Doublehanded Inshore Formats

Two sailors, one boat, tight courses and often less than six hours of racing – doublehanded inshore formats are among the most dynamic competitions in regatta sailing. Unlike two-handed offshore races, the sailing area remains manageable, safety requirements are reduced and the focus is on precision maneuvers, start tactics and rapid role rotation. At the same time, there are no bowmen, pit crew or dedicated trimmers – every tack, every spinnaker change and every mark rounding must be planned in advance and executed in a flash.

Doublehanded inshore regattas take place on sportboats such as J/70, J/80 or Melges 24, often as a separate scoring class within larger events such as Kiel Week or regional championships. This guide explains common formats, boat selection, role distribution, tactics and preparation for teams that want to take inshore racing seriously with exactly two people.

What Are Doublehanded Inshore Formats?

Doublehanded means: Exactly two sailors run the boat for the entire regatta – without guest crew, without rotation by third parties and without exceptions during individual races, unless the Notice of Race (NoR) provides otherwise. Inshore refers to competitions in sheltered or coastal waters: windward-leeward courses, trapezoid courses, short coastal passages or multi-day series with daily day races. Course length typically ranges between five and one hundred nautical miles per day; total duration is measured in hours, not weeks.

The format is not a separate boat type, but a crew category within existing regatta disciplines. Organizers run doublehanded divisions parallel to full-crew fleet races or as standalone championship series.

Distinction from Offshore and Shorthanded

In the spectrum of reduced crew sizes, doublehanded inshore sits between full-crew fleet racing and long offshore passages. Shorthanded with three or four people offers more specialization; doublehanded inshore demands maximum efficiency per person.

Criterion
Doublehanded Inshore
Two-Handed Offshore
Shorthanded (3–4 people)
Sailing area
Sheltered, coastal, visible courses
Open sea, night navigation
Inshore to coastal/offshore
Race duration per day
2 to 8 hours
24 hours to weeks
4 hours to several days
Sleep management
Not required
Mandatory watch system
Relevant on long legs
Maneuver frequency
Very high (tacks, gybes, sets)
Moderate, strategic
Medium to high
Typical boats
J/70, J/80, Melges 24, Dragon
Class 40, ORC racer, Figaro
ORC racer, sporty keelboats

The broader context is provided by Shorthanded and Doublehanded.

Common Inshore Formats for Doublehanded Teams

Organizers combine crew format and course layout differently. The following formats are the most widely used internationally.

Windward-Leeward Courses

The classic inshore format: start, windward mark, gate or leeward mark, windward again – multiple laps to the finish. For doublehanded crews, the challenge is maneuver density: every tack requires coordination between helm and crew; spinnaker sets and drops without a pit crew cost valuable seconds. Details on course geometry and tactics: Windward-Leeward Courses.

  1. Olympic Triangle / Windward-Leeward: Standard at sportboat championships; gate at the leeward end reduces collisions.
  2. Inner-Outer Loop: Two marks to windward; requires precise Rule 18 knowledge in overlaps.
  3. Slalom elements: Increasingly used at short-course events; doublehanded teams benefit from prepared role changes.

Trapezoid, Coastal and Series Formats

Trapezoid courses and slalom variants reward boat speed and smooth spinnaker changes. Coastal day races run along the coast with navigation parallel to sailing – details under Coastal Navigation and Tactics. Series with discard scoring (six to twelve races per weekend) reward consistency rather than single-race speculation.

Flow of a Doublehanded Inshore Race

1
Morning briefing and SI check
2
Course setup and wind study
3
Start sequence and positioning
4
First windward leg (trim + tactics)
5
Maneuver phase (tacks, sets)
6
Finish and debrief

Boat Classes for Doublehanded Inshore

Not every boat is suitable for two-handed inshore racing. Ideal are sporty keelboats with manageable sail area, lines reachable from the cockpit and stable handling characteristics with a reduced crew.

Boat class
Length
Doublehanded suitability
Typical event level
J/70
6.96 m
Very high – standard class for inshore doublehanded
National to international
J/80
8.06 m
High – slightly more physical effort during maneuvers
Club to national
Melges 24
7.32 m
High – fast, demanding spinnaker work
Grand prix inshore
Dragon
8.90 m
Medium – traditionally three-person, doublehanded possible
Classic regattas
Etchells
10.36 m
Medium – physically demanding with two
Match and fleet racing

Detailed portraits of common sportboats: J70 and J80. In handicap regattas instead of one-design, ORC or IRC ratings apply – then the doublehanded division often decides between comparable boat types within the same rating group.

Boat Selection for Doublehanded Inshore

One-Design

J/70, Melges 24 – recommended entry point; budget, availability and fleet size are decisive

Rating Inshore

ORC Club – handicap scoring with comparable boat types in the same division

Mixed Fleet Division

Doublehanded scoring within larger events parallel to full-crew fleets

Role Distribution and Team Dynamics

With two people, all classic crew roles overlap. Successful teams divide tasks clearly and consistently – not situationally on a whim.

Skipper and Crew: Typical Division

The skipper steers in most doublehanded inshore teams and carries responsibility for tactics, rule compliance and communication with the race committee. The crew (also called co-skipper) handles trim, headsail handling, spinnaker work and supports navigation and protest documentation.

  1. Helm and tactics: Course choice, laylines, covering and start positioning.
  2. Sail handling: Main, genoa and spinnaker trim; winch work during maneuvers.
  3. Navigation: GPS, plotter, wind and current observation – often parallel to sailing.
  4. Communication: Clear calls during maneuvers ("Tack in three … two … now!").

In-depth coverage of roles in regatta sailing: Helmsman and Tactician.

Maneuver Planning and Communication

Doublehanded inshore thrives on standard procedures. Teams define fixed routines before the event for:

  • Tacks and gybes (who goes to the mainsheet when, who releases the gennaker)
  • Spinnaker sets and drops (sequence, commands, error fallback)
  • Mark roundings (inside overlap position, Rule 18, penalty on contact)
  • Start (timer, line sag, acceleration)

Maneuver Time: Full Crew vs. Doublehanded (J/70)

Maneuver
Full crew (5 people)
Doublehanded (2 people)
Spinnaker set
approx. 12–15 seconds
approx. 18–25 seconds
Tack
approx. 8 seconds
approx. 12–14 seconds

Tactics in Doublehanded Inshore

Tactical principles from fleet racing still apply – implementation under crew constraints requires prioritization.

Without a dedicated bowman, doublehanded teams often choose more conservative start positions. The first windward leg frequently decides the race – layline errors weigh heavier than with full crew. At gate marks, Rule 18 situations are critical; doublehanded boats respond more sluggishly to course changes. Successful teams cover selectively and in series scoring aim for top-five consistency rather than risky pursuit of victory in every race.

In doublehanded inshore series, median placement across all races counts more than a single win. Plan equipment and energy for races six and eight – not just for the opening race.

Equipment and Boat Setup

Inshore doublehanded requires less offshore equipment than transatlantic races, but targeted optimizations:

  • Lines into the cockpit: Fewer deck runs, faster reaction in gusts and maneuvers
  • Marked lines and color codes: Recognizable under stress and poor visibility
  • Autopilot (where rule-compliant): For coastal inshore, short rest periods while trimming
  • Redundant navigation: Tablet plus handheld GPS; backup in case of electrical failure
  • Inshore-level safety equipment: Life jackets, fire extinguisher, first aid per NoR

Doublehanded does not mean reduced safety obligations. In accidents, there is no reserve crew – life jackets, harness and clear MOB procedures must be practiced before the first start.

Preparation: Checklist for Doublehanded Inshore

Pre-Season Checklist

  • Role distribution documented in writing and confirmed by both sides
  • Standard maneuver procedures (tack, gybe, set, drop) practiced at least ten times
  • NoR and SI read; doublehanded special rules and crew limit understood
  • Equipment check: lines, blocks, spinnaker, reefing system, navigation
  • Rules refresh: Rule 18, start rules, protest time limits
  • Fitness and coordination: short intensive load simulated (multiple races in succession)
  • Debrief template for after each race (What went well? Where were seconds lost?)

Regatta Day Checklist

  • Weather briefing and course discussion noted
  • Sail choice made for wind range
  • Communication devices and timer tested
  • Start watch synchronized, line sag strategy discussed
  • Emergency and MOB procedure briefly reviewed

First Doublehanded Inshore Event

  • Choose partner and define roles
  • Classify boat and check doublehanded division
  • Complete training weekend
  • Choose club regatta as entry point
  • Read NoR and doublehanded special rules
  • Review maneuver video and adjust procedures
  • Plan series tactics (consistency over single-race victory)
  • Schedule next event in calendar

Well-Known Events and Getting Started

Doublehanded inshore divisions are part of many national and international regattas:

  1. Kiel Week: Dedicated two-handed scoring on sportboats and in mixed fleets.
  2. Regional DSV championships: Doublehanded classes in J/70, J/80 and club fleets.
  3. Cowes Week and Palma: International inshore series with shorthanded divisions.
  4. Club regattas: Entry with lower pressure; ideal for first two-handed experience.

More on major European events: Kiel Week and Short Legs and Day Races.

Doublehanded Inshore Growth (2015–2025): The number of registered doublehanded divisions at European sportboat events is rising steadily – with a clear focus from 2020 onward. Full-crew fleets remain stable by comparison. The format is gaining importance as an entry point into reduced crew sailing.

Common Mistakes

Typical mistakes: unclear commands (one speaker per phase), overambitious starts, missing series planning, unpracticed role changes and underestimated hiking power. Before the first event, check NoR and doublehanded special rules for the class.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Do I Need a Separate License?

The regatta license according to the organizer applies – no separate doublehanded license, unless the NoR provides otherwise.

Is Every Boat Allowed?

Only if the Notice of Race provides a doublehanded division for the boat type. One-design classes and handicap fleets have different rules.

Getting Started Without Your Own Boat?

Charter boats with doublehanded scoring or club crew searches are common entry paths for first two-handed experience.

Conclusion

Doublehanded inshore formats combine the intensity of classic course racing with the team responsibility of reduced crew sizes. Success depends less on exotic equipment than on practiced procedures, clear role distribution and series thinking. Those switching from full crew to two-handed should first automate maneuvers, then refine tactics – and plan offshore ambitions separately under Two-Handed Offshore Races.

Related Topics

Last updated: July 4, 2026