Cthulhu D, on 2012-May-28, 03:29, said:
Anyway, to get to the meat of your example, if that is the case you should ban them entirely! If the amateurs without coaching access etc are to be protected, making your 'protection' it a crapshoot based on other teams results doesn't make any sense. It's also going to lead to dissatisfaction for everyone. Say Belgium is planning on using a HUM if it makes the knockout. They are only a 20% shot, but they get lucky and make it. Now the amateurs are totally screwed - if they couldn't prepare for this with months of lead time, it's completely unreasonable to expect them to jam it through in a few days. The pros are going to be irritated as well because even with the months of coaching this it is very hard work to get across relatively common systems like Polish club etc if you don't play them much (see: Cohen), so they are going to be in the same boat.
I don't understand why you've put the word "protection" in quotes. I didn't use this word, and I didn't imply that the objective was to protect anyone.
As I said in an earlier post, the purpose of system regulation at this level is to strike a balance between allowing people the freedom to play methods that suit them, and limiting the burden of preparation on their opponents. Limiting HUMs to the knockout stages is a way to strike such a balance. Banning them entirely is not striking a balance, or it's not putting the fulcrum in a sensible place anyway.