Phil, on 2012-August-01, 15:16, said:
Perhaps, but this does not invalidate the premise, it supports it. Put it this way, over the course of a match, there are hundreds of opportunities to lose tricks.
No, not even close.
Badminton and bridge are competitive games centered around winning their respective games.
Bridge is not a game centered around winning tricks as they become available, nonsensical example.
A tournament is a series of competitive games with the goal of finding the best players of that game during the tournament.
Losing a trick to insure a contract is totally inline with the competitive spirit of doing your best to win your game.
Losing a match to improve your chances in the overall tournament is fundamentally different. You are violating the goal of game(to win the game) to further your goal in the tournament. The tournament is a structure that serves the game, not the other way around.
Your analogy is flawed, period. Maybe you can come up with a better one, whatever, don't care, I personally feel it violates the spirit of the Olympics. As it has been pointed out, it indeed violates the rules as well, punishment was handed out and I approve.
Maybe you feel that its the fault of the tournament setup(I certainty agree that the setup leaves something to be desired), your welcome to feel that, to some extent our opinions are subjective and while I strongly disagree with you, I am not going to be able to construct a mathematical proof demonstrating your error with respect to the idea that you should do what ever you can to win a tournament.
I can, to my satisfaction, prove that your analogy is flawed.