Case 32
Definitions Finish, Finish
Rule 90.2(c), Race Committee; Sailing Instructions; Scoring: Sailing Instructions
A competitor is entitled to look exclusively to the notice of race or to written sailing instructions for all details relating to sailing the course. If the race committee wants to change the direction in which boats are required to cross the finishing line to finish, this must be stated in the sailing instructions. When a boat fails to finish correctly because of a race committee error, but none of the boats racing gains or loses as a result, an appropriate and fair form of redress is to score all the boats in the order they crossed the finishing line.
Facts
The sailing instructions included, among other things, the following:
  1. All races will be sailed under The Racing Rules of Sailing except as modified below.
  2. A briefing will be held in the clubroom 60 minutes before the start of the first race each day.
  3. Shortened Course will be signalled by two guns and raising of flag S and the class flag. Boats in that class will round the mark about to be rounded by the leading boat and go straight to the finishing line. This sailing instruction changes rule 32.2.

The sailing instructions did not include any statement about the direction in which boats were required to cross the finishing line. However, at one of the briefings, the race officer attempted to clarify the phrase ‘go straight to the finishing line’ in item 3 by stating that when the course was shortened, all boats should cross the finishing line in a windward direction. This would ensure that all classes, some of which might be finishing from different marks, would finish in the same direction even if that were not the direction of the course from the mark at which the course was shortened.

Subsequently, a race was shortened. Six boats, which had not attended the briefing, followed the written sailing instructions and crossed the finishing line from the course side of the line. To cross the line from its course side, it was necessary for those boats to cross while sailing downwind. The six boats were recorded as not finishing, and they requested redress. The boats alleged that the race committee had improperly changed the definition Finish and had failed to follow the requirements of rule 90.2(c). The protest committee upheld their requests for redress on the grounds they had cited, and it decided that the appropriate and fair form of redress was to score all the boats in the race in the order they crossed the finishing line.

The race committee appealed to the national authority, asserting that the briefing sessions were a numbered part of the sailing instructions, all competitors should have attended, and the briefings constituted a procedure for giving oral instructions. Also, it argued that the sailing instructions were not changed but merely clarified by the race officer as to what the words "go straight to the finishing line" meant.

Decision
Appeal dismissed. 

The definition Finish permits the sailing instructions to change ‘the direction in which boats are required to cross the finishing line to finish.’ However, the sailing instructions for the event did not do so. If the race committee had wanted to change the direction in which boats were required to cross the finishing line when the course was shortened, it would have had to clearly state this in the sailing instructions.

The remarks of the race officer amounted to more than mere clarification. This is borne out by the fact that the boats that did not attend the briefing acted as they did. Competitors are entitled to look exclusively to the notice of race and the sailing instructions, and to any amendments to them, for all particulars of the course, and rule 90.2(c) requires changes to the sailing instructions to be in writing.

GBR 1975/3; revised by World Sailing 2025
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