your opinion wanted
#1
Posted 2012-May-06, 06:44
Question number 1: Lets say that you have a couple of players that were found to have altered score slips in a game. These players took scores and altered the slip so they were not the real and honest results. The action is discovered. The players who did the deed are banned from playing together for two years. Not banned from playing, but not together. The ban over the pair begin playing again. Should this pair be allowed to play for your countries national team?
Question number 2: A tournament is set up and a very small group attend. Lets say there are 11 to 13 teams entered in this team game. The director announces before the event begins that because of the small number of teams he is not going to have a carry over. His reason is because this would be a bit unfair to the majority of the players. The game is played over 2 sessions. The result at the end is team B wins, team A is enraged. Team A insists there should have been a carry over which would have placed them first and team B second. This team is so annoyed they go to their governing body The bridge league) and have them change the rules of the event. They win.
The players that composed the NEW winning team, some are members of the board. Their claim is that their bridge body wanted the event to be run with a carry over (this in fact was never established).In fact correspondence between an organizer and the director there is no mention of a carry over plan for the event at all. However they (The League Board) over rule the director, change the form of scoring to a carry over, and Bob's your uncle. New winners!
The governing bridge league did ask two different directors their opinion. These two directors told them the event was run fairly, within the rules of the leagues and the results should stand. But this advice was ignored.
Now for the final question number 3: What can we do if anything?
#2
Posted 2012-May-06, 06:47
#3
Posted 2012-May-06, 07:06
#4
Posted 2012-May-06, 07:23
#2 "Should this be allowed?" - yes, given the event did not have Conditions of Contest, trying to have a higher body (i.e. somebody who could allow or not allowed it, otherwise the question is useless) sort it out based on "correspondence between an organizer and the director" seems hopeless. If the event did not have any big prize, feel free to allow members of the League Board to overturn the result, as it will make it easier to get them removed from the Board.
#1 "Should this pair be allowed to play for your countries national team?" - yes, assuming they have completed their suspension, and meet the event requirements on the previous and current conduct of participants, and can find team mates willing to be associated with their results. The suspension given (don't play with each other) seems clearly wrong, but not all details are given, but don't bother with the complete mess of it all.
#5
Posted 2012-May-06, 12:09
If I understand the OP correctly, the outcome of the event in #2 was determined by the results of the second session alone (that's what 'no carryover' means to me). Is my understanding correct, McPhee?
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#6
Posted 2012-May-06, 13:22
Now to #1. A two part answer. I. If the penalty was that they were not allowed to play as partners for two years then at the end of two years there should be no further penalty. II. The penalty was far too lenient. What were the authorities thinking? If these two guys were permanently bounced out of organized bridge the game would be the better for it. They are adults, no? If they are under the age of 18, we can make some allowance here. But adults? At a minimum send them off for five years, and tell them that after that time is up they can apply for re-admission and we will consider it. The authorities who came up with this "well, you can't play together for a while" rule are the ones who need to explain themselves. I gather everyone fears being sued. If that's the case, then I guess that's an excuse, or at least a reason. Yuk.
#7
Posted 2012-May-06, 13:23
#8
Posted 2012-May-06, 13:56
kenberg, on 2012-May-06, 13:22, said:
Now to #1. A two part answer. I. If the penalty was that they were not allowed to play as partners for two years then at the end of two years there should be no further penalty. II. The penalty was far too lenient. What were the authorities thinking? If these two guys were permanently bounced out of organized bridge the game would be the better for it. They are adults, no? If they are under the age of 18, we can make some allowance here. But adults? At a minimum send them off for five years, and tell them that after that time is up they can apply for re-admission and we will consider it. The authorities who came up with this "well, you can't play together for a while" rule are the ones who need to explain themselves. I gather everyone fears being sued. If that's the case, then I guess that's an excuse, or at least a reason. Yuk.
what he said
#9
Posted 2012-May-06, 13:57
mcphee, on 2012-May-06, 13:23, said:
I still don't quite understand. Did only a certain number of teams qualify for the final session?
Anyway, my answers:
1) If that was the penalty imposed, and they served their time, they would appear eligible to me. I don't think the penalty was sufficient, but if that is what the ruling body imposed, then there's nothing to be done retroactively.
2) I'd want to refer to the CoC. Absent something specific in the CoC, I would assume the the director had authority to change or determine the procedure and the result stands.
3) Establish good rules and CoC before such things happen. I think that trying to "fix" the past would be more of the meddling that appears to have taken place in #2. Just establish rules so that these sorts of issues do not arise in the future (so that when there is a question, there is an established answer).
#10
Posted 2012-May-06, 14:14
In the second case, either the original result should stand or the event should be cancelled. In general, if the director gets the format or conditions wrong and nobody objects immediately, then I think you are stuck with that. Allowing an objection after the fact, when others have relied on the director's statement of the conditions, is just not on.
#11
Posted 2012-May-06, 16:24
nigel_k, on 2012-May-06, 14:14, said:
It sounds like OP has heard this story at least second-hand (maybe even less directly than that). It's entirely possible that Team A, upon hearing the director announce that there would be no carryover, immediately said "that's really stupid -- you can't have a two-session Swiss and only count the second session to determine the winner. We are contacting the RA." (Any form of tournament with qualifying and final rounds is not a "two-session Swiss".)
#12
Posted 2012-May-06, 16:47
Nobody has any business removing directors decision and asigning a new winner. If anything, they could have the rights for the final to be replayed. But even that is a total overurun over the real winners of the event.
It is very easy to assume the positions are reversed and ask yourself who would win the tournament then. Would the bridge league make the other team the winner in case they needed the carry over to win? no way, and we all know it. This is so outrageous.
#13
Posted 2012-May-06, 17:28
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#14
Posted 2012-May-06, 18:06
The shepherd drives the wolf from the sheep's throat for which the sheep thanks the shepherd as a liberator, while the wolf denounces him for the same act as the destroyer of of liberty.
-A. Lincoln
#15
Posted 2012-May-06, 18:23
My own view on cheating is public flogging. They should have made these two players and example, and to let them serve a sentence and later play on the national team because they (ahem) won a birth
#16
Posted 2012-May-06, 18:38
Question 2 needs better facts--what exactly happened here. I do believe that members of Team A (or for that matter, members of Team B if had been any) should recuse themselves from considering the matter when it was appealed to the league. A rather settled concept of law in most jurisdictions is that no man should be a judge in his own case.
Question 3 is also easy: vote for better leadership, throw these guys out.
#17
Posted 2012-May-06, 18:45
mcphee, on 2012-May-06, 18:23, said:
My own view on cheating is public flogging. They should have made these two players and example, and to let them serve a sentence and later play on the national team because they (ahem) won a birth.
Mcphee posted this while I was writing my post. In view of this clarification, it seems obvious that the results should stand in case #2. As to the public flogging, this is an overbid but not by much.
#18
Posted 2012-May-06, 19:24
This post has been edited by Bbradley62: 2012-May-06, 19:35
#19
Posted 2012-May-06, 20:08
mcphee, on 2012-May-06, 06:44, said:
If they are resorting to doctoring score sheets to get a good result, I doubt they would ever be good enough for national selection, so this is probably a moot point.
#20
Posted 2012-May-06, 21:12
Bbradley62, on 2012-May-06, 19:24, said:
A long-term solution to all McPhee's problems might be to elect a different board.