Posted 2023-June-29, 09:30
"check and see if it's clear wishful thinking" (or "it looks like about 1/3 would double, so let's give them half of +170, half of -100") vs "clear warning, possible penalty if this is a known Hard Case, whether because they're too lazy or they're trying to gain from limited disclosure". I don't think that's "more scrutiny".
I don't know about your club, but in mine, there are NOSes who are really good with the bafflegab about how they would "always find the right call/play with the correct information" - and if you believe them all the time, they're going to snow the game just as much as the "Just Bridge"rs or the other "careful informers" (small secret: they're frequently the same people!) There are also those (100%, give or take) who can convince themselves that they would have got it right after they see that it is right. I bet you don't believe me. That's fine.
And I'll be happy to send all the people who tell me "but they'd never find that at the table" (especially the "but *they'd* never find that at the table" people) after a ruling to you, who can tell them that misinforming the opponents is free, and their case must just have been an outlier.
On that note, unless it's absolutely egregious, we don't attach a penalty in MPs to this kind of thing if we're also adjusting the score. Partly because of the "well, if you'd have done the right thing at the table, you would have found out if they would have"; partly because when we do adjust the score, we adjust it "with doubt going to the NOS", so they don't actually get the same result they would have got at the table, because this pair easily *would have got* the defence or the auction wrong; partly because, whether or not it's "correct", adjusting from +110 and a top to -170 and a near-bottom "feels like" a penalty to many, and it does in fact help fix the problem in future. Blackshoe will say that that's Wrong, and I agree with him in theory; but in practise it works better.
Note also that my "check and see if this pair are Known to the Directors" applies *throughout*; strangely enough their "small miss" in explanation, "everybody does that sometimes", gets ruled as misinformation more often than the average pair who do "small miss sometimes". And our belief when they tell us that "that's Just Bridge" or "we didn't think it needed to be mentioned, it was that obvious" or ... is lower than average pair. The "but we were damaged by their incomplete information" level of belief also might be a bit higher.
And the end result of "Known to the Directors" is C&E, not MP penalties. Rarer, but the punishment is *much* harsher.
Yes, there is a problem with incomplete information. Yes, it happens with "standard system" just as much as the unusual outliers. Yes, it causes problems more often with the unusual systems, which is why they complain that they are held to a higher standard (which we are). Yes, in particular in the ACBL, it's hard to get Alerting right, because of "basic theory" decisions made by the Committee limit the number of Alerts to "meaningful ones" over simplicity. All of this means that Mistakes Will Be Made, and sometimes Mistakes Will Not Be Punished. Which I'm sure you will be grateful for, the (fewer) times *your side* makes the mistake.
But no, it's not a free ride.
TL;DR: Again, this is a "breaking the rules should be punished" vs "the goal is to get the players to follow the rules, using whatever tools work best" philosophy question. Which the Lawmakers have planted their flag on, in no-doubt territory. And at least at the clubs, "you got the score you deserved. Don't worry about what the opponents get, let us do that" loses fewer pairs to online/other clubs than "2 minutes for cross-checking".
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)