Second player judging is in some ways an advantage, and in other ways a disadvantage (and either way not really what’s happening in cricket, because the players are actually cooperating rather than trying to exploit the rules but being foiled).
The disadvantage is that, lacking rules, it’s hard to communicate what you want the first player to do at all! You don’t get children to play soccer by not telling them any rules or giving any demonstrations, only judging their actions as legal or illegal.
If you do manage to communicate your preferences about what kind of game is even being played to player 1, then there’s no qualitative barrier to communicating enough information about your standards that you can get goodharted.
Second player judging is in some ways an advantage, and in other ways a disadvantage (and either way not really what’s happening in cricket, because the players are actually cooperating rather than trying to exploit the rules but being foiled).
The disadvantage is that, lacking rules, it’s hard to communicate what you want the first player to do at all! You don’t get children to play soccer by not telling them any rules or giving any demonstrations, only judging their actions as legal or illegal.
If you do manage to communicate your preferences about what kind of game is even being played to player 1, then there’s no qualitative barrier to communicating enough information about your standards that you can get goodharted.