Misconduct and Disqualification

Gross misconduct – referred to in the rulebook as Gross Misconduct – is not a marginal topic in regatta sailing, but the red line between hard-fought competition and behaviour that damages the sport. While a normal rule violation is handled through the protest procedure with a protest flag and hearing, Rule 69 and Competitive Behaviour applies to misconduct: intentional endangerment, insults, result manipulation or repeated malicious rule-breaking. The most common and most serious sanction is disqualification (DSQ) – from a single race to exclusion from the entire event and beyond.

Understanding misconduct helps you recognise early when a dispute can still be resolved on the water – and when a Rule 69 procedure becomes unavoidable.

What Misconduct Means in Sailing

Misconduct is not a catch-all term for every rule violation. The Racing Rules of Sailing (RRS) draw a clear line: Part 2 governs right of way, room at marks and manoeuvres on the race course. Rule 69 governs behaviour that fundamentally violates sportsmanship, fairness or the reputation of sailing – on the water, at the dock, in the regatta area or in direct connection with the competition.

Forms of Gross Misconduct

Typical misconduct cases can be divided into categories:

  1. Aggression and insults – loudly abusing opponents, umpires or race officials, threats, racist or sexist remarks
  2. Intentional endangerment – deliberate ramming, late avoidance with collision intent, threatening people or others' property
  3. Result manipulation – arranged placings, deliberately holding back to benefit a third party, unauthorised agreements via radio
  4. Systematic rule-breaking – repeated intentional rule-breaking with the aim of harming others (not a single mistake under pressure)
  5. Violations of integrity rules – fraud in boat measurement, doping violations, breach of Anti-Doping and Fair Play requirements
Rule 69
Root: Gross misconduct and sportsmanship
Aggression
Insults, threats, discriminatory remarks
Endangerment
Deliberate ramming, collision intent, threatening people
Manipulation
Arranged placings, radio agreements, influencing results
Systematic breach
Repeated intentional rule-breaking to harm others
Integrity
Measurement fraud, doping, violations of fair play requirements

What Is Not Misconduct

Not every heated scene is Rule 69. The following generally does not constitute misconduct:

  • A close but rule-compliant tack duel with a loud "Room!" or "Protest!"
  • A single right-of-way error resolved through the normal protest hearing
  • Frustration after a mistake, as long as no insult or threat follows
  • Hard but fair sailing within RRS Part 2

Warning: Misconduct is not a shortcut to get rid of an unwelcome opponent. Anyone filing a Rule 69 complaint must prove gross misconduct with concrete facts – not merely subjective feelings of injustice.

Disqualification: Forms and Effects

Disqualification (DSQ) is the central sanction for misconduct. It means that a boat or competitor is not scored for a race, several races or the entire event. The abbreviation DSQ is standard in regatta terminology – details on status codes such as DNF, DNS and OCS can be found under DNF, DNS, DSQ and OCS.

Type of Disqualification
Scope
Typical Cause
Scoring Consequence
DSQ single race
Affected race only
Serious rule violation with misconduct character in one race
Penalty points (often number of competitors + 1) in the series
DSQ multiple races
Several races of the event
Repeated misconduct during a regatta
Major deterioration in overall standings
DSQ entire event
All races of the event
Most serious misconduct, e.g. intentional endangerment
No result, no prize, no ranking points
DSQ with recommendation to federation
Event + report to higher authority
Particularly serious or repeated cases
Event DSQ plus possible season ban
Warning without DSQ
No change to scoring
Borderline case, first minor misconduct
Documented; escalation on repetition

DSQ vs. Normal Protest Penalty

Protest DSQ (Part 2)

Rule violation on the course, triggered by protest flag. Typically only a single race is affected. The subject is the rule violation in competition on the water.

Rule 69 DSQ (Misconduct)

Misconduct and violation of sportsmanship, triggered by written complaint. Event-wide DSQ is possible. The subject is gross misconduct, not just a manoeuvre error.

Gradation of Sanctions

The Jury and Protest Committee chooses the sanction according to severity, intent, history and impact on the competition:

  1. Warning – in borderline cases or first-time minor misconduct
  2. DSQ single race – when the misconduct is clearly tied to one race
  3. DSQ entire event – for most serious misconduct or when a single DSQ does not reflect the scope
  4. Recommendation to National Authority – for cases that go beyond the event (bans, career consequences)

The Rule 69 Procedure for Misconduct

A misconduct procedure follows a fixed process. It differs from a normal protest in several respects: no protest flag, written complaint, burden of proof on the complainant – and the committee can also act on its own initiative.

1
Incident (water or dock)
2
Documentation (witnesses, photos)
3
Written complaint
4
Admissibility check (dismissed or hearing)
5
Rule 69 hearing
6
Decision (warning or DSQ)
7
Appeal optional

Step 001: Filing a Complaint

The complaint must be submitted in writing to the protest committee or race committee and must contain:

  1. Complainant – boat, person or organisation
  2. Respondent – boat, competitor or team
  3. Facts – What, when, where (concrete actions, no generalities)
  4. Justification – Why this constitutes gross misconduct
  5. Evidence – witnesses, photos, videos, radio logs

Step 002: Hearing and Decision

At the Rule 69 hearing, both sides are heard. Witnesses may be called. The committee examines:

  • Is there gross misconduct (not just a normal rule dispute)?
  • Are the facts proven?
  • What sanction is appropriate?

Under certain conditions, an appeal may be lodged against the decision via Redress and Appeals – within the deadlines defined in the Notice of Race and Sailing Instructions.

Procedure Step
Protest (Part 2)
Rule 69 (Misconduct)
Trigger
Protest flag on boat
Written complaint or ex officio
Time window
Protest deadline per SI (often 90 min. after RC finish)
Per SI; often same protest time
Subject
Rule violation on the course
Gross misconduct, sportsmanship
Maximum penalty
DSQ of race, scoring penalty
Event DSQ, federation report, ban
Ex officio possible
No (protest flag only)
Yes – PC can act on its own initiative

Practical Examples: Misconduct and Disqualification

Example 1: Insult After the Protest Hearing

A helmsman loudly and personally abuses a jury member at the dock after an unfavourable hearing result. The protest committee can open a Rule 69 hearing on its own initiative – regardless of whether anyone formally files a complaint. Possible sanction: warning on first offence, DSQ from the event for serious or repeated insult.

Example 2: Deliberate Ramming After Finishing

A boat deliberately rams a competing boat after finishing. This is no longer a normal right-of-way issue, but intentional endangerment. Typical consequence: DSQ from entire event plus recommendation to the federation.

Example 3: Arranged Result in Team Racing

Two teams agree in advance to sail certain placings to harm a third team. The protest committee can disqualify all involved boats for affected races or the entire event.

Day 1
Incident on the water or at the dock
Day 1–2
Written complaint and Rule 69 hearing
Day 2–3
DSQ decision by the protest committee
Weeks later
Federation proceedings and possible season ban

Checklist: Avoiding Misconduct

For sailors, helms and crews:

  • Before the event: read Rule 69 and Fundamental Rule in the RRS
  • Crew briefing: fair conduct, no escalation at the dock after heated races
  • For rule violations: self-penalty or timely protest – do not confuse "hard sailing" with misconduct
  • Treat umpires and race officials respectfully, even when decisions are disputed
  • No insults, threats or intentional endangerment – not even "out of frustration"
  • No agreements on result manipulation – neither by radio nor at the dock
  • Comply with equipment and anti-doping rules
  • After controversial races: brief factual conversation instead of social media attack

Checklist: Acting Correctly in a Misconduct Incident

For those affected and witnesses:

  • Document the situation immediately – name witnesses, note time and place
  • Secure photos or videos if available and permitted
  • Submit written complaint to the protest committee within the deadline
  • Describe the facts objectively – concrete actions, no emotions
  • At the hearing: testify truthfully, no exaggeration
  • Review decision: if DSQ, observe deadlines for appeals

Tip: After controversial races, have a brief, factual conversation with the affected opponent before the situation escalates. Many conflicts can be resolved without triggering Rule 69 or a disqualification.

Long-Term Consequences of a Disqualification

A DSQ under Rule 69 has effects beyond the current event: it appears permanently in the results list, can cost ranking points and qualifications, and with a federation report can lead to season bans.

Important: Disqualification under Rule 69 addresses gross misconduct – not a hard manoeuvre error on the course.

Sanction Spectrum Rule 69

Warning

First minor misconduct without change to scoring.

DSQ 1 Race

Disqualification from a single race with penalty points.

DSQ Event

Exclusion from the entire event without scoring and prize.

Federation ban

Report to the National Authority with possible season ban.

World Sailing measure

International sanctions in the most serious cases.

Conclusion

Misconduct and disqualification mark the boundary between hard-fought competition and behaviour that harms sailing. Those who know Rule 69 and sail fairly protect themselves and strengthen the sport.

Related Topics