Please select your home edition
Edition
Lloyd Stevenson - AC INEOS 1456x180px TOP

World Sailing – Don’t rock the boat, whatever you do

by Rob Kothe and the Sail-World team on 5 Dec 2015
Capsize coming up - abandon ship Frank Quealey
In October 2014 Sail-World was in Palma, Mallorca to watch and listen to the deliberations of the International Sailing Federation (ISAF), the world governing body for the sport of sailing. Annual General Meeting council.

We were frankly appalled at the time management of the critical last two days of the event, of the major meeting when the Council met and deliberated on a large number of submissions from MNAs around the world.

It was easy to see why the group could have made the kind of stupid decision-making errors that will go down in history such as the famous removal of the Tornado multihull from the 2012 Olympics.

For the last two years, Sail-World has been attempting to find a copy of the overall plan. The master plan. The core mission statement of ISAF - without success. (Does anyone have a copy they can forward to us?).

We've asked numbers of people in ISAF. They say they will get back to us, but all we hear is the sound of crickets.

It is therefore not surprising that the delegates and the MNA's could produce submissions that in fact may have gone in the opposite direction to the unpublished philosophy and aims of the organisation.

Just as the decision to cut the Tornado, for purely political reasons, went in the opposite direction to the ISAF submission to the IOC, which had said our aim is to have faster, more exciting boats. That historic vote removed the fastest and most exciting boat from the Olympic suite.



At the 2014 AGM, there was a lot of work to be done and very important decisions to be made and then what struck us was the amount of time that was nothing more than entertainment and the background education for an expensively assembled group.

We estimate that at least a third of the time of the last critical two days' critical decision making of the meeting was spent on education, running of videos, briefings, speeches, etc.

All this information could have been presented to the delegates on a DVD two or three weeks before the event, letting people spend five or six hours of their time watching this content.

That would have allowed them to come to the Council meeting up to speed and ready to engage in constructive debate and informed decision making.

Large numbers of submissions were put to the council with no cross reference between any unpublished overall council policy and the direction of the actual submission.

With precious time already consumed, the deliberations of the group was cut short because of a crammed list of items, many of them nonsensical that required formal decisions.

There were, in fact, rare glimpses of actual intelligent debate and conversation amongst the delegates.

The whole event was deeply depressing.

After the weekend, I commented to one of the ISAF old hands among the delegates, how appalling the time management and decision making had been at the meeting, and he said to me, ‘I guess that was your first ISAF AGM meeting? ‘I nodded, and he said ‘I thought so. ‘It was so much better than in the olden days!!'

The reality is that had that procedure been followed in a commercial environment heads would have rolled.

This was the environment that still existed in early July 2015 when Sail-World interviewed, on his third day in the office, Peter Sowrey the man in the hot seat in Southampton.



Sowrey had a strong corporate background in large organisations where decision making was a premium, and this decision making was fact based.

At the time, we asked Sowrey just how he felt he could handle the politics of a very political organisation ISAF. He said,’ I am not interested in politics, I let the facts speak for themselves’.

Sowrey’s optimism on his ability to engender change within the peak sailing body without worrying about politics seemed to us overly optimistic, and so it is proven.

Now the highly credentialed and experienced corporate reformer is gone. (See the ISAF Press release)

Did he jump or was he pushed?

Don't assume a press release is a fact, but was there a culture clash?

Although he was an enthusiastic sailor Sowrey had not been involved in the machinations of ISAF and not been present at any ISAF Annual Conferences or Mid-Year conferences.

Looking at the background of the conversation that came out of Sanya, China, at the Annual General Meeting, that is pretty plain to see. The speed at which the CEO wanted to move, and the speed at the which the ISAF executive has traditionally moved seems to be poles apart.

One commentator said to us upon hearing of Sowrey’s departure is that perhaps the problem is that our representatives at ISAF are displeased with interruptions when they are drinking champagne, and they certainly don't like their opinions being questioned.

The previous CEO Jerome Pels had been in the organisation for some years before he took on the CEO role and it’s clear given the sorry state of the organisation he left after 17 years, sadly it seems he did not rock the boat.

Going forward it would appear that the selection of a new CEO for ISAF is going to be even more difficult - if the most recent CEO found that his position was unacceptable after less than six months.

Now it seems ISAF is unlikely to appoint a reformist CEO going forward. Probably one won't present anyway. Where now do you find a reformer out there who believes he can find his way through the ISAF politics.

Regardless when the ISAF Executive next sits down together, one hopes they don’t smugly congratulate each other for seeing off someone who was questioning their lack of direction and leadership, but rather hang their heads in shame at failing to rise to the reformist challenge.

Which do you think they will do?

Henri-Lloyd Dynamic RangeFestival of Sails 2026Allen Dynamic 40 Footer

Related Articles

America's Cup: "Road to Naples" starts in Sardinia
The first Preliminary Regatta will take place in the Gulf of Angels, home of Luna Rossa. The Louis Vuitton 38th America's Cup starts the ‘Road to Naples' with the announcement of the Region of Sardinia & City of Cagliari as the first Host Venue for the initial Preliminary Regatta to take place in May 2026
Posted on 16 Jan
90 boats entered for GP14 World Championship
Royal North of Ireland YC thrilled with phenomenal response Exciting news from Royal North of Ireland Yacht Club and the GP14 Class Association! Just days after the publication of the Notice of Race, ninety boats have already entered the GP14 World Championships, to be held this August.
Posted on 16 Jan
Argo takes Line Honours in RORC Transatlantic Race
Argo has set a new Multihull Race Record for the RORC Transatlantic Race Jason Carroll's MOD70 Argo (USA) has taken Multihull Line Honours in the 2026 RORC Transatlantic Race. Argo crossed the finish line outside English Harbour Antigua on Friday 16th January 2026 at 12:31:15 UTC.
Posted on 16 Jan
Great offers from Sunsail this January
Start the new year looking ahead to glorious sunshine and clear blue seas! Start the new year looking ahead to glorious sunshine and clear blue seas with special offers from Sunsail
Posted on 16 Jan
The Famous Project CIC at the equator
48th day at sea and now sailing in the northern hemisphere The eight sailors of The Famous Project CIC have been sailing since last night at 20 hours and 53 minutes standing upwards. They crossed the equator on their 48th day at sea and are now sailing in the northern hemisphere.
Posted on 16 Jan
Fremantle Doctor shakes up fleet
Ahead of Rolex SailGP Championship's 2026 Season Opener The Rolex SailGP Championship's 2026 Season gets under way this weekend in Perth - with the fleet already reeling from early encounters with the venue's infamous 'Fremantle Doctor'.
Posted on 16 Jan
Maximize protection with FlexForce Westuits
Wetsuits trusted and worn by the best Vaikobi's groundbreaking FlexForce range of sailing wetsuits bings you the ultimate in innovation, performance, and unmatched comfort for paddlers and sailors who need to stay warm but still be nimble.
Posted on 16 Jan
SailGP casualties continue to mount
The casualty list continued to climb at the first SailGP event of Season 6. It was confirmed to this morning's SailGP Preview Session that Spain would not be competing this weekend due to the damage sustained to a T-Foil and its case during a test session yesterday.
Posted on 16 Jan
SailGP: Spain out of Freo event
SailGP confirm that Spain is out of the first event of Season 6 due to yesterday's crash damage. Spain's Los Gallos SailGP suffered board case damage, board damage and hull damage in a nosedive in Freo on Thursday. It was announced at the start of Friday's media conference that the team will not be competing in the weekend's racing.
Posted on 16 Jan
Sodebo Ultim 3 maintains a lead
After a month on an attempt at the Jules Verne Trophy For exactly one month now, the crew of Sodebo Ultim 3 has been dedicated to their attempt at the Jules Verne Trophy. Having set sail on December 15th, they have achieved record times at the three great capes and have also set new records.
Posted on 15 Jan