Hydro doc, the one part of what you say that I don't quite agree with concerns the length of a race day and the number of classes. A boat race is not a football or baseball game with a beginning and an end. I remember the huge crowds at the outboard races (Saturday) and Inboard races (Sunday) at Greenlake in the middle of Seattle in the Sixties. This was also still the peak of classic Unlimited racing, which was an enormous recruiting tool for getting Seattle-area boys like me into outboard racing, and men in Inboards. People who were not racers but were still avid fans would come from all over the greater Seattle area to watch the racers, as did people in the immediate neighborhood. But nobody thought of it in the way you think of stick-and-ball sports in which you want to get to your seat in time to see the start, and stay until the last strikeout. At a race, whether a boatrace, drag race, motocross, roadrace, or kart race, the spectators then and now get there when they get there, stay for a few hours, and then go home. Spectators have no interest in watching trophies handed out; why would they? The action's over. So I disagree with the idea I've seen expressed on these pages by several people that to draw spectators, we have to have short programs with no more than a half-dozen classes with full fields. That wasn't what made the boat races popular in the Sixties, and I think you have to look elsewhere for answers.
There's nothing to stop any club from trying this for a season or two, but I doubt it will produce any increase in numbers of spectators (and some of the racers in classes that don't make the show will quit rather than run a class they don't really care for).
There's nothing to stop any club from trying this for a season or two, but I doubt it will produce any increase in numbers of spectators (and some of the racers in classes that don't make the show will quit rather than run a class they don't really care for).
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