mrdct, on Aug 4 2010, 07:47 AM, said:
mikegill, on Aug 4 2010, 03:06 PM, said:
1) While I still strongly suspect that something fishy went on here, I agree with the view that this incident alone is insufficient information to take any action, particularly at the table.
Does "strongly suspect" mean you think it is a greater than 50% chance?
I admit that this is somewhat of a strawman arguement, but if so you seem to be advocating a change in the laws to require a higher standard of proof that "balance of probabilities" to award an adjustment for apparent use of unauthorised information.
A huge problem in this post is that people seem to conflate two topics: suspicion and evidence.
So when Peter says he strongly suspects something fishy, others seem to think that this means that he sees evidence of UI. Maybe he thinks this way, but I suspect he doesn't.
The fortuitous outcome of the bid, combined with it's bizarre nature, gives rise to a suspicion that the bidder knew something about the hand.
But it is not evidence that he knew anything.
Evidence would be something like: he shuffled that board while no-one else was at the table. His partner coughed in an unusual fashion after sorting his hand. His partner moved the pencils on the table to line up in a particular fashion, after sorting his hand. (Note: these two mechanisms are said by some to be the means by which two of the most notable ACBL cheating scandals came about and I stress I mean no suggestion that Mr. Piltch's partner was involved in anything....or that Mr. Piltch was either).
The fact is (apparently) that there was NO evidence of wrongdoing but SOME reason to be suspicious.
Such suspicion should generate an investigation. I assume such an investigation took place....certainly the directing staff seems to have been notified and a C & E committee may have looked at it.
I also assume that neither the directing staff nor the committee found any evidence of wrongdoing.
As humans we tend to leap to conclusions on gut instinct and biases. I suspect, as others have suggested, that if the 6
♦ call had been made by one of the game's respected superstars, and it had worked, there would a huge writeup but of an entirely, laudatory nature.
It is no answer to simply state that no such superstar would make the call. Do a thought experiment: imagine your bridge hero....someone you know with utter conviction is someone of great integrity....and imagine he or she did this. Would your reaction be one of betrayal...my hero is a cheat? Or one of...wow....how did he figure that out? He or she is either brilliant or incredibly lucky?
The player who made the bid is no-one's superstar and I doubt that he is anyone's hero. Moreover he is apparently widely disliked and has some history, the true nature of which is likely obscured by issues about the facts and the nature of his accusers...Wolff is someone for whom I have zero respect as a human being.
So feel free to be suspicious, but don't start substituting those feelings for facts....for evidence. The McCarthy era in US politics demonstrates what happens once that becomes the accepted standard for conviction.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari