Jlall, on Oct 18 2009, 11:26 AM, said:
I agree there are those who bend over backwards when they have UI to not use it, this is how I was taught and I think my personal hero Bob Hamman is the best at this and I'm happy I got to learn a sense of his ethics, but in my experience this is far and away the exception not the rule.
Cascade, on Oct 18 2009, 01:06 AM, said:
It is interesting that you say this as this is not the impression that I got of Bob Hamman from reading his own book. Where he seems to admit to engaging in unethical conduct.
Bob Hamman, on At the Table, said:
"Ron could have called the director and sought a conduct penalty against me. But it would have been like admitting he couldn't take the needle. He had been dishing it out, and to call the director would have been psychological surrender. It would have signaled that he couldn't take it. He would have won the battle but lost the war.
The point is that in the main event of any competitive endeavor, you had best be prepared to play hard ball - literally in some arenas, figuratively in others. You wouldn't be surprised to get a thumb in the eye on the first play from scrimmage in the Super Bowl - or an elbow in the jaw in the NBA final. Well bridge is no different.
Nobody's going to punch or kick you, but the other guy is there to beat you - period. It's fierce competition, not a social situation. The politeness police are not part of the scene. In many settings, such as a local duplicate club, I don't beat up on my opponents because most of them are pleasure players and they are not really challenging me. When I'm in a major event like the Spingold, however, I don't ask for quarter and I don't give it."
Cascade, on Oct 18 2009, 01:06 AM, said:
I don't find the things that Hamman advocates to be what I would consider fair play - beating up on opponents, not being polite.
hanp, on Oct 18 2009, 04:52 AM, said:
I don't like how you equate (what I consider) cheating and (what you consider) impoliteness. You can put both under the header of "unethical behavior", but they are very different.
gnasher, on Oct 18 2009, 06:38 AM, said:
Discourtesy to an opponent is against the rules. Knowingly breaking the rules in order to gain an advantage is cheating, isn't it? It may not be the same sort of cheating as leading a singleton diagonally, but it's still cheating. Most of the discourtesy we encounter at the bridge table isn't cheating, of course. If you're unpleasant to an opponent because you're annoyed or you don't like him, that's just a breach of the rules.
I agree with Gnasher (if, exceptionally, I understand him correctly): IMO: what Hammand did is blatantly unethical and against the law. Deliberately and knowingly breaking the law to gain advantage is cheating. Obviously Hamman
doesn't think he is deliberately breaking the law, however, or he wouldn't advertise this as a mild example of "hardball". He doesn't even seem to realise that what he was doing is illegal. Hence, he didn't call the director to report his own infraction (as he is legally obliged to do). It substantiates Trinidad's claim that many who break the law aren't cheating.
If Jlall is right that top experts collude with their partners to deliberately break unauthorised information laws, then they are cheating and it is a far more serious matter.
To anticipate a knee-jerk reaction: Please note this isn't America-Bashing. It's just that Americans write excellent autobiographies that are more honest and frank than those of Europeans. We have an unhealthy obsession with secrecy and libel