Favored End and Bias

Whoever wins the start often sails the first windward leg from the front. Decisive factors are not only timing, but above all the question: Which end of the start line is favored? The Favored End lies to windward – whoever starts there is closer to the windward mark and can use clear air and outside lanes earlier. Line Bias describes how strong this asymmetry is. This guide explains how to recognize and calculate bias and translate it into your start strategy.

What Is the Favored End?

The start line runs between the pin-end mark (pin) and the committee boat (RC boat). In theory, it stands at a right angle to the wind direction. In practice, that is rarely the case: the wind shifts, the line is laid slightly askew, or the wind has already changed noticeably since the warning signal.

The Favored End is the end of the line that lies further to windward. From there, the route to the first mark is shorter – sometimes only a few meters, sometimes significantly more. In tight fleet races, these meters can decide victory or defeat.

Pin End vs. Committee Boat End

  1. Pin end favored: The pin lies further to windward than the RC boat. Whoever starts on the left at the pin is closest to the windward mark.
  2. Committee boat end favored: The RC end lies further to windward. Whoever starts on the right has the shorter route to the first mark.
  3. Neutral line: Both ends lie approximately equally far to windward. The tactical decision shifts to lane preference, fleet size, and port-starboard options.

Start line and favored end: The line runs horizontally from left (pin end) to right (committee boat). The wind comes from below upward. The more windward end is the favored end – the dashed distance from there to the windward mark is shorter than from the other end.

Understanding and Measuring Line Bias

Line Bias is the deviation of the start line from the ideal 90-degree position relative to the wind direction. A strong bias means one end is clearly favored. A weak or neutral bias allows more flexible start decisions.

Visual Method: Head-to-Wind Alignment

The simplest method on the water:

  1. Sail head to wind (bow directly into the wind).
  2. Turn your head and look along the start line – from pin to RC boat.
  3. If the line lies to your right (starboard side), the pin end is favored.
  4. If the line lies to your left, the committee boat end is favored.
  5. If the line lies straight ahead of you, the line is neutral.

Tip: Perform the head-to-wind check several times – once before the warning, once after the preparatory signal, and shortly before the start. Wind shifts in the last two minutes often change the bias noticeably.

Compass and GPS Method

It becomes more precise with instruments:

  1. Measure the wind direction (MWV or compass with wind correction).
  2. Measure the course of the start line (from pin to RC boat).
  3. Calculate the difference: ideally 90 degrees between wind and line.
  4. A deviation greater than about 5–7 degrees is considered a noticeable bias – depending on boat class and course length.
Method
Accuracy
Time Required
Ideal For
Head-to-wind visually
Medium – experience-dependent
30 seconds
Club regattas, dinghies, quick decisions
Compass (wind vs. line)
High in steady wind
1–2 minutes
One-design fleets, Olympic classes
GPS / tactical software
Very high
Continuous during pre-start
Keelboats, large fleets, pro events
Observing the competition
Indirect, but valuable
Ongoing
All classes – shows where the best sailors go

Impact of Wind Shifts on Bias

Bias is not a constant. It changes when:

  • the wind shifts left (backing) → pin end becomes more favored
  • the wind shifts right (veering) → committee boat end gains advantage
  • gusts and pressure lines create different wind angles across the line
  • the race committee readjusts the line (rare, but possible)

Warning: Do not rely on the bias from ten minutes ago. Whoever misses the last wind shift before the start often starts at the wrong end – with a structural disadvantage that no perfect timing can compensate for.

Tactical Consequences at the Favored End

Targeting the favored end sounds simple – but it is rarely risk-free. Large fleets, tight pin-end areas, and OCS risk make the decision complex.

Advantages of the Favored End

  • Shorter route to the windward mark
  • Earlier layline options on the favored side
  • Psychological pressure on competitors starting at the unfavorable end
  • Better VMG in the first minutes after the start

Risks at the Favored End

  • Crowding and dirty air – many boats gather at the favored end
  • OCS risk (on course side) – especially at the pin with early timing
  • Little room to maneuver – mistakes are hard to correct
  • Black flag or U flag situations – aggressive pin-end timing is penalized
Situation
Favored End Pin
Favored End Committee Boat
Neutral Line
Strong bias (> 10°)
Occupy pin early, clear timing
Gather on the right, port tack after start
Rare – one end dominates
Medium bias (5–10°)
Pin-end option, middle as backup
Start on the right, secure lane side
Flexible based on lane preference
Weak bias (< 5°)
Middle to pin, favored end optional
Middle to RC, do not force it
Clear air more important than end choice
Large fleet (50+ boats)
Heavy crowding, OCS risk
More room, often better option
Aim for upper third of the line

Comparison: Favored End, Middle, and Unfavorable End

Characteristic
Favored End
Middle
Unfavorable End
Distance to mark
Shortest route to windward mark
Medium distance
Longest route to mark
Air quality
Often limited due to crowding
Often better clear air
More free air, less competition
OCS risk
High – especially at the pin
Moderate
Lower pressure
Fleet crowding
Very high
Moderate
Low
Strategic flexibility
Low – fixed position required
High – more maneuvering room
High – alternative lane options

When to Ignore the Favored End?

Not always is the favored end worth it. Experienced tacticians deviate when:

  • lane preference (left or right side of the windward leg) is stronger than line bias
  • too many boats are already positioned at the favored end
  • current or tide favors one side of the course
  • the wind is unstable and a shift in the opposite direction seems likely
  • you plan covering or splitting against a specific opponent

In these cases, a start in the middle or at the slightly unfavorable end with better air and more maneuvering room can bring more than a three-meter advantage at the pin.

Practice: Bias Check Before the Start

Checklist for Tacticians

  • Head-to-wind check performed (at least twice)
  • Wind shift in the last 5 minutes observed
  • Competition at pin and RC end counted
  • Bias strength assessed (weak / medium / strong)
  • Lane preference compared with line bias
  • OCS and black flag risk at chosen end evaluated
  • Backup plan defined (e.g. middle instead of pin)
  • Crew informed about target end and timing

Typical Sequence in the Last 3 Minutes

  1. Minus 3 minutes: Final bias check, decision favored end or alternative.
  2. Minus 2 minutes: Approach chosen end, observe competition.
  3. Minus 1 minute: Final position, build speed.
  4. Minus 30 seconds: Acceleration, align luff timing with countdown.
  5. Start signal: Full speed, cross the line close but legal.
1
Observe wind – detect shifts and pressure lines
2
Measure bias – head-to-wind or compass check
3
Check lane preference – left or right side of the leg
4
Choose end – favored end, middle, or alternative
5
Hold position – keep competition and timing in view
6
Execute start – full speed across the line

Important: In one-design fleet races, a strong line bias often trumps pure lane preference. In uncertain wind, clear air weighs more heavily than the last meter at the favored end.

Common Mistakes

  1. Measuring bias only once – wind shifts, decision becomes outdated.
  2. Forcing the favored end – despite a crowded pin or poor air.
  3. Confusing bias with lane preference – different concepts, both relevant.
  4. Underestimating OCS risk – pressure is greatest at the favored end.
  5. Ignoring the competition – where the best sailors go often shows the realistic bias assessment.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

How many meters of advantage does the favored end bring?

Typically 5–30 meters, depending on bias strength and line length.

Should I always start at the favored end?

No – clear air and maneuvering room can be more important than the meter advantage at the favored end.

Can the bias change during the pre-start?

Yes, especially with thermal winds and in the last two minutes before the start signal.

Related Topics