| Re: What would be a good replacement for the Tornado?
[Re: carlbohannon]
#102953 04/05/07 11:42 AM 04/05/07 11:42 AM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 695 Ft. Pierce, Fl. USA Seeker
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Posts: 695 Ft. Pierce, Fl. USA | The problem is not with the Tornado...the problem is with the PC Mentality...it ignores one of the most basic principals of life..."WE ARE NOT ALL CREATED EQUAL"
If you are 5 feet tall the odds are will never be a successful NBA All Star. If you are 6'-6" and 280# it is highly unlikely you will ever be a successful Jockey. If you are blind don't be surprised if you plan a career as a golf pro and it doesn't work out.
What is being discussed here is the myth that everyone should have an equal chance of winning at a game when the very rules of the game (from its inception) have favored a certain body type. Add to that the fact that the tools used to win the game are locked to fixed parameters, and you will never have a competition that allows all players to compete on a level playing field. The whole concept of one design racing is a farce. All other things being equal, one body type/size is going to dominate every sport. If the equipment is changed to suit one group it will do so at the exclusion of others...it is a cat chasing its tail.
I am sure there are many men who are discouraged from competing on the Tornado feeling that they are too small/light or heavy to effectively campaign against the optimum sailor at the Olympic level...it's not a gender thing its a height/weight/strength issue...that’s life, get over it...
"Political Correctness is a doctrine fostered by a delusional, illogical liberal minority, and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous media, which holds that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end."
Regards, Bob
Last edited by Seeker; 04/05/07 11:46 AM.
| | | Re: What would be a good replacement for the Tornado?
[Re: Mary]
#102954 04/05/07 12:44 PM 04/05/07 12:44 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 778 Houston carlbohannon
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Posts: 778 Houston | This isn't April 1st. <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" /> I was sorta serious. I was thinking about how to use our most popular class without damaging the class by picking one boat as the Olympic boat. It doesn't have to be as complicated as I had. An alternative would be. * Special mast and sail with the sail area proportional to crew weight * Wings/hiking bar with the overall width of the boat inversely proportional to the crew weight. There are a lot of things you could do to derive a unique 1 design from a stock boat that you could provide to the Olympics. | | | Re: What would be a good replacement for the Tornado?
[Re: Seeker]
#102955 04/05/07 12:55 PM 04/05/07 12:55 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD Mark Schneider
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Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD | I agree with your premise about one design constraints. Physics determines the optimums for any one design class... the range at the elite level will be quite small. Stay away from class politics etc etc.
Your assertion that its all about PC is just wrong.
Goal: Gender equity... Absolutely... so you must have men and women's divisions of a type of boat. Is this PC.... or Fairness. I vote fair! (perphaps you want to debate Title IX and football scholarships in the USA)
Types of sailing. I proposed 5 basic classes.. Do you have a counter propopsal and why? (In your language which 5 turds do you want to float around in the circus) How is this choice PC?
So... The Olympic Sailing effort must afford opportunity for all of humans to SAIL... perhaps not your boat of choice... but afford the opportunity to compete in sailing. Is this goal PC... or Fair.... I vote Fair.
This means that the equipment selection must cover the range of humans when you view it as an agragate. This is not PC.... This is just a fairness issue. Notice... Basketball is not played with a team of 7 footers.
You get screwed when you stray from the core principles...
Once you stray... It will then be a matter of Political Correcness (Finn vs Laser) and just plain ol Politics... (it's hard to defend the USA when their proposal is... we only send up classes when we have a winner in that class.)
This is not PC... its just P.... and the politics is unseemly!
Remember... the Olympics are a nationalistic.. for better or worse... but that is what they are.. So... finding a cheap boat that poor countries can play with is not PC... in my opinion... it is just a matter of fairnes..
Take Care
crac.sailregattas.com
| | | Re: What would be a good replacement for the Tornado?
[Re: Mark Schneider]
#102958 04/06/07 04:13 PM 04/06/07 04:13 PM |
Joined: Feb 2007 Posts: 14 sarahlala
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Posts: 14 | Why should the entirety of the sailing world be forced to make up for the struggling economy of one or another countries??
??
Your personal humanitarian ideologies have no place in a discussion of sports, no place in a discussion of sailing, no relevance to the issue of Tornado as Olympic material.
Not everyone has the "right" to sail. No one has a right to anything that they haven't earned, on a separate note. Olympic competitors in the US are less funded than European Olympic hopefuls, Canadian sailors, Puerto Rican sailors, etc. etc. . Almost all American campaigners spend a good deal of time and energy funding their careers through sponsorship or with their own money. You see that there is no advantage, even to the sailors in the wealthiest and most powerful country in the world. Sailors from other nations still manage to continue in competition, if poor countries want to develop sailing programs it isn't the obligation of other nations (at the disadvantage of their own constituents) to provide for this. This HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH THE SPORT. It should have no reflection on the Olympic classes.
Additionally, US Sailing (and the Olympic Sailing effort) has no duty to provide anything to it's members based solely on their "right" to certain things, it's duty is only to the consensus of it's members and only additionally, to accurately represent the interests (as so expressed) of it's majority. This is where US Sailing has gone wrong. Massively wrong.
Why has the 'open' classification of the Tornado contributed to its being a male dominated class?
It hasn't. I'd be willing to bet that if one looked at the numbers, sailing would be a predominately male sport (perhaps not by much).
If you don't believe that, as a cat sailor you should realize that multihull sailing IS a predominately male sport. There are more male skippers than female skippers in general, and outside classes like the hobie 16, women become more scarce, even as crews. The hardest Olympic classes to get women involved in are 1. Multihull; 2. Skiff (though this has a better youth base: the 29er).
Resolved: women in multihull sailing are few. This is reason number one why there are not many women sailing Tornados. Also, consider the fact that youth sailing has a few basic manifestations: opti, laser, 420 (29er and sl16/h16 are MUCH MUCH smaller classes, MUCH less popular, MUCH more obscure in youth sailing [ and yes, I realize that this is a situation to which many people are making an effort to find a solution, me included] )
To jump from intense training in a 420 to a 470 is easier for someone than making that same jump into a Tornado. It's all about accessability. And that is essentially reason number two why women are few in Tornado sailing. It isn't readily accessable to anyone, much less women.
Three: the Tornado (and god knows I love this boat) is not an ideal design for an all women crew. BUT, the reason why this is less of an issue than it appears to be, is that in some ways it allows (potentially) the class to fulfill it’s title as "open". It is more likely that there will be mixed gender teams because a) it isn’t ideal to have two women sail together, and b) if there were successful mixed gender teams they would most likely be lighter than the all male teams, which would be the disadvantage to an all male team. (Overwhelmingly, the reason I believe that there are not mixed gender crews is specifically because the lack of development of the class (or multihulls in general) on the youth/beginner levels. By the way: in terms of any sort of gender equity the Tornado class is shooting itself in the foot with the minimum weight limit proposal. There is no room for mixed gender in the class with that rule.
Just some thoughts. Have at them. | | | Re: What would be a good replacement for the Tornado?
[Re: Mary]
#102963 04/06/07 06:09 PM 04/06/07 06:09 PM |
Joined: Feb 2007 Posts: 14 sarahlala
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Posts: 14 | | | | Re: What would be a good replacement for the Tornado?
[Re: sarahlala]
#102964 04/09/07 08:44 AM 04/09/07 08:44 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 778 Houston carlbohannon
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Posts: 778 Houston | AND:
A boat that can't be sailed outside of the Olympics??? ... This is the stupidest thing I've ever heard. Why not? You are talking strict one design with a setup like the the Alter Cup, supplied boats. If it were being done today, what would the boat look like, most likely a Hobie Tiger, with a Fiberfoam mast, Marstrom carbon rigging, and the best sails a one of the big lofts can put togather. For fairness, the running rigging and the tweaking would be done by the F18 Class. We are moving away from one-design toward formula classes. None of the Formula Classes in their right mind would allow one of their boats to be selected as the Olympic One- Design. So, what are we left with, no multihull, the Tornado, or every 4 years let a Formula Class Association put togather their dream boat. | | | Re: What would be a good replacement for the Torna
[Re: Stewart]
#102967 04/09/07 04:24 PM 04/09/07 04:24 PM |
Joined: Apr 2003 Posts: 1,669 Melbourne, Australia Tornado_ALIVE
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Posts: 1,669 Melbourne, Australia | who said a T cant be sailed outside the Olympics? My club has a fleet of Ts that sail every weekend. As well as another 2 clubs with very healthy numbers in Oz........ And non of them with Olympic aspirations...... Just a love for the boat. | | | Re: What would be a good replacement for the Torna
[Re: Tornado_ALIVE]
#102968 04/09/07 05:31 PM 04/09/07 05:31 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD Mark Schneider
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Posts: 3,116 Annapolis, MD | The USA scene for catamaran racers is quite twisted compared to what you guys have going...
None of the Tornado sailors actively racing the boat in the USA are members of an active local fleet of Tornado's. Reason... No active fleets of any size (greater then two boats) exist in the USA.
Likewise... I don't know of any Nacra 20 fleets sailing out of a club in the USA either. (West River Sailing will start up this season with 5 boats).
Perhaps, there is a club in the USA that has an F18 fleet going (Syracuse may be the best bet with 5 or 6 tigers) but I would not bet on it.
For better or worse... we do this the hard way... we trailer in all directions up to 500 miles for a two day regatta which gives you about 7 to 8 hours on the water.
The Tornado circuit is matched to the off periods in Europe. So... they have two regattas in Miami back to back (OCR and North Americans). They try to have one or two regattas at another venue around about November or December. (US Nationals and Pre Olympic class San Diego) 8
When their was more non olympic interest in the boat... They could get a regatta in Kingston, Canada, in August. However, the EU circuit and boat shipping durations has killed this event for the most part.
crac.sailregattas.com
| | | Re: What would be a good replacement for the Torna
[Re: Laruffa]
#102970 04/09/07 06:31 PM 04/09/07 06:31 PM | Anonymous
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Unregistered | Think we have 5 or so I-20's now out of www.tcdyc.com now. Just got one form Calf. Doug | | | Re: What would be a good replacement for the Torna
[Re: Mark Schneider]
#102971 04/09/07 06:47 PM 04/09/07 06:47 PM |
Joined: Oct 2003 Posts: 118 St. Louis, MO JoeLeonard
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Posts: 118 St. Louis, MO | Reason... Likewise... I don't know of any Nacra 20 fleets sailing out of a club in the USA either. (West River Sailing will start up this season with 5 boats). We have a fleet of 4 Nacra 20's sailing at Lake Carlyle in So. IL (St. Louis). Most of them travel occasionally as well...(Mine has been in Florida all winter....will be back home in a month for summer fleet racing)
JL
N20 # 1041 "Lucille"
A-cat USA 44
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