ArtK78, on 2014-April-05, 04:56, said:
Yes. From the USBF General Conditions of Contest:
III. ELIGIBILITY
A. All Participants
All participants in any USBF Championship (players and NPCs), and any player or NPC added to a team that has been nominated to represent the USBF as a result of its performance in a USBF Championship, must meet the following requirements at the time of the USBF Championship:
1) Be either an Active or Resident member of USBF who is in good standing.
2) Not be under suspension by USBF, ACBL or ABA.
3) Not be excluded from playing in the specific USBF Championship by a committee of USBF, ACBL or ABA.
So, if a player or pair were suspected of unethical conduct, a committee of the USBF could exclude the player or pair from playing in a championship.
As far as legal action, it is not likely to succeed unless the exclusion was based on some prohibited reason, such as race, religion or national origin. Alternatively, an excluded player would have to show that the exclusion prevented him or her from earning a living without justification. That would be a difficult case to make if the exclusion was based on some rational criteria.
In addition, the USBF General Conditions of Contest also provide as follows:
XIII. APPEALS AND CONDUCT AND ETHICS COMMITTEES
A. Establishment; Timeliness of Requesting Ruling or Appeal.
[text omitted]
B. Jurisdiction of Committees and Regulations.
By participating in a USBF Championship players agree to the following regulations and procedures.
1 Tournament Committees
Two committees will be available at any USBF Championship to hear director’s rulings and appeals of assessed penalties, conduct disciplinary proceedings and similar matters
a) The Appeals Committee for the USBF Championship will appoint a Tournament Appeals Committee and an Appeals Administrator. [text omitted]
b) The Tournament Conduct and Ethics Committee will hear serious matters such as those that might result in disqualification of a team or player, (including when such a player has failed to play the required percentage of boards), or such as would affect the participant’s USBF playing or membership rights. Matters may be brought to this committee through the DIC or may be referred to it by an Appeals Committee. Conduct and Ethics Committee members are appointed by the DIC and the Tournament Appeals Administrator. Sanctions by this committee may be appealed to the USBF Grievance and Appeals Committee in writing up to 15 days after the conclusion of the event. By entering a USBF Championship, participants agree to be subject to the Bylaws, rules, and procedures of the USBF. Such Bylaws require an aggrieved participant to seek binding arbitration after exhaustion of all other administrative remedies.
2 Regulations governing players in a USBF Championship
Playing in a manner to advance the interest of one’s opponent, or inducing or attempting to induce another to play against their best interest or against the best interest of their own team is subject to discipline. Providing any inducement to a player not to compete in the event is subject to discipline. Players are subject to the regulations in Section XII – Security and the regulations and By-Laws of the USBF. USBF Championships will be governed by the ACBL interpretation of the Laws of Duplicate Bridge.
So, aside from being a member in good standing of the USBF, and not being under suspension by any of the ACBL, ABA or USBF, a player can be brought before the Tournament Conduct and Ethics Committee of the USBF which can deal with issues affecting a player's eligibility to participate in international competition. Also, players agree to seek binding arbitration after exhaustion of all other administrative remedies, which limits their ability to sue the USBF for denial of the right to participate in international trials.
I see this differently.
Players are selected on their prior Bridge results to represent their country. The NBO should decide, which Bridge results matter and how the selections is executed, but I do not want a committee of wise men, who use their own subjective criterias, which personalities are eligible and which ones are deemed not.
Personalities of Bridge players are largely immaterial. This is how it is in other sports too.
If you want to disqualify someone, he or she should be already under a finally convicted penalty, saying he/she is ineligible.
You can and should not disqualify anyone due to hearsay, rumours etc. This would open the door to pure arbitrariness.
For example before Armstrong participated in his last "Tour de France" there were a lot of rumours and also already some evidence.
But this is not a basis to disqualify him or others.
Even if there has been instances before, you can not disqualify somebody.
For example If the verdict is upheld Elinescu and Wladow will be individually banned for ten years and as a pair for life from WBF events.
The DBV can (and probably will) do some of its own.
But assume after 11 years Wladow qualifies again with a different partner and the DBV will now not impose a penalty saying Wladow will not be eligible for life anymore.
If you would disqualify him then based on the current incident, in effect you ban him now for life. Then the verdict should say so now.
Punishing somebody again for the same offence is in my opinion not acceptable and in most countries illegal for good reasons.
Rainer Herrmann