Rulings
#1
Posted 2009-June-03, 23:15
In one the opponent claimed fewer tricks than they could make. WE accepted the claim. The director adjusted the board to give the opponent an extra trick. The director said the rules say youc annot lose a trick which is "impossible" to lsoe. But there were several ways the trick could have been lost. It would have required bad play but it was possible. In my opinion this ruling was incorrect. The rule does not say that you cannot lose a trick which is impossible to lose without making a mistake.
In the other the opponent bid spades at one point in the bidding sequence and when asked what the bid meant typed "no s." That would lead you to believe that he had no spades. In fact he had A-4 in spades. There was damage as a result of the information given. The director said he didn't speak English well and meant that he had no spade losers and made no adjustment. Of course he did have a spade loser and I don't see why it matters whether he speaks English well, misleading information is misleading information.
The director in both of these situations was the same person. Am I correct to feel like we got jobbed?
#2
Posted 2009-June-03, 23:43
In #2, it doesn't matter what he has. He's only required to explain their agreements, not what he actually holds. And in an international context you also have to make allowance for the fact that that someone might not know how to explain clearly.
#3
Posted 2009-June-03, 23:59
On 2, the explanations given to us and the director were contradictory. They cannot both be what their agreement is. And both were at odds with he held.
As for the language, the official language in these tournaments is English. If they can't speak it well enough to give an explanation they shouldn't be playing.
#4
Posted 2009-June-04, 01:53
2007 Laws said:
A concession must stand, once made, except that within the Correction Period established under Law 79C the Director shall cancel a concession:
- if a player conceded a trick his side had, in fact, won; or
- if a player has conceded a trick that could not be lost by any normal* play of the remaining cards.
The board is rescored with such trick awarded to his side.
* For the purposes of Laws 70 and 71, “normal” includes play that would be careless or inferior for the class of player involved.
waubrey, on Jun 4 2009, 05:59 AM, said:
I'd prefer if we were all more tolerant ... on BBO and in real life.
Paul
#5
Posted 2009-June-04, 08:32
waubrey, on Jun 4 2009, 02:59 PM, said:
You can hold your personal view on this subject, but luckily the owners of this side do not share your point of view.
I do not share it either and I guess that you are in a small minority.
What do you think happens to someone who got robbed? You lose money or other pieces of value by an act of crime.
My opinion:
A bad ruling is no crime.
To lose 4 or 5 % in an online tournement is no piece of value.
So no, you did not get robbed, but I know that your feeling in this case is shared by many others.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#6
Posted 2009-June-04, 08:55
cardsharp, on Jun 4 2009, 02:53 AM, said:
waubrey, on Jun 4 2009, 05:59 AM, said:
I'd prefer if we were all more tolerant ... on BBO and in real life.
I think the original poster should print out that comment, staple it to his forehead, then write it on the blackboard a thousand times until he gets it.
#7
Posted 2009-June-04, 10:37
2, Since normal play includes careless play then it would seem to me that the first ruling was incorrect because a misclick could have lost the trick.
3. I'm plenty tolerant. I don't mind having people from other countries play in ACBL tournaments. But if they give an incorrect explanation of their agreement I think they should be penalized for it. I don't know of any sport in which an official would say "Hey, that would normally be a foul but because he couldn't help it I am not going to call it."
#8
Posted 2009-June-04, 10:45
1. Abnormal play
2. Tolerance
#9
Posted 2009-June-05, 02:03
jdonn, on Jun 4 2009, 05:45 PM, said:
1. Abnormal play
Law 71 footnote says:
For the purposes of Laws 70 and 71, “normal” includes play that would be
careless or inferior for the class of player involved.
So e.g., with 2 cards left to play in nt, if you have an A and a K in different suits, it would be not normal to play the K first.
Karl
#10
Posted 2009-June-05, 02:33
Anyway, as Barmar says, we would need to see the actual hand in order to judge on #1.
#11
Posted 2009-June-05, 07:44
helene_t, on Jun 5 2009, 03:33 AM, said:
He wants misclicks to qualify as normal play. So in other words any play is normal play and the entire phrase is meaningless, because otherwise he would be wrong. I don't have a lot of sympathy for people who just come to get confirmation they are right instead of truly learning an answer.
#12
Posted 2009-June-05, 07:48
#13
Posted 2009-June-05, 12:54
waubrey, on Jun 4 2009, 12:15 AM, said:
In one the opponent claimed fewer tricks than they could make. WE accepted the claim. The director adjusted the board to give the opponent an extra trick. The director said the rules say youc annot lose a trick which is "impossible" to lsoe. But there were several ways the trick could have been lost. It would have required bad play but it was possible. In my opinion this ruling was incorrect. The rule does not say that you cannot lose a trick which is impossible to lose without making a mistake.
In the other the opponent bid spades at one point in the bidding sequence and when asked what the bid meant typed "no s." That would lead you to believe that he had no spades. In fact he had A-4 in spades. There was damage as a result of the information given. The director said he didn't speak English well and meant that he had no spade losers and made no adjustment. Of course he did have a spade loser and I don't see why it matters whether he speaks English well, misleading information is misleading information.
The director in both of these situations was the same person. Am I correct to feel like we got jobbed?
I think you got jobbed in the second case, but not in the first. I agree with pretty much everyone who's commented on first one.
With respect to the second one, I agree with Helene. I also agree with the people who think that you should be more tolerant, as far the comment "They shouldn't play in the tournament," but such tolerance doesn't have much to do with the ruling. It seems patently obvious to me that in a tournament that designates an official language, if your inability to communicate in that language reults in misinformation that damages the opponents, that's on you, and an adjustment is appropriate.
Call me Desdinova...Eternal Light
C. It's the nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms.
IV: ace 333: pot should be game, idk
e: "Maybe God remembered how cute you were as a carrot."
#14
Posted 2009-June-05, 16:48
#15
Posted 2009-June-08, 02:06
B if i saw "no -s" i wouold assume no spades,so its a splinter?advanced double cue, non bid?
with due respect you must have been plying in a Turkish event/Poilish event:)
regards.
#16
Posted 2009-June-08, 10:15
Might it be that the opponent typed "No s" while he actually meant to type "No a" (as in "no agreement")? This difference is only one step (~3/4") on the US keyboard.
I think only people with 200 key strokes per minute should be allowed to play on BBO. Psyches should be allowed, but misclicks and typoes should be banned!
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#17
Posted 2009-June-08, 13:10
#18
Posted 2009-June-08, 13:42
#19
Posted 2009-June-09, 01:10
After thinking it over, I tend to think the ruling was correct in the first instance and incorrect in the second instance.
Oh the auction was...
1C-1S-2C-P
2H-P-3S-P
3NT-P-P-P
I clicked on the 3S to see if that was supposed to show a spade stopper or if it was asking the opener if she had a spade stopper. no S was the reply. I took that for no spades. After talking to the player in question the TD said it meant no spade losers. Neither explanation was correct.
#20
Posted 2009-June-09, 02:14
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...