gnasher, on 2013-July-25, 13:04, said:
You and I must inhabit different universes, or at least know very different sets of players and directors. I know very few bridge players who think it's OK to intentionally break the rules, and I don't think current directorial practice is at all as you describe it.
Cyberyeti, on 2013-July-25, 13:34, said:
I know a lot in clubs that bend the rules to breaking point, or do dodgy things they've been doing for years knowing full well the directors won't enforce the rules. The main difference between soccer and bridge is with the professional foul, which bridge has a way of nullifying by restoring equity. The defender fouling an attacker who's beating him fully prepared to take the booking and free kick rather than letting him through on goal is the equivalent of revoking, paying the 2 trick penalty but gaining 3 with the revoke, and the TD can fix that.
pran, on 2013-July-25, 13:39, said:
I was first authorized as TD in 1980 and have had my share of events at all levels from Club to National. To this date I haven't come across a single player who apparently thought it was OK to intentionally break the rules.
In all my universes, players regularly gain by breaking the rules. I can only guess at intentions but I'm unaware of deliberate cheating. For example:
Many write that when in receipt of UI, they make the bid they would have made, anyway, fully prepared to accept any adverse ruling that eventuates.