cherdanno, on Jun 8 2009, 10:39 PM, said:
Could it be that you learned it wrongly?
No. It could be that I was
taught wrongly, but as my teacher is an international expert director, I don't believe it. I shall ask him.
Quote
I guess you don't know soccer well.
No, I don't. Interesting example, but it strikes me this is not "ethics of soccer" except perhaps by adoption.
If in soccer the team played on, in spite of a wounded player on the field, what would you expect a referee to do? Based on your description, there seems to me nothing he
could do. What would you expect the game organization to do? Ban the team? Fine them? Anything?
The same applies, I think, to these bridge questions. If a good player psychs against bunnies at some club, about the most anyone can do is tell him that's not welcome in the club. The TD
can't tell him not to do it, because doing it is legal. It's not a matter of bridge ethics, it's a matter of "general' ethics. It may be that this player will be ostracized by everyone who learns of this incident, but that again isn't a matter of bridge ethics.
There is
Law 74A2 said:
A player should carefully avoid any remark or action that might cause annoyance or embarrassment to another player or might interfere with the enjoyment of the game.
but I think first that "should" in this law means such things will rarely be penalized, and second, that it doesn't apply to legal actions, anyway. I do
not want to have to respond to 300 TD calls per game in the nature of "I'm not having fun, hang
him!"