Trinidad, on 2012-December-16, 14:20, said:
I obviously don't know, but to me it seems likely that the board set was taken from a set that was played at this pair's bridge club, some time ago. In that case, it was this pair and possibly their team mates who would know about the boards.
This is the crucial point and I agree with you if that could be ascertained.
However all that has been told so far is that nobody could establish where and when the boards were originally played or whether the other contestants in the session definitely had not played the boards. You seem to admit yourself that you are only guessing?
Trinidad, on 2012-December-16, 14:20, said:
I agree with Andy that -given the situation at the end of the day- the league's decision is the most practical solution and it is fair. We are not talking about regular club bridge nights. These are 24 board matches and they are played during a weekend, at 2 matches per day at a central location. (I believe it was a conference center this time.) Some teams are traveling over three hours to play.
The playing days are scheduled more than a year ahead. Many players have families and are involved in other activities than bridge. Given that the other matches -most likely- were not influenced at all, I think that it would be entirely disproportional to:
- ask people to come an extra day
- try to arrange a conference center at short notice
This would be the equivalent of deciding that a pairs event at a regional needs to be completely replayed 3 weeks later.
The two teams that were involved in the match where the boards were recognized are from clubs that are located only 30 km (20 miles) from each other. They also happen to both play their club games on Thursday evenings. It is relatively easy to arrange a new match between these two teams.
Rik
All this is OK if, as I have already said several times, it can be established (beyond doubt) that no other team than the two immediately involved may have seen (or learned about) the boards at an earlier time. But that condition must be confirmed, not just assumed. I haven't seen anybody here confirming that the two teams were the only teams affected, all I have seen are assumptions. And that is not good enough.
I remember a similar situation some 20(?) years ago in Norway. I was not involved, but I knew the player who blew the whistle: He entered an event way up in northern Norway and recognised the cards during the first round. It turned out that the distributor had simply sent the same cards that had already been used in a similar event in southern Norway, assuming that nobody would go some 2500 km to play both events. However, my friend had a schedule which made it convenient for him to participate at both places and the scandal was on.
As they were able to establish exactly what had happened and that he was the only player who had entered both events the event was run with him and his partner excused and compensated.
But they could only do this because they were able to establish all important facts about the incident.