BUILD TUNE RACE RC YACHTS
Coaching for improvement
A program to aim high at any event

Coaching to win in radio sailing
We cant all be Brad Gibson, Zvonko Jelecic or Olivier Cohen. They have been sailing radio boats for decades and know every trick of the trade both in set up and sailing skill. They can do things with these boats that we can only dream about. Having said that there maybe ways we can short circuit the process to catch up get close to them. It requires dedication, discipline and a desire to master all the aspects of racing to put yourself in a position to compete. A reiview of where you are and a coaching program can help.
A coaching program requires a strategic approach focused on refining high-level tactics, tuning, and decision-making. You have solid sailing experience, so a coaches role shifts to helping optimize performance. You have two choices. You can find a coach but none exist in radio sailing or you can coach yourself. Here’s one way to approach self coaching if you don't have a potential coach.
Lets start at the beginning with boat set up and tuning
1. Fine-Tune Boat Setup and Tuning
• Sail Trim & Rig Tuning: Set your boat up at home and measure everything on each of the rigs. Your design manual or sail maker should be able to help you with base settings. It is so important to start from the same base otherwise so you know you have consistency. Of course if you have already done you homework you will have identified the best settings that work for your boat. If not go back to the designers measurements. Each time you go sailing your boat should be set up in a measured way. Think, mast rake, foot depth, shroud tension etc. and always check measure at the end of the day.
• Use of Tools: You can use a rig tension gauges which are accurate and ensure the same tension each time you rig up and you own a designers tuning guide for consistent repeatability. Use a rig stick or tape for rake measurement.
• Condition-Specific Tweaks: Next you need to work through how you adjust the setup for, light, medium and heavy wind and for short steep chop and rounder waves. If you travel you will encounter a variety of conditions and it is important to know what setting fits what condition. Focus on mast rake, rig tension, sail camber and twist for boat balance.
• Changing rigs: Now is the time to practice changing rigs. To make life a bit more realistic, try it in the garden on a windy day. You will never know when you need to change a rig in less than two minutes.
2. Advanced Tactics & Strategy
• Start Line Mastery: Practice time-on-distance, positioning and holding stationary position, and controlling opponents. Being able to keep the boat stationary is one thing, keeping the boat stationary whilst nearly head to wind is another. The more you practice the better you will start a race. In addition alertness to wind shifts, and assertiveness is so important
• Wind & Shift Reading: you need to be able to read the patterns, clouds, and using shifts to advantage.
• Fleet Positioning: Focus on staying in phase with the wind and clear lanes.
I read in a US web site there are three things to think about when racing:
Where are you on the race course?
Where are you in relation to the wind?
Where are you in relation to the fleet?
3. Decision-Making Under Pressure. This is easily done with other boats but on your own you have to use a lot of imagination.
• Scenario-Based Training: Simulate racing scenarios (e.g., port/starboard at the top mark, covering vs. splitting).
• Debrief Sessions: After practice or racing, analyze choices and discuss alternatives.
• Use of Video/Drone Footage: If you can, have someone video your sailing. Visual feedback is powerful in radio sailing due to limited on-water presence.
4. Mental Game and Consistency
• Race Focus: Train on staying composed, avoiding risky maneuvers unless necessary.
• Routine Development: Encourage pre-race checklists and mental prep routines.
• Dealing with Errors: Think about recovery strategies and resilience. You are over the line, what do you do. You nick a starboard boat crossing behund, how quickly can to perform a 360.
5. Peer Learning and Open Dialogue
• Encourage Knowledge Sharing: Work with other sialors to form group tuning sessions or roundtables.
• Performance Logs: Track your settings, conditions, and outcomes for pattern recognition.
If you are able and can commit the time with others, here is a potential plan for the day. Of course you can break this down into two hour sessions or shorter.
ADVANCED RADIO SAILING COACHING SESSION PLAN
If you are lucky enough to be able to coach a group of radio sailors this may help
Session Duration: ~6.5 hours
Target Group: Skilled sailors with strong fundamentals
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1. Welcome & Goals (30 mins)
• Briefing Topics:
• Review individual goals for the session
• Set focus: tuning consistency, tactical execution, and racing discipline
• Tools Prep: Distribute tuning sheets, wind meters, GoPro/drone setup if available
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2. Tuning & Boat Setup Workshop (1 hour)
• Rig Tuning Drill:
• Sailors rig their boats for current conditions (with feedback)
• Group walk-through of each boat: shroud tension, jib angle, sail shape
• Wind Response Adjustment:
• Adjust for light puffs, gusts, and steady breeze — emphasize repeatability in settings
• Speed Testing:
• 2-boat tuning runs: compare speed and pointing, record settings
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3. Tactical Scenarios on Water (1.5 hours)
• Short Course Drills:
• Starting line positioning: 3-on-3 timed starts, rotating groups
• Upwind shift response: mini windward-leeward courses (3-5 mins each)
• Focus Points:
• Hold lane after start
• Spot and respond to shifts
• Port-tack crossing judgments
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I’m
4. Midday Debrief & Lunch (45 mins)
• Review footage or observer notes
• Discuss key decisions made in drills
• Sailors share tuning insights and setup notes
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5. Mini-Regatta with Coaching (2 hours)
• 6–8 short races (5–7 mins each):
• Coach gives live tactical prompts (if possible via headsets or from sideline)
• Video capture starts, finish placement recorded
• Rotating Pair Analysis:
• Partner up sailors to observe each other’s races and give feedback
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6. Final Debrief & Action Planning (45 mins)
• Performance Review:
• Start success rate
• Tactical errors/gains
• Boat speed observations
• Review Race Logs:
• Each sailor logs rig settings, decisions, and outcomes
• Next Steps:
• Set personal tuning/test goals
• Define 1–2 tactical focus points for upcoming events
And finally for the very top class sailors.
World-Class Radio Yacht Sailing Coaching Program
1. Foundation & Goals (Week 1)
• Skill Assessment
• Evaluate current strengths/weaknesses: boat handling, tactics, tuning.
• Identify class (IOM, Marblehead, 10R, etc.) and event goals.
• Goal Setting
• Define short-term (regatta performance), mid-term (ranking), and long-term (world title) goals.
• Equipment Review
• Audit boat condition, radio gear, rigs, and sails.
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2. Boat Tuning & Technical Mastery (Weeks 2–4)
• Rig Tuning
• Practice rig setup for A/B/C rigs under varying wind conditions.
• Use tuning matrix to document performance shifts.
• Hull & Sail Optimization
• Hydrodynamic and aerodynamic reviews with expert input.
• Compare sail shapes and mast rake angles with top-tier setups.
• Telemetry & Data Use
• Analyze VMG, tacking angles, and acceleration/deceleration.
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3. Tactical & Strategic Racing Skills (Weeks 5–8)
• Starts
• Master time-to-line judgment and positioning with practice drills.
• Mark Rounding
• Focus on layline approach, boat spacing, and avoiding infractions.
• Fleet Tactics
• Practice positioning strategies for large fleets.
• Match race simulations for boat-on-boat control.
• Wind Strategy
• Learn local wind patterns and micro-shifts.
• Practice reading water and flags for pressure and direction.
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4. Mental & Physical Conditioning (Ongoing)
• Focus & Recovery
• Mental rehearsal and visualization.
• Managing nerves and staying calm under protest or in tight races.
• Physical Wellness
• Neck, eye, and posture exercises for long hours of standing and viewing.
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5. Regatta Preparation (Ongoing before Events)
• Venue Analysis
• Study past wind/weather trends, water features.
• Practice Races
• Simulate regatta conditions: countdowns, pressure, scoring.
• Support Team Coordination
• Boat handler/tuner, coach, and logistics manager roles.
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6. Post-Race Review (After Each Event)
• Debrief
• Analyze video footage, race logs, tuning notes.
• Adjustment Plan
• Identify areas for improvement and update training focus.
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