Terry’s Tips: Gate Gamble
Left or right? Crowd or Clear? The better choice is most often the one with the longterm gain.
Left or right? Crowd or Clear? The better choice is most often the one with the longterm gain.
Improve the mileage of your sail cloth by taking these simple steps for protection on and off the water.
Bringing new blood on board for your midwinter events? Terry Hutchinson shares his team-dynamic tips.
It’s hard enough to be consistent in any TP52 event. Key West can be all that much harder.
Terry Hutchinson reports in as tactician for Quantum Racing’s TP52 at Quantum Key West Race Week
You can respect your competitors, push the limits, and race hard while not losing sight of the big picture.
When the team hasn’t sailed together in a while, there’s an easy way to get everyone on the same page and going fast.
Even the best tacticians pick the wrong side on occasion. When that happens, the key is to identify things aren’t going well and move to minimize the damage.
A starting line with a favored end opposite of where you want to go can throw a wrench in your plans, Terry Hutchinson sorts out options when things get tough.
When you jump into a new boat, keep it simple and play to your strengths to get the boat up to speed.
Keep it simple and understand your boat’s performance to better make gains and manage traffic in big fleets.
Regattas are often won not by the sailor with the most great finishes, but by the sailor with the fewest bad finishes.
Left or right? Crowd or Clear? The better choice is most often the one with the longterm gain.
Improve the mileage of your sail cloth by taking these simple steps for protection on and off the water.
Bringing new blood on board for your midwinter events? Terry Hutchinson shares his team-dynamic tips.
It’s hard enough to be consistent in any TP52 event. Key West can be all that much harder.
Terry Hutchinson reports in as tactician for Quantum Racing’s TP52 at Quantum Key West Race Week
You can respect your competitors, push the limits, and race hard while not losing sight of the big picture.
When the team hasn’t sailed together in a while, there’s an easy way to get everyone on the same page and going fast.
Even the best tacticians pick the wrong side on occasion. When that happens, the key is to identify things aren’t going well and move to minimize the damage.
A starting line with a favored end opposite of where you want to go can throw a wrench in your plans, Terry Hutchinson sorts out options when things get tough.
When you jump into a new boat, keep it simple and play to your strengths to get the boat up to speed.
Keep it simple and understand your boat’s performance to better make gains and manage traffic in big fleets.
Regattas are often won not by the sailor with the most great finishes, but by the sailor with the fewest bad finishes.
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