Team leaving match
#1
Posted 2019-October-15, 15:48
One table completes the 14 boards of the first half of the match. On the other table there's disagreement about rulings and upset feelings. The pair from team A leaves the table after 12 boards and after discussions with a TD leaves without completing the match.
What should the result of the match be in the league table? In case it matters, team B was up by 34 imps on the 12 boards that were played at both tables.
#2
Posted 2019-October-15, 19:09
Bende, on 2019-October-15, 15:48, said:
One table completes the 14 boards of the first half of the match. On the other table there's disagreement about rulings and upset feelings. The pair from team A leaves the table after 12 boards and after discussions with a TD leaves without completing the match.
What should the result of the match be in the league table? In case it matters, team B was up by 34 imps on the 12 boards that were played at both tables.
There is no universal answer to this. Look first at the league's rules / conditions of contest. And tell us the jurisdiction.
#3
Posted 2019-October-16, 00:38
In any case, the result in the case of a walk over is:
- Team A gets 0 vp.
- Team B gets VP from the best of three options:
1. The average from other matches, calculated at the end of the league.
2. 12 VP
3. The average of what other teams have scored against team A, calculated at the end of the league.
No masterpoints are rewarded.
Does it make sense that the above is also used in the case where the match was started but aborted? Does it matter how many boards were played?
#4
Posted 2019-October-16, 01:34
Bende, on 2019-October-16, 00:38, said:
In any case, the result in the case of a walk over is:
- Team A gets 0 vp.
- Team B gets VP from the best of three options:
1. The average from other matches, calculated at the end of the league.
2. 12 VP
3. The average of what other teams have scored against team A, calculated at the end of the league.
No masterpoints are rewarded.
Does it make sense that the above is also used in the case where the match was started but aborted? Does it matter how many boards were played?
It makes a major difference whether the match was aborted due to Force Majeure or (as here) due to an unacceptable action by a contestant.
I believe that with us in Norway:
Team A would be ruled to having withdrawn from the league, forfeiting all rights, and denied any further participation in this league.
Team B would receive points according to a win of 34 IMPS on the 12 boards played plus compensation (artificial adjusted scores) for the boards not completed.
#5
Posted 2019-October-16, 06:54
pran, on 2019-October-16, 01:34, said:
I imagine that the artificial adjusted scores would be aligned to the average outcome of the 12 boards actually played - which means that the total win would be (34/12) * 28 = 79 IMPs.
#6
Posted 2019-October-16, 07:43
pescetom, on 2019-October-16, 06:54, said:
Possibly.
But an important factor is how many rounds of the league were completed before this incident took place.
We do not appreciate artificial adjusted scores to be the determining factor for the final results.
#7
Posted 2019-October-16, 09:00
#8
Posted 2019-October-16, 09:05
#9
Posted 2019-October-16, 09:41
barmar, on 2019-October-16, 09:05, said:
The more interesting aspect is what will happen at disciplinary level. Here it would not be without consequences for the players involved and perhaps also for the TD if he got things badly wrong.
#10
Posted 2019-October-17, 15:09
In EBU we treat leaving as withdrawal, and withdrawal for not good reason is a disciplinary offence. The withdrawn contestant has forfeited the match. For league purposes, the match is treated as if the team did not turn up. Leagues in England have regulations for scoring matches which did not take place.
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#11
Posted 2019-October-18, 05:49
RMB1, on 2019-October-17, 15:09, said:
In EBU we treat leaving as withdrawal, and withdrawal for not good reason is a disciplinary offence. The withdrawn contestant has forfeited the match. For league purposes, the match is treated as if the team did not turn up. Leagues in England have regulations for scoring matches which did not take place.
Should one not give the better of the "not played" and a result reflecting the score at the time? Otherwise there is an incentive to feign injury, a bit like Bloodgate in Rugby.
#12
Posted 2019-October-18, 10:28
lamford, on 2019-October-18, 05:49, said:
Better for whom? I would presume the NOS.
"Not played" for an entire match is one thing. "Not played" on the boards missed because one team left is quite another, and not legal. If this league has a regulation applicable to scoring this match, one should use that regulation.
As for the "incentive to feign injury" we can come up with lots of possible but unlikely scenarios for what dirty rotten scoundrels might do. I frankly don't see much point in such speculation unless one is actually involved in making laws or regulations governing the game.
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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
#13
Posted 2019-October-18, 16:46
Of course regulations to cover all scenarios are best but hard to phrase perfectly.
#14
Posted 2019-December-17, 04:15
- The pair who left was suspended for one month by the diciplinary committee.
- The match was ruled 20.00-0.00.
- The general regulations, which did not really cover this type of situation was amended as follows below.
The change was quite long but this is a summary (as far as I can understand it):
- When several artificial results are awarded, it should be 3 IMP for the first board, 2 IMP for the second board, and 1 IMP for the rest of the boards.
- Maximally half of the boards in a segment can be awarded an artificial score.
- To count a segment, at least half of the boards must be played and the boards comparable.
- If only one half of a 24 board match are played, the other half gets artificially rewarded results on half of the 12 boards and the 18 board VP scale is used.