A few years ago I went on a 5 day clinic with Kolius Sailing Schools. I learned a lot of good stuff from John Kolius and his team but one particular comment by one of the coaches has stuck in my mind. She said, "You have to be inconsistently good before you can be consistently good."
What did she mean? We all start as back-of-the fleet racers and over the years gradually improve. But our results don't improve consistently at first. Before we are good enough to expect to be in the top 3 at every regatta we sail we have to go through that stage of being inconsistently good. Good days and bad days. Moments of glory separated by long periods of total mediocrity.
"Inconsistently good" just about sums up my sailing year. Last Sunday was a great example. Probably the best start and best first beat of my sailing career. Followed by a gear breakdown and then some very average races where I struggled to make the top 20 in the fleet of 50+ Lasers. And that has been the pattern over the year. The highlights were winning an open Laser regatta for the first time; winning my age group at the Laser Masters Atlantic Coasts; and placing in the top 25% at the Laser Masters US Nationals. The worst performance was probably at the New England Laser Masters and everything else was somewhere in between.
Looking beyond results I also take pride in starting a new Laser fleet, writing a sailing blog for over 6 months, introducing another whole group of kids to our sport, being a competent race officer and publishing another year's worth of my club's sailing newsletter.
So it's time to step back and think what I want to achieve next year. How do I turn "inconsistently good" into "consistently good"? And what sailing challenges outside of racing shall I look for?
I'm sure part of the answer is in one of the first posts I made in this blog. Focus.
4 comments:
I crew many boats, but mostly GP14's. I am an improving crew thanks to my brill helm. Then its spinnaker time and I turn into a crap crew- well most of the time, sometimes the spinnaker works and flies beautifully and when this happens I feel like I have achieved something! Then disater strikes and the spinnaker decides to play up- it gets twisted, it won't go up, it goes under the boat and flies out the back (god I hate when that happens!)etc and it makes me feel like a crap crew- i've noticed it only plays up when its very windy! (sometimes I wonder why I sail GP's but what would I do if I didn't- sailings just too addictive!) Its like 1 step forward and 2 steps back, and I know its my fault really that the spinnaker isn't doing what it should but it is so annoying when it goes wrong. So this winter I've told my helm that we are going to have the spinnker up at any posibble moment that we can when racing, in order for me to improve- well I have only been sailing spinnaker boats for about a year, and the feelings great when you actually achieve something!
Claire (England)
Claire, Skip - You guys have my admiration. Having done most of my sailing on Lasers and Sunfish, on the rare occasion when I do crew on a spinnaker boat I seem to cause a disaster every time I touch the beast.
Sounds like I would need a season of practice to get the hang of it?
Start on a sprit boat; it's more like a big jib. My first race on a J105 they put me on foredeck it's so easy.
Now, dealing with a pole and gybing is a whole different story. I admire what those guys do.
Thanks for the advice Skip, i'll tell my helm and we can have a go at it. Just seen the weather forecast for this sunday and it's windy- I can't wait!
Claire (England)
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