bluejak, on 2011-March-28, 10:31, said:
Law 12C1E includes the following wording "The score assigned in place of the actual score for a nonoffending side is the most favourable result that was likely had the irregularity not occurred." This means that, in the ACBL, it is important to know what "likely" means Furthermore, this was part of Law 12C2 used worldwide under earlier Law books. How does the ACBL interpret 'likely', and did the rest of the world interpret 'likely' for this Law?
I have been told that there is an interpretation in the ACBL that likely is 1 in 3, while at all probable [Law 12C1E2 for the offenders] is 1 in 6. Many years of discussion on newsgroups and forums, talking to my American friends including top TDs, and sitting on and commenting on ACBL ACs have convinced me it may be an official interpretation but it is certainly not followed. The actual usage is probably closer to 1 in 5 for likely and 1 in 10 for at all probable. The EBU came up with an approach that tended to mirror this.
So, how about 1 in 5 for likely? I suppose it means "a reasonable likelihood". But as others have pointed out, if a player said "I am likely to win this match" he probably means he has at least a 6 in 10 chance of winning. Maybe it is the difference in wording, "that was likely" is a lower likelihood, so perhaps Law 12C is a red herring.
Perhaps we should look at logic and fairness, not always the best approach in interpreting the Law book.
What would we expect this Law to mean?
Suppose we have this position where a player would have won a trick a certain percentage of the time. What does this Law feel like? Should we give him the trick if he would have won it 15% of the time? 25%? 35%? 45%? 55%? 65%? 75%? 85%?
My feeling is that 55% accords with th feel of this Law. What do you think?
I am not surprised that TDs in the ACBL don't follow the ACBL's guidelines. Actually, I'm kinda surprised there
are guidelines, since I'd never heard of any, until now.
To me, "at all probable" means the probability is greater than zero. "Likely" is harder; I don't really have a problem with 1 in 5, or with 55%, depending how you interpret the words. Not much help, I suppose.