally logical, I agree.


Ok, I am willing to be corrected here, but, the all-female team SCA blew out their Code 0 in the last leg around Cape Horn and are not permitted to replace it for the next leg.

Meanwhile, Donfeng snapped a mast and had a new one flown in after they limped into Brazil after retiring from the leg. Team Vestas literally drive their boat onto a reef :doh:sustaining major damage to the hull etc. and are rebuilding the boat to rejoin the race.

What am I missing. You can replace masts, hulls, electronics, engines, but the girls can't replace a totally unsafe and blown out sail???? I call bogus on this one. :cussing::cussing::cussing:
 
Sep 15, 2009
6,244
S2 9.2a Fairhope Al
Ok, I am willing to be corrected here, but, the all-female team SCA blew out their Code 0 in the last leg around Cape Horn and are not permitted to replace it for the next leg.

Meanwhile, Donfeng snapped a mast and had a new one flown in after they limped into Brazil after retiring from the leg. Team Vestas literally drive their boat onto a reef :doh:sustaining major damage to the hull etc. and are rebuilding the boat to rejoin the race.

What am I missing. You can replace masts, hulls, electronics, engines, but the girls can't replace a totally unsafe and blown out sail???? I call bogus on this one. :cussing::cussing::cussing:
hmmmmmmmm makes one think there is a chauvinist pig in the pot somewhere...but then i don't know the rule governing that did they cite a rule as to why this is this way ...if i were the girls i would sail under protest and fly the flag until otherwise
 
Nov 9, 2012
2,500
Oday 192 Lake Nockamixon
I believe the issue is that the teams are limited to a certain number of sails.

Here it is: "In 2014-15, each one-design Volvo Ocean 65 will race around the world with just 12 sails, a major reduction in the inventory from previous races and another significant cost saving introduced as part of the project."

"Just eight race sails are allowed on board, with no (non-repair) recuts and only four replacement sails."

http://www.volvooceanrace.com/en/boat/10_The-sails.html
 
Sep 20, 2006
2,953
Hunter 33 Georgian Bay, Ontario, Canada
I believe the issue is that the teams are limited to a certain number of sails.

Here it is: "In 2014-15, each one-design Volvo Ocean 65 will race around the world with just 12 sails, a major reduction in the inventory from previous races and another significant cost saving introduced as part of the project."

"Just eight race sails are allowed on board, with no (non-repair) recuts and only four replacement sails."

http://www.volvooceanrace.com/en/boat/10_The-sails.html

But how is it saving money for the team if they charter a Jumbo jet to fly in a new mast to Brazil, I'd say a tad more expensive than a Code 0
 
Nov 8, 2010
11,386
Beneteau First 36.7 & 260 Minneapolis MN & Bayfield WI
Racers know how hard they can press sails. If you knew that could replace them, they would ALL go a lot harder on them. It part of the management of your race, and your gear. The SCA gals screwed up when they broke their code, and they know it. DFR was just sailing along when the rig snapped. (I have no defense for Vestas!)

It's not really fair, but its what they all signed up for.

Anyway the RRS state that, and racers know it would be protest-city the rest of the way. Team SCA asked about a new sail, but pretty sure it was a formality.
 
Jan 27, 2008
3,092
ODay 35 Beaufort, NC
The rules were created before the race, there was no foreknowledge of which team might blow out a sail. To think that the rule is somehow discriminatory towards women after the fact makes no sense at all. If it had been a team of men would you have posted this?
 
Sep 15, 2009
6,244
S2 9.2a Fairhope Al
The rules were created before the race, there was no foreknowledge of which team might blow out a sail. To think that the rule is somehow discriminatory towards women after the fact makes no sense at all. If it had been a team of men would you have posted this?
the way the op reads.... it leads one to believe there could be bius ...but that has been cleared up and the protest withdrawn....and yes if it had been a team of men in the same sanario my post would have read there was bius of some sort ....but now that the rule has been cited and cleared up the question there would have been no such post ...male or female..
 

RECESS

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Dec 20, 2003
1,509
Catalina 27 . St. Mary's Georgia
Team SCA has not been doing great in the offshore legs. They have been pushing hard for podium spots and wins in the in port races while other teams are laying back and protecting sails. The teams are panelized pretty hard in points when they do not finish an offshore leg.
 
Nov 6, 2006
10,212
Hunter 34 Mandeville Louisiana
At the risk of sounding as if I am demeaning .. I think they should go ahead and let 'em have a new one. They aren't a threat to anyone's position at this point. I think they've been doing fine, but they aren't in the podium running. .. The guys who broke their mast were probably pushing too hard for conditions as well, but they are allowed a new mast.. Yeah, I know the rules.. but ...
 
Nov 8, 2010
11,386
Beneteau First 36.7 & 260 Minneapolis MN & Bayfield WI
Team SCA has not been doing great in the offshore legs. They have been pushing hard for podium spots and wins in the in port races while other teams are laying back and protecting sails. The teams are panelized pretty hard in points when they do not finish an offshore leg.
The ladies on SCA are GREAT sailors. They results in the in-shore races proves that. But they are NOT great at pushing the boat hard off-shore. The guys are simply willing (or capable) to push just a bit harder, and it shows in the results. They freely admit this. Often in any off-shore race, being in last position at an important point (even by just a little bit) makes you 'miss the bus' when it come to hitting new wind and the distance grows huge and you never make that up unless the fleet compresses later.

There is an old saying/truism in sailboat racing. 'The rich get richer, the poor get poorer'.

The gals broke their sail. It was not wind, or pushing it too hard. They screwed up and auto-gibed, and it took them an hour to recover. The code got trashed in the process.

Like any race, a DNF scores starters+1.
 
Sep 20, 2006
2,953
Hunter 33 Georgian Bay, Ontario, Canada
I've followed Sam Davies since the Vendee Globe few years ago for her determination and spirit handling the grueling conditions while the guys were whining. Dee Caffari has been around the globe solo several times and in the list of very few to go around the world the wrong way. It's not a matter of defending the weaker sex. They're more than capable then half of the crew on the other boats.
 
Sep 20, 2006
2,953
Hunter 33 Georgian Bay, Ontario, Canada
The ladies on SCA are GREAT sailors. They results in the in-shore races proves that. But they are NOT great at pushing the boat hard off-shore. The guys are simply willing (or capable) to push just a bit harder, and it shows in the results. They freely admit this. Often in any off-shore race, being in last position at an important point (even by just a little bit) makes you 'miss the bus' when it come to hitting new wind and the distance grows huge and you never make that up unless the fleet compresses later.

There is an old saying/truism in sailboat racing. 'The rich get richer, the poor get poorer'.

The gals broke their sail. It was not wind, or pushing it too hard. They screwed up and auto-gibed, and it took them an hour to recover. The code got trashed in the process.

Like any race, a DNF scores starters+1.
They admitted they took too long to recover from the jibe, same as 2 (?) other boats, but others pushed on hard afterwards, while the girls regrouped then pushed on. Otherwise would have been closer to contention on the last leg.
 
Nov 8, 2010
11,386
Beneteau First 36.7 & 260 Minneapolis MN & Bayfield WI
I've followed Sam Davies since the Vendee Globe few years ago for her determination and spirit handling the grueling conditions while the guys were whining. Dee Caffari has been around the globe solo several times and in the list of very few to go around the world the wrong way. It's not a matter of defending the weaker sex. They're more than capable then half of the crew on the other boats.
Interesting discussion. I dare say that the Vendee is a much different race than the VOR. It is MUCH more about sailing smart and safe, and taking care of your (notoriously fragile) boat. Even so, over 50% of the fleet ends up dropping out.

The VOR (with its crews and stop-overs, and more durable boats) is sailed much harder.

The ladies freely admit that they have to learn how to push the boat harder.
 
May 4, 2005
4,062
Macgregor 26d Ft Lauderdale, Fl
modify VOR rules to allow replacement of a sail, spar or other major component with a time penalty? Replacement of ripped a storm sail should be allowed, for safety alone.

Super fast pit stop like repairs do favor the better funded teams. A time penalty would help balance that.
 
Sep 10, 2012
231
Hunter 450 Gulfport, Florida
After replacing the spar they are required to return to the point at which they ended the leg to legitimately resume.
 
May 27, 2004
2,059
Hunter 30_74-83 Ponce Inlet FL
So the guys with the wrecked boat (that's now in a Europe drydock) have to have the boat transported back to the Indian ocean to rejoin while the rest of the fleet is in the Atlantic?