Race scoring at the club: pen-and-paper or iPads and phones?
There’s a special kind of romance to race scoring with a clipboard: the wind flaps the paper, the pencil refuses to write because it’s damp, and someone shouts “SAIL NUMBER 42!” while you’re busy trying to stop the results sheet making a bid for freedom. It’s traditional. It’s character-building. It’s also the reason half of us have handwriting that looks like a seismograph during an earthquake.
So… should we keep the clipboard and carbon paper, or move to iPads/phones and let the gadgets do the heavy lifting?
What pen-and-paper still does brilliantly
1) It always works. No Wi-Fi. No battery. No “app update required”.
2) It’s fast for the basics. If you’re recording simple finish order for a small fleet, a decent results sheet and a competent scribe is hard to beat.
3) It’s transparent. Anyone can see what was written down, when, and by whom.
But paper has two enemies: water and humans. Water turns your ink into modern art; humans transpose sail numbers, miss a boat, forget a code (DNF/DNS/OCS), or drop a sheet overboard at the precise moment you finally got it right.
What phones and tablets do brilliantly
Used well, digital scoring is less “fancy tech” and more “fewer late-night re-checks”.
1) Fewer transcription errors. You enter once, not twice (on the water → then again into a computer later).
2) Results can appear immediately. Some systems publish online as soon as you hit “save”, which is great for keen racers and even better for impatient ones. HalSail, for example, is designed for entering results on any device and seeing them online straight away.
3) Handy scoring rules. Proper race-scoring software handles series scoring, discards, codes, ties, and multiple scoring systems without needing someone who “knows Excel”. Sailwave explicitly supports configurable scoring systems and is self-contained (no Excel required).
The hidden gotchas with going digital
Digital isn’t automatically better; it’s better when the system is set up for real race-day life:
-
Screen + sunlight + wet fingers can be a comedy trio.
-
Battery anxiety is real (especially on cold days).
-
One person who knows the system is a single point of failure.
-
Connectivity can be patchy (committee boat / far end of the river).
If you choose an online-first tool, look for an approach that still works sensibly when signal is weak (or have a paper fallback).
A very sensible middle way (my favourite): “Belt-and-braces scoring”
For most clubs, the sweet spot is:
On the water: record finish order/times on paper and enter into a phone/tablet if practical.
Ashore: publish from the digital system, but keep the paper sheet as the audit trail.
This gives you:
-
resilience (paper backup),
-
speed (digital publishing),
-
and fewer “we’ll fix it later” moments.
Practical tool options that clubs actually use
Here are three common “levels”, from simplest to more feature-rich:
1) Start simple (desktop/laptop after racing): Sailwave
Great if you’re happy entering results ashore and want robust series scoring and publishing support. Sailwave is designed as dedicated scoring software and doesn’t require Excel.
2) Online scoring and quick publishing: HalSail
Designed to run in a browser on phones/tablets/laptops, with immediate online results and even “on the water” entry options.
3) Free Windows program (offline): Hal’s Race Results
A downloadable Windows option if you want to keep everything local/offline, with the online option available separately via HalSail.
A quick decision guide for your club
Choose paper-first if:
-
small fleets, informal racing, minimal series complexity,
-
lots of volunteers rotating through duty,
-
you want maximum robustness with minimum training.
Choose digital-first if:
-
multiple fleets, pursuit races, handicap maths, discards, championships,
-
you regularly publish results and want them quickly,
-
you’re tired of retyping everything after racing.
Choose hybrid if:
-
you want speed and certainty,
-
you often have new volunteers on duty,
-
you race in conditions where screens and signal are… optimistic.
A tiny checklist if you do go digital
-
One device is dedicated to scoring (not also taking photos of “that capsize”).
-
Power bank + charging cable live in the race box.
-
Waterproof case or zip pouch.
-
A printed “how to” sheet for the scoring workflow.
-
Paper backup sheet always on hand (because sailing)

