JimC
Not actually an anarchist.
Sailing should be exciting and sailing politics should be dull. If its the other way round you have problems.
Class administration should be dull. We should elect class leaders who manage the class affairs with a healthy mix of vision and competence, and everything runs smoothly.Sailing should be exciting and sailing politics should be dull. If its the other way round you have problems.
On the contrary, ILCA leadership have done a superb job. They managed to keep the Laser in the Olympics even though the RS Aero won the Trials in a landslide. They have managed to find a way forward when the old builder stopped co-operating with the class and now have approved builders all over the world. They even found a way around losing the rights to use the Laser trademark when the old builder got fired. And now they have developed a new constitution to catch up with all the changes in recent years and provide more fair representation on the World Council.
ILCA leadership still sucks!
Welcome back, Wess! I missed correcting you on every post! I see T-man beat me to the punch.
ILCA leadership still sucks!
Not sure what you mean by that.I agree with Tillerman that the current ILCA leadership has guided the average Laser/ILCA sailor through some very rough weather.
Kind of. ILCA were put in a difficult position thanks to a nightmare non-sailor owned manufacturer who didn’t give a shit about the class and was dragging it down into oblivion. So ILCA punted them and salvaged the class by opening the door for multiple builders.Not sure what you mean by that.
I will agree the ILCA management has successfully caused a transition in its role from attempting to control a game played in a certain kind of sailing toy to controlling the manufacture of the toys used in the games.
This is the most accurate and pertinent point in nearly 5,000 posts. I am uncomfortable with ILCA management’s new self-defined scope and the way they went about this coup. The argument that it is for the greater good is not justifiable, after all even Hitler made the trains run on time. Or, to step back from Godwin’s law, it is a little reminiscent of the renaming of JK Rowling’s Quidditch to Quadball.I will agree the ILCA management has successfully caused a transition in its role from attempting to control a game played in a certain kind of sailing toy to controlling the manufacture of the toys used in the games.
You do realize the class once had over 7000 members in North America??The class is growing and prospering with fantastic world championships for all 3 rigs. Stronger than ever! All while feeding other classes with sailors who wanted a different experience. Perfect result!
If We can get a well funded builder who eagerly supports dealers and the resulting game, the Laser game still has a fantastic root system of Geezers.
Never saw anyone put that so bluntly. Smells of corruption. If the IOC doesn't have its hand in your pockets, you must be pushing them into theirs, full of cash.On the contrary, ILCA leadership have done a superb job. They managed to keep the Laser in the Olympics even though the RS Aero won the Trials in a landslide.
I was certainly not suggesting corruption. I listened online to the whole of the World Sailing meeting where the decision to keep the Laser in the Olympics was made. It was clear that many small World Sailing nations had Laser youth/development programs aimed at qualifying for the Olympics and felt that making a wholesale switch of those programs to the RS Aero was too costly a step for them.Never saw anyone put that so bluntly. Smells of corruption. If the IOC doesn't have its hand in your pockets, you must be pushing them into theirs, full of cash.