CASE 90
Definitions, Sail the Course
Rule 28.1, Sailing the Race
When a boat’s string passes a mark on the required side, she
does not break rule 28.1 if her string, when drawn taut, also
passes that mark on the non-required side.
Facts
The first leg of a race on the Panama River was to windward, in a weak and
fluky wind and against a strong current. Boats A and B started correctly, but
the wind died and they drifted backwards. A passed outside the port end of
the line, and B crossed back over the line. Later, the wind returned but from
a new direction, and both boats passed to starboard of the race committee
boat at the starboard end of the line and continued up the leg.
A protested B for breaking the ‘string rule’ (see the definition Sail the
Course and rule 28.1) but the protest committee decided that the protest was
invalid. However, it sent a request for interpretation of the definition Sail
the Course and rule 28.1 to the national authority under rule 70.4.
Question
Did boats A and B comply with rule 28.1?
Answer
Boat A complied with rule 28.1. After starting, she left each starting mark
on its required side. Then she sailed around the entire starting line as shown.
Even so, the string representing her track, when drawn taut, leaves each
starting mark on the required side as it crosses the starting line. Rule 28.1
does not prohibit extra turns around a mark, provided that the string
described in the definition Sail the Course, when drawn taut, lies on the
required side of each mark. For example, if a boat touches a rounding mark
while leaving it on her starboard side as required by the sailing instructions,
and then makes a clockwise penalty turn around it, she complies with rule
28.1. Another example, as boat A illustrates in this case, is when a boat’s
string passes the two starting-line marks on the required side, she does not
break rule 28.1 when her string also passes one of those marks (in this case
the race committee boat) on the non-required side.
Boat B broke rule 28.1. After starting, she left the port-end mark to port and
the starboard-end mark to starboard, as required. However, she later drifted
back across the starting line and then left the starboard-end mark to port.
When the string representing her track is drawn taught it will not pass
through the starting line and therefore will not leave the starboard-end mark
on the required side.
See Case 106, for a discussion of a similar incident at a finishing line.
ARG 1996/3