Posted 2014-October-21, 18:25
I would disagree with that (I have a full disagreement with the "sympathy with" to write, but that requires more thought than I have available today. Short version of that: "if you want to make the IB UI to partner, and let the IBer correct with any legal call (except double), I'd be right there with you, except for all the games where you wouldn't trust a UI ruling. If you want to follow current Law 25, which may or may not bar IB's partner, also fine - but don't treat the 'may have had to make the lowest sufficient call under duress as it's the only call that doesn't bar partner' as UI (Do check to make sure that the IB doesn't "win", though, over the normal auction). Both seems, as I said, draconian").
Right now, they're in "if we're lucky, we break even. If we're unlucky, we get penalized. If they don't call the TD, or the TD doesn't know the Law, we might get an advantage." territory.
I dislike the "primarily to repair the game" mentality as much as all; especially the "but I lost a trick I could never lose when I revoked, why did I only get back what was always coming to me when they did?" bit (which got us in the NAOP qualifiers - 4 trick "equity restoration", but no penalty for keeping the card until it was good). I think there are, or should be, penalties for failing to follow the mechanics of the game - if for no other reason than the continual arguments around the Stop Card and Protect Yourself show that if it's wrong but there's no penalty, they're not going to do it.
But I really do not see where, in revoke or IB situations, they win. They might "get away with it" - and that might be "winning", especially when the next time it happens (to the NOS of the first time), all hell drops on their head.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)