Please select your home edition
Edition
Allen Dynamic 40 Leaderboard

Just another event?

by Mark Jardine 4 Aug 08:00 PDT
Cowes Week day 3 © Ingrid Abery / www.ingridabery.com

We've been blessed with incredible sailing so far this summer in the UK (for once) with great breeze much of the time, and some of the best events in the world gracing our shores.

The Admiral's Cup has been successfully revived and has repositioned itself back in its role as the unofficial offshore sailing world championship, SailGP in Portsmouth has proved that if you provide the spectacle then people will come and watch sailing, and countless other events have kept us entertained, whether as competitor or armchair sailor. These are truly halcyon days for British sailing.

But, like with Storm Floris, there are clouds on the horizon and not everything is well in the world of sailing. Classes wax and wane, the fortunes of clubs ebb and flow, and events rise and fall. Cowes Week is sadly an event where the trend continues downwards.

Over the years I've loved racing at Cowes Week. Be that in the X One Designs that I sailed for many a year with (or against) my dad, in IRC fleets with mates, in the Bembridge Redwings on occasion, and special events in the SB20 and Victory classes. There were fun times on and off the water, and a real sense of occasion. Seasons revolved around the event, and getting a good result in the Captain's Cup in the XOD was the pinnacle.

It was in 2011 that the XOD Centenary was held, with 146 of the One Designs gathered on a single startline, and now just 36 have entered the week. The Captain's Cup deserves more, but sailors are voting with their feet, choosing instead to compete in events like the Taittinger Regatta at Yarmouth, Poole Week, Itchenor Points Week, Lymington Week and Cowes Classics.

While media has changed beyond recognition since the turn of the millennium, Cowes Week used to gather mainstream attention in the broadsheets. It was one of the key events for getting sailing noticed outside of sailing circles. Now of course it's all about grabbing attention with short videos paired to the latest viral song, but the event simply isn't getting the exposure outside of the sailors' own social media feeds.

Cowes itself as a sailing venue certainly isn't at fault. The Royal Thames Yacht Club 250th Anniversary Regatta and the Admiral's Cup have reinstated the Isle of Wight town as the global capital of world yachting, and Cowes Week could and should have fed off the success of these events, as well as watched and learned.

Cowes Week suffers from being too long an event with too little racing. Over seven days the norm is to lose one or two days to the weather, be that too much or too little wind. Getting five races in during a seven day event isn't the kind of thing many want to do, and it isn't like the days without racing are days off - long days waiting around in the cafes and clubs, drinking endless coffees, deciding when to tuck into the packed lunch, before debating when to start on the beers, doesn't make for the greatest of days.

There are glimmers of what can be done. The J/70 class is one of the biggest at the event, with three races a day for 4 days of racing, and there lies the secret to success. More racing, less time, and clear proof that the compacted event schedule works, but this hasn't been widely rolled out. With so many fleets it is impractical to have everyone heading off the Squadron line every day, but mixing it up so that one day you have a single Solent race, then the next you have three committee boat starts would provide variety and interest.

Cowes Week does poll competitors at the end of each event, but I fear the results of these surveys are either ignored, or self-validating amongst the ageing group of sailors who like to do things how they've always been done. I again refer to what is working elsewhere to see what a successful model looks like.

So how many yachts are competing in Cowes Week? Taking a look at the first Saturday, here are the figures from the results sheets, including those who didn't start or declare.

By my maths, there are 216 in the 'yacht' classes: 84 boats in the IRC classes, 22 of which competed in the Queen's Cup, 33 in the Club Cruiser classes, 31 in the two Performance Cruiser classes, 14 Contessa 32s, 9 J109s, 9 Cape 31s, 8 Sonatas, 8 Quarter Tonners, 8 Sigma 33s, 8 Sportsboats and 4 Prometheus 41s.

In the two classes with three races a day there are 36 J70s, 16 SB20s, making the J70s the joint-highest turnout fleet at the event.

In the 'dayboats' there are a total of 163 boats, with 36 X One Designs, 17 Bembridge Redwings, 17 Sunbeams, 16 Darings, 14 Flying Fifteens, 14 Seaview Mermaids, 14 Sonars, 12 Dragons, 12 Etchells and 11 Victory One Designs.

That makes for 431 boats total. Cowes Week used to have that number in the dayboat classes alone. It's noticeable that the Squib class isn't at the event at all, whereas in 2018 the class entry had to be capped at 100 boats...

So how should Cowes Week stop the rot? My personal thought is to split it into two halves with a Saturday to Tuesday series and then a Wednesday to Friday series, with two or three windward-leeward races some days and classic round the cans Solent racing on the others - the exact breakdown can be chosen by each class and honed over time. Make it possible to compete in the entire week if you want to, to keep those who like things as they are happy, and I believe the event can be revived.

This may seem overly-negative to some, where I'm normally very positive about the sport, but I believe in Cowes Week and want it to succeed again, especially with its bicentenary celebrations next year. The clues as to how to do this are there, and I've talked to enough sailors over many years to understand what they all want. The question is whether there is the will to change amongst the decision-makers. If not, the plethora of other events will continue to thrive and Cowes Week will continue to be 'just another event', which is far from where it should be.

Mark Jardine
Sail-World.com and YachtsandYachting.com Managing Editor

Related Articles

Trade agreement reached between the USA and Europe
A summary of news relevant to marine businesses across North America In a significant development for American marine manufacturers, the United States and the European Union have reached a trade agreement that spares U.S.-made recreational boats and marine engines from a new round of retaliatory tariffs. Posted on 30 Jul
Move to introduce a market expansion strategy
A summary of news relevant to marine businesses across North America In a pivotal move to confront declining new boat sales and unify the recreational marine industry around a shared growth strategy, the NMMA and the MRAA have launched the Market Expansion Advisory Group. Posted on 23 Jul
Tariff news still taking the headlines
A summary of news relevant to marine businesses across North America Last Week, President Trump announced additional plans to impose new tariff rates on imports from several countries, including Brazil and the Philippines. Posted on 16 Jul
Legislation passed supporting US industry growth
A summary of news relevant to marine businesses across North America On Friday, President Trump signed what he referred to as "one big beautiful bill": legislation that preserves key provisions from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Job Act (TCJA). These provisions will continue to support growth. Posted on 9 Jul
Letter aims to reduce harm to U.S. Manufacturing
A summary of news relevant to marine businesses across North America NMMA joined 29 leading industry associations in a letter to U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick advocating for revisions to the Department of Commerce's implementation of Section 232 tariffs on steel, aluminum and related derivative products. Posted on 2 Jul
Despite world politics industry remains resolute
A summary of news relevant to marine businesses across North America As part of NMMA's continued advocacy efforts following the 2025 American Boating Congress (ABC), a group of NMMA leaders visited Capitol Hill last week to meet with Congressman Mike Collins (GA-10). Posted on 25 Jun
Major industry event updates in the USA and Europe
A summary of news relevant to marine businesses across North America The International BoatBuilders' Exhibition and Conference (IBEX), North America's premier technical trade event for the recreational marine industry announced today that registration for visitors is now open for this year's Show. Posted on 18 Jun
Maritimo M50 Flybridge & S60 Sedan Video
We speak to Maritimo's Neil McCabe & Phil Candler We talked to Neil McCabe, Maritimo's Design Office Manager, and Phil Candler, Maritimo's General Manager Operations, to find out more about the M50 Flybridge and S60 Sedan during the Sanctuary Cove International Boat Show. Posted on 17 Jun
Room for industry optimism for the rest of 2025
A summary of news relevant to marine businesses across North America Despite varying economic factors across all states, the latest data from NMMA's Monthly Recreational Boating Industry Data Summary report offers a tempered view of the recreational boating market. Posted on 11 Jun
More confusion as tariff decisions overruled
A summary of news relevant to marine businesses across North America On May 30, President Donald Trump announced that Section 232 tariffs on imported steel and aluminum will double from 25% to 50%, effective Wednesday, June 4. The announcement was made during a speech at U.S. Steel's Mon Valley Works-Irvin Plant. Posted on 4 Jun
Maritimo M50Cyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERAllen Dynamic 40 Footer