JLOGIC, on 2013-November-24, 05:17, said:
So you think if there is an infraction, there is automatically an adjustment?
I don't think anyone said that.
If there is an infraction, the director should consider two things:
- Does the infraction merit a procedural penalty? If so, he issues one.
- Did the infraction damage the other side? If so, he adjusts the score.
It should be automatic for him to think about both of these, but it's never automatic to adjust the score.
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That makes no sense. If there is a BIT that is an infraction, but it only leads to an adjustment if it might have changed the outcome of a hand.
A BIT isn't usually an infraction. It's merely an irregularity.
It's true that
sometimes breaking tempo can be an infraction, for example if you pause without any bridge reason and that misleads an opponent. But in general stopping to think is legal. That's a good thing, because bridge would be an awful game if thinking weren't allowed.
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2013-November-24, 07:00