The creation of the International Yacht Racing Union (IYRU) began in 1904, when Major Brooke Heckstall-Smith AINA, then Secretary of the Yacht Racing Association (now the Royal Yachting Association) wrote to the Yacht Club de France, pointing out the desirability of holding a conference for the purpose of devising an International Rule of Measurement for Racing Yachts acceptable to all European countries. As a result, an International Conference of Yacht Measurement was held in London in January and June 1906, at which the Metre Rule was developed. This group went on to adopt a formal Constitution after a meeting at the Yacht Club de France in Paris on 14 October 1907 which is seen as the formation date of the International Yacht Racing Union.[1]
On 5 August 1996, the IYRU changed its name to the International Sailing Federation (ISAF).[2]
On 14 November 2015, ISAF changed its name to World Sailing.[3][4]
Competition formats
Competitive sailing regatta contain events which are defined by a combination of discipline, equipment, gender and sometimes categories. These criteria are defined by the race purpose.
Disciplines
The following are the main disciplines:
Fleet racing – The most common form of competitive sailing involving boats racing around a course.[5]
Match racing – Two identical boats race against each other. This one-on-one duel requires strategy and tactics. The first to cross the finish line wins.[6]
Team racing – Two teams each of normally three boats compete against each other. Fast-paced racing depends on excellent boat handling skills and rapid tactical decision making.[7]
Offshore/oceanic – Any offshore race over 800 miles, including races around the world.[8]
The majority of sailing events are "open" events in which males and females compete together on equal terms either as individuals or part of team. Sailing has had female only World Championships since the 1970s to encourage participation and now host more than 30 such World Championship titles each year. For the 2016 Olympics, compulsory mixed gender in the event was added for the first time.[citation needed]
Sailor categories
In addition the following categories are sometimes applied to events:
Age
Nationality
Disabled classification
Sailor classification
Rules and regulations
World Sailing is now most familiar to sailors for defining the Racing Rules of Sailing (RRS), the international standard used to define competition rules and the framework within which racing is conducted.
Para sailing regattas for para sailors likewise follow the World Sailing rulebook with a minor change to permit things like powered adaptations. Strict classification requirements are enforced in the Paralympic Games for fair competition in Paralympic-class keelboats.
The key documents under control of World Sailing are:
Like all sports federations, World Sailing is composed of "Member National Authorities" (MNA's) from over 140 countries all of whom have the right to make submissions to determine World Sailing's policies.[13]
Persons with a physical impairment who are interested to learn to sail are encouraged[14] to locate their national World Sailing Member National Authority (MNA), Disabled Sports Organization, or visit the local sailing club, as World Sailing seeks to people with disabilities into the sport.
World Sailing is responsible for administration of the Olympic Sailing Regatta. Sailing (called yachting in the early years) has been a mainstay of the modern summer Olympic games since 1896, omitted only from the 1904 summer games in St. Louis.[19][20]
To help encourage high level international competition in the Classes used for the Olympic Games, World Sailing arrange the following events:
Sailing World Championships this is held every four years and is the combined World Championships for the Olympic classes and used as part of the Olympic Qualifying procedure
Sailing as an equipment based sports allows one of the largest ranges of paralympians to compete under equal terms. Sailing was included for the first time in the Atlanta 1996 Paralympic Games program as a demonstration event. It became a full medal sport at the Sydney 2000 Paralympic Games up to 2020 were IPC removed sailing from the paralympic program. Work continues to get sailing reinstated for the 2028 Paralympics.
Sailing is a versatile sport that can accommodate many types of disability primarily because it is equipment based. Sailing is one of the few sports where disabled sailors compete on equal terms to able body sailors in a large section of the sport. Almost any boat can be sailed though some are more suitable for larger ranges of disabilities or specific categories of impairment.
World Sailing is also responsible for disabled sailing worldwide under the guidance of its own brand Para World Sailing.[14] This is since the merger of International Association for Disabled Sailing (IFDS) in November 2014, and re-forming of the World Sailing Committee later rebrand Para World Sailing. The rational was given as follows: "The creation of a single governing body for Member National Authorities (MNAs) and sailors will better serve the needs and interests of sailors with disabilities, and provide consistency within the sport, from relationships with the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) to technical support and operational efficiencies."[22][23]
The IFDS Foundation was dissolved during the 2015 Annual Conference in Sanya, China. The Disabled Sailing Committee then re-branded as the Para World Sailing Committee.[24]
People
Presidents
From 1906 to 1946 a chairman was elected from time to time to orchestrate the annual meetings.
1946–1955: Sir Ralph Gore was elected the first President
2004–2012: David Irish (USA), Teresa Lara, Teo Ping Low (SIN)
2008–2012: Alberto Predieri (ITA), Eric Tulla, Tomasz Holc
2008–2016: Nazli Imre (TUR)
2012–2016: George Andreadis(GRE), Chris Atkins (GBR), Adrienne Greenwood
2010–2020: Gary Jobson(USA), Quanhai Li (CHN), Scott Perry (URU)
2016–2020: Jan Dawson (NZL), Torben Grael(BRA), Ana Sanchez (ESP), Nadine Stegenwalner (GER)
2020–present: Duriye Özlem Akdurak (TUR), Philip Baum (RSA), Tomasz Chamera (POL), Sarah Kenny (AUS), Cory Sertl (USA), Marcus Spillane (IRL), Jo Aleh (Athlete commission)
When a crew of two or three people is nominated, the awarded is presented to the entire crew. When larger crews win the award, normally only the skipper is recognised.
On 5 November 2007 in Estoril, Portugal, the International Sailing Federation announced the first six inductees for the ISAF Sailing Hall of Fame.[26][27]
The Beppe Croce Trophy is presented to an individual who has made an outstanding voluntary contribution to the sport of sailing. The roll of honour is an impressive one, including multiple Olympic medallists, rules gurus and designers, and all have dedicated an outstanding amount of time to the sport of sailing. Recipients are presented with a replica trophy.