Big water always levels the playing field.
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Big water always levels the playing field.
This is exactly what HORBA is trying to do. When Offshore Racing first started in the modern era......late 50's, there was only one race each year....Miami to Nassau. Everyone worked all year to get something ready to run in it.
HORBA is doing the same thing with our two events per year....February for the Miami to Key West race and Sept for the Around Long Island Marathon. We want to have "Events", not a race series so we don't interfere with the other race groups.
We invite everyone who wants to race to have a chance to run.....from real race boats, modern and historic to poker runners to center consoles to sports fisherman types. Engine and boat manufacturers, come and show the world the products you make can take it in real world conditions. There will be plenty of room for everyone over 185 miles on the way to Key West.
This race date, February 20, 2010, is before any of the other organizations start their schedules. We don't want to take away from any other race group, but want to welcome all who want to try this kind of racing.
two points
1. these long run events are really cool and should somehow be incorporated into todays racing. but i think there need to be some kinda of safety and towing program in affect. as a racer/boat owner you have to think of the bigger picture also and rationalize whats being put at stake $$$$-wise.
2. the "worlds" is probably one of the key factors in the down fall of overall boat racing. there should be a "world champ" but he should be the guy that has won the most races or done the best ALL YEAR! the current setup with KW as the worlds lets teams show up for just that one race and have a shot at the title. how does this promote a quality product of racing all year when guys can just show up and cherry pick the last race.
Weren't the World's originally set up to do that, but differently? You had too race at least four races in you district, beit Europe, South America, USA west, USA Midwest, etc. Then you were champ of that region maybe. Then the World's was the one race where all those regional racers got together?
or you can read the fine print, which gives sbi the right to grant any boat it sees fit an exception and allow them to race, even if they don't meet any of the qualifications.
but even the 4 race rule still makes my case. the world champ is not the best of the best, he's just the guy that won that last set of races. imagine if nascar operated that way, you think those top teams would go out and race as hard as they do all year?
if you did a points total award system if would force the teams to run all year. and then you could pay all the prize money at the end with just a little tow money during the year, just enough to offset some of the costs.
It used to be you had to run at least three races and finished at least 3rd in at least one of them. You could not just show up and run. As fleets dwindled these old rules were relaxed.
The also used to race 3 days and in SUPER, OPEN and MODIFIED they would run 350 miles over the 3 days. Boats would come from around the world. A win was a true accomplishment.
Jim most of the things you mentioned are what the racers voted on. The shorter races is one of the things they wanted. The longer races are to hard on the equipment and there was alot of teams falling out by Sunday. It still bite alot of teams now, and no one want to win not racing all the boats in their class. Three day of racing KW no matter how many miles is a chore.SBI still has the 2 race rule to run in KW ( with an org.)
I really love this different approach idea. Why don't we try this: Limit the contributors to a racing forum to folks designated as competitors. When those of us who spend the money and take the risks to keep this sport alive have to read drivel written by people with specific agendas and little factual knowledge it's disheartening. When people who might otherwise be racing read it, it is incredibly detrimental. If a forum were "competitors only" we could have dialog between those who put their lives and money on the line and have had a say in where we now find ourselves.
Steve, we are trying to maintain an open and professional discussion site related to all facets of the sport. That said, there is no reason to have a "Racer Only" section. You make great points in your posts and I think those not directly involved can learn something from them. OTOH I think that sometimes the racers need to take into account other's ideas and opinions, sometimes there are real answers to why the sport cannot progress. Every other major motorsport has marketing gurus, focus groups, and trend analysis experts to help them tailor the product to be most attractive to the end user- the fan. We do not have that luxury but once in a while we do get an honest insight into why fans do or do not like what is going on. As for detrimental drivel, we offer two avenues-report it or refute it. Our mods are very attentive and if a comment or thread is reported we are on it ASAP. We also have other things in place to keep the discussion civil and hopefully, productive.
BTW, the Competitor designation is specifically so that anyone reading will know who is making a statement and attach the proper level of significance to it ;)
Exactly the situation I was thinking of when I posted!
Racing to me means man and machine laying it all on the very fine line between success and failure; not doing parade laps at 75MPH in a 105MPH boat. (Sorry to offend current "racers".)
OK- so GPS it is. Bump the current restrictions up by 20MPH.
I happen to agree with this and think that is how it was on some of the other boards in the past.
The problem with this approach is:
1- on the fence racers not involved. Could be a good thing; could be a bad thing. Either way seems like it has been proven racers can't get the show together on their own (ie- look at the current situation; but kudos to those making the changes to hopefully make it better! ).
2- fan input not involved. You have to give the fans what they want if you want them to pay your salary and isn't that the end goal of all of this. If racers knew what we wanted they would be flying to the race this weekend on a private jet while eating pealed grapes getting a foot massage vs driving their own rig to the race after wrenching all night (not all racers but I know many like this..).
I'm sure has been covered 101203 times before but I've never read it- sorry but "offshore racing" has never been one of my interest but hoping that changes if/when offshore racing changes.
ps- in all due respect of course. Mr.Quick- your boat is one of the ones I like to watch and congrats to you and Throttle Up on your success!
That's certainly one possibility. But there are a couple of tradeoffs.
The first is that possibility that some non-racer contributes that "golden nugget" of a great idea that makes the whole thing better.
The second would be that those people you'd want to exclude are the ultimate customer for your product. They're the guys that are making a deliberate effort to attend your races- the guys that see your sponsor's messages and patronize the businesses in your host/sponsor cities.
Those to me seem to be reasonable tradeoffs to having to endure the occasional numbnuts comment. And it's also an opportunity for you and everyone in the racing community to connect with, inform and educate your fans.
I own a couple of businesses and I WISH there were boards like this where my customers had open conversations about their likes and interests.
You have to build a foundation first. The race teams are the customers not the fans (what fans if you want to compare to the big motorsports). Your not going to get big sponorship, only a select few that did or do. Those teams are big money teams that get the major sponors. Those big companys just don't throw money out to anyone. Boating in general is a hobby that not everybody can relate to. Everybody drives a car.