The Finn has been the dinghy of choice for generations of sailors seeking to challenge themselves to the limits of their sailing skills and their physical endurance. It has a culture that embraces sailors of all ages and a camaraderie that lasts a lifetime. It is a class that is proud of its incredible history and legacy as well as its amazing sailors. And it is looking forward to a promising future, wherever that future may lie.

20190403 Trofeo Princesa Sofia 2019 Pic Robert Deaves 045A1493The Finn Class refuses to be discouraged by the results of last month’s World Sailing Conference in Bermuda, and is anticipating some great events and great competition over the coming year. While the IFA continues to do its best to keep the class Olympic for 2024, until the 2024 events are approved by the IOC the Finn is Olympic. [For those that have not seen the reports there are further details below of what happened at the conference.]

However, we also have to look to and plan for the future of the class.

A fantastic year of Finn racing, of which the obvious highlight is the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, begins next month with the 2019 Finn Gold Cup in Melbourne and culminates with the Finn European Masters in Gdynia next September.

Around 60 Finn sailors are expected in Melbourne, Australia, for the world championship, which begins on Friday 13 December. Most of those already qualified for Tokyo will be present, as well as a few still looking for one of the remaining five spots.

The first of those five places will be decided next week at the South American Continental Qualifier at the 2019 Copa Brasil, in Rio de Janiero. Then the Oceania place gets decided at the Finn Gold Cup, closely followed by the North American qualifier at the 2020 Sailing World Cup Miami in January. Finally the African and European Continental Qualifier will be at the 2020 Sailing World Cup Genoa.

Those events will quickly be followed by the 2020 Finn Gold Cup in Palma, Mallorca, and the 2020 European Championship in Gdynia, Poland, just before the Olympics begins. Further details will be published on both those events very shortly.

And with entries for the 50th Anniversary Finn World Masters, in the Netherlands, already approaching 100, it is going to be a very exciting few months with plenty of opportunities for everyone to take part in or watch some great racing.

Future Direction
While the decision to drop the Finn from the Olympics is hard and, perhaps, life changing for a few hundred young athletes, the Finn class remains strong with worldwide fleets and dedicated sailors, as well as, of course, being a fantastic boat to sail.

There is no doubt that the Finn will have a bright and happy future, even while it undergoes some restructuring. It will be a future in which thousands of sailors worldwide continue to regard the Finn as the ultimate singlehanded dinghy, the toughest test of a true sailor and still one of the best platforms that any young sailor can utilise to advance their sailing career to wherever that may lead. The technical, strategic and tactical knowledge within the class are beyond measure. Nothing has or will change that and this knowledge base will continue to be expanded as the sailors continue to find better and faster ways to sail the boat. The class will continue to expand the science of sailing as it has done for the past seven decades.

The IFA executive is putting together a strategy to take the class forward. It is looking at introducing new admin processes, as well as new event structures and circuits. The change in the administration of the class this week is the first step on a long-term plan to make sure that Finn sailing and Finn events remain as attractive and as relevant as they have been for seventy years.

There will necessarily be some rationalisation in the annual calendar to continue to ensure Finn sailing remains affordable and attractive to as many sailors as possible. There is a lot of work to do and the class will seek to engage with Finn sailors in many countries to make sure everything is on the right track.

We will need help to put all this together and plan a future for the class that is sustainable and offers the potential for growth. We plan to take the Class in new directions and provide new opportunities. We plan to ensure that not only can the class survive outside the Olympics but that it continues to thrive.

 

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© 2024, International Finn Association, Inc