Markovich wrote on 03/13/11 at 21:13:36:
I never heard that it's considered unsportsmanlike to withdraw from a Swiss if you're results aren't good. It's quite a common occurrence here in the States. If perchance you're highly seeded but 0-2 in a 5-round event, you're guaranteed of playing far down in your last three games, and with scant chance of winning anything. Furthermore the Swiss format very well accomodates withdrawals, so it's no skin off anyone else's nose.
It's in Round Robin events where withdrawals are to be condemned, because it totally screws up the results. The fairest thing to do is to forfeit all of withdrawing player's games, but this is too bad for those who had to work to beat him.
That's exactly why I said "in some countries": I had the impression that withdrawing is more accepted in the States and in Canada than in most of Europe. My federation can in theory even impose sanctions on people who withdraw without a good reason, and people who do it repeatedly have been banned from tournaments.
Withdrawals from a round-robin should not be allowed unless there's a very good reason.
@Uhohspaghettio: The accepted practice is that the results of all the games a withdrawing player completed will stand, both in the standings and for rating purposes. The biggest problem is actually how it will affect tiebreaks like Bucholz, Sonnenborn-Berger etc.: Anyone who's faced a withdrawing player will lose tiebreaks points. So if this becomes much more common I think some adjustments should be made. For example, stipulate how many points the withdrawing player was likely to take the rest of the tournament, and use that instead of his actual score.
Tiebreaks based on TPR (performace rating) avoid this problem, but there are other issues with it. For example if two players finish 1st = having drawn only each other the higher-rated player is handicapped, TPR-wise. In effect, the lower-rated player is rewarded for
having been weaker in the past, which really has nothing to do with the current tournament.