A team resignes after 1 segment What would you do?
#1
Posted 2010-January-03, 08:46
Semi final of the country's teams championship. Top 4 teams (from 12 in the Premier League) qualified after several weekends of play. This can be easily considered the most serious and prestigious tournament around.
The Semi Final is scheduled for 4 segments of 14 boards. Team X has a carryover of -14 IMPs. After they play the first segment (and lose 2 more IMPs, so now they are down by 16, with 42 board to play), one pair of team X informs the director that they wish to resign and go home, since they think "their chances to win are gone". Since resigning during a KO match is generally allowed , the director approves, and they go home (the other pair very unhappy with this).
The other semi-final is of course played for 7 more hours...
Do you think there is something wrong in this pair's behaviour? Are there laws against it? What would you suggest doing? Would you make some kind of ethics comittee look at it?
#2
Posted 2010-January-03, 09:47
mich-b, on Jan 3 2010, 09:46 AM, said:
Semi final of the country's teams championship. Top 4 teams (from 12 in the Premier League) qualified after several weekends of play. This can be easily considered the most serious and prestigious tournament around.
The Semi Final is scheduled for 4 segments of 14 boards. Team X has a carryover of -14 IMPs. After they play the first segment (and lose 2 more IMPs, so now they are down by 16, with 42 board to play), one pair of team X informs the director that they wish to resign and go home, since they think "their chances to win are gone". Since resigning during a KO match is generally allowed , the director approves, and they go home (the other pair very unhappy with this).
The other semi-final is of course played for 7 more hours...
Do you think there is something wrong in this pair's behaviour? Are there laws against it? What would you suggest doing? Would you make some kind of ethics comittee look at it?
this behavior is of course ludicrous since -16 IMPS with 42 boards to go is hardly an an amount that can't be reached in the remaining boards. If they are going to give up this easily why did they enter in the first place? IMO this is just poor sportsmanship!! I would be inclined to see if this was essentially a planned bye for the remaining team so some investigation is needed.
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#4
Posted 2010-January-03, 09:50
#5
Posted 2010-January-03, 10:23
mich-b, on Jan 3 2010, 09:46 AM, said:
If the other top bridge player from this counrty will hard deliberate in the future about taking a pair with such "engagement" in their teams...I think this behaviour will be punished simply by the life!
Robert
#6
Posted 2010-January-03, 10:48
#7
Posted 2010-January-03, 10:58
Do the event organizers have the authority to bar this pair from future events?
#8
Posted 2010-January-03, 11:24
I say, hars punishment is in place, online and offline
#9
Posted 2010-January-03, 12:44
#10
Posted 2010-January-03, 13:06
#11
Posted 2010-January-03, 13:16
I believe that if the tournament is top level, finding substitutes from somewhere, even if they are not worth the level should be encouraged and not banned.
#12
Posted 2010-January-03, 13:24
The Laws do say that you're supposed to try to win. Resigning when you still have a realistic chance (it only takes two game swings to overcome a 16 IMP deficit) could be considered a violation of this. It seems like they were trying to get around the CoC that prohibits dropping out of the competition for no good reason.
#13
Posted 2010-January-03, 15:25
If the pair had a win 100 card in the first set and their teammates brought back a lose 102 card, I could see where they think their chances of winning are zero.
If the pair had strong reason to believe their teammates were cheating, I could see where they'd want to withdraw.
I don't think this merits any sort of investigation, but I'd certainly be reluctant to play on a team with this p'ship absent a compelling explanation for their behavior.
#14
Posted 2010-January-03, 15:39
#15
Posted 2010-January-03, 16:49
mich-b, on Jan 3 2010, 03:46 PM, said:
It depends.
Did they play for some club?
How did the other pair play the 1st segment?
#16
Posted 2010-January-03, 17:03
bed
#17
Posted 2010-January-03, 17:06
mich-b, on Jan 3 2010, 06:46 AM, said:
Yes.
Not if the CoC allow one to withdraw.
Change the CoC to not allow a withdraw if you don't want this to happen - otherwise hope the occurrence gets publicized so people know what happened and the social pressure kicks in.
Not at all, if the asked to withdraw and the director allowed it then there is nothing to look into IMO.
#18
Posted 2010-January-03, 17:06
Maybe a player has health problems, e.g. chronicle pain or was just informed that a close person died or had a accident. I bet you can up with something yourself that would distract you, so that you just know you would not be able to focus on bridge for days.
Lets be a little creative here, I bet you all would tell everyone starting with your teammates and your national bridge organization , that you have to go home because your wife had a nervous breakdown when your child had just been arrested for shoplifting.
Do you really think CoC could prevent someone from withdrawing is such a case?
#19
Posted 2010-January-03, 17:16
Jlall, on Jan 3 2010, 09:39 PM, said:
Maybe they will get some penalty at the top level bridge of there, but on a lesser level it will be kinda the contrary from my experience:
Some years ago a lady was banned from a club for a couple of months for cheating. When she came back she couldn't handle to play all the people that asked her.
Lanzarotti lives around here, and he is getting sponsors.
There was some kind of similar incident like this, althou sitation was much more desperate, on the venice cup when spanish ladies withdrew Vs USA1 since 3 players retired and the other 3 couldn't fight alone. Will they get social penalty for retiring? Oh no, they qualified among the top 8 teams of the world. Kinda the contrary. Let alone that only several people (less than 10) know what actually happened.
#20
Posted 2010-January-03, 17:54
Quote
And of course you'll let us know about it, or else, why would you tell us you have such a secret?
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
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