Quote
This clause does not appear in the current laws.
Current practice, in England at least, is to apply what has become known as "sympathetic weighting" to an adjustment, to skew the weightings of possible outcomes slightly in favour of the non-offending side. So if without an infraction you think the opponents would bid a making game half the time, you might award 60% of +620 and 40% of +170 rather than 50% of each score.
I don't care for the name, as it's not really being done out of sympathy for the non-offenders, but rather in an effort to make sure the offenders don't gain from the infraction, but I approve of the practice.
Is the new wording of law 16 supposed to put a stop to sympathetic weighting?