Dummy's antics EBL Poznan
#21
Posted 2011-July-08, 09:18
It sounds an awful lot like you're saying "whatever the law says, my thirty years of experience says different, so I'm not going to do what the law tells me to do".
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#22
Posted 2011-July-08, 10:17
blackshoe, on 2011-July-08, 09:18, said:
It sounds an awful lot like you're saying "whatever the law says, my thirty years of experience says different, so I'm not going to do what the law tells me to do".
You must have overlooked the most important part of my comment?
Let me put it this way: In many situations I deliberately rule differently in an ordinary club event from how I rule in a national championship. (And in general I am more lenient in the former, except that I shall never knowingly compromize the interests of an NOS.)
#23
Posted 2011-July-08, 11:04
By the way, most of the (now 118) messages on the Facebook page are discussing a different question - how to restore equity and/or penalise the offender.
#24
Posted 2011-July-08, 11:31
gnasher, on 2011-July-08, 11:04, said:
By the way, most of the (now 118) messages on the Facebook page are discussing a different question - how to restore equity and/or penalise the offender.
What is the URL of the Facebook page? Can people who are not on Facebook read it/post on it?
#25
Posted 2011-July-08, 11:53
pran, on 2011-July-08, 10:17, said:
Let me put it this way: In many situations I deliberately rule differently in an ordinary club event from how I rule in a national championship. (And in general I am more lenient in the former, except that I shall never knowingly compromize the interests of an NOS.)
Which part of which comment was that?
I don't have a problem with ruling differently at different levels. I don't have a problem with "education is more important at club level than penalizing". I do have a problem with "at clubs, we do not issue PPs except in very rare cases" (most of which seem to be "the player didn't do what I told him to").
If, at a club, I was ruling on a case where a player didn't do something the law says he "must" do, I would tell him that the law says he must do whatever it is, and if I get called again because he didn't do it, I will issue a PP for the failure to do what he must do, not for failing to do what I told him. And if I do get called again, having told him that, I will issue a PP. For a lot of club players, "if you do that at a tournament you will get a PP" does no good, either because they don't care ("I don't play at tournaments") or because they don't believe it (whether it's true or not).
As far as most of the club TDs around here are concerned, there's no such thing as a PP. I think we need to get away from that attitude.
I am happy to explain to players that the laws assign, by their wording, a hierarchy of when a PP should be applied ("should do" will rarely get one, "must do" will most often get one). This should be true at clubs just as much as it is at tournaments, even though we are generally more lenient, in favor of education at clubs. I also think that if TDs are fair and objective about when and why they give PPs, they will find that their fears about players leaving the club in droves will have been unfounded. <shrug> Maybe I'd believe differently if I owned a club, but I doubt it.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#26
Posted 2011-July-08, 12:03
Where I was going with that was, of course, that the "slow play penalties" for "exceeding the time limit for the match" are regulations made under that law, and therefore behaviour that leads to such a penalty is in fact an "irregularity per se" in matches played under those regulations - which affects your initial Facebook response.
Where that leads us in the full discussion, of course, is very little.
#27
Posted 2011-July-08, 12:32
Although there was plenty of time on the clock, Dummy attempted to rush the defenders. At the level of players also given in the OP, what this would lead me to believe is that not only "could dummy have known" that what he was doing might disconcert the opps into an error, but also increases the likelihood that it was his intent (which I could not prove).
#28
Posted 2011-July-08, 14:24
They might tell the TD that they were 'upset' and might need a later adjustment. It would of course be a matter of TD judgement how upset they were.
Sometimes we refer to chess, and there was a famously reported incident from the 1930s(?) Player A complains his oppo's smoking is putting him off. The arbiter persuades B to not smoke at the table. Later A calls the arbiter because he can sense that B wants to smoke, and it is putting him off.
While I am aware of and accustomed to the rules restricting dummy, I'm very surprised at how emotional poeple feel about it:
'Dummmy must not ...' - was this not aimed against dummy suggesting plays to the declarer, rather than making (doubtless unacceptable) comments to the defenders about their pace of play, the cut of their jackets, or whatever.
#29
Posted 2011-July-08, 16:38
blackshoe, on 2011-July-08, 11:53, said:
I said:
At this level I consider education much more called for than penalties.
blackshoe, on 2011-July-08, 11:53, said:
If, at a club, I was ruling on a case where a player didn't do something the law says he "must" do, I would tell him that the law says he must do whatever it is, and if I get called again because he didn't do it, I will issue a PP for the failure to do what he must do, not for failing to do what I told him. And if I do get called again, having told him that, I will issue a PP. For a lot of club players, "if you do that at a tournament you will get a PP" does no good, either because they don't care ("I don't play at tournaments") or because they don't believe it (whether it's true or not).
It appears to me that we say precisely the same, only using different words?
blackshoe, on 2011-July-08, 11:53, said:
I am happy to explain to players that the laws assign, by their wording, a hierarchy of when a PP should be applied ("should do" will rarely get one, "must do" will most often get one). This should be true at clubs just as much as it is at tournaments, even though we are generally more lenient, in favor of education at clubs. I also think that if TDs are fair and objective about when and why they give PPs, they will find that their fears about players leaving the club in droves will have been unfounded. <shrug> Maybe I'd believe differently if I owned a club, but I doubt it.
Agreed
#30
Posted 2011-July-08, 17:40
Vampyr, on 2011-July-08, 11:31, said:
You have to be both a member of Facebook, and a Facebook friend of the person who posted it. Anyway, I can promise you that it's not a very interesting discussion.
#31
Posted 2011-July-08, 17:43
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#32
Posted 2011-July-09, 02:12
- The regulations specify when the round should finish
- Finishing the round late is a breach of the regulations
- A breach of the regulations is an infraction, and therefore also an irregularity
- Any player may attempt to prevent another player’s committing an irregularity.
#33
Posted 2011-July-09, 03:13
gnasher, on 2011-July-09, 02:12, said:
- The regulations specify when the round should finish
- Finishing the round late is a breach of the regulations
- A breach of the regulations is an infraction, and therefore also an irregularity
- Any player may attempt to prevent another player’s committing an irregularity.
We do generally expect that the players actually be in danger of committing the irregularity before dummy attempts to stop them, and this doesn't seem to have been the case here.
I'm slightly puzzled though that such strong players allow this sort of trivial comment (that could legitimately have been made by declarer) to distract them to the point of mis-defence.
London UK
#34
Posted 2011-July-09, 10:48
gordontd, on 2011-July-09, 03:13, said:
Suppose that the table had actually been short of time. Would it then have been legal for dummy to say something?
#35
Posted 2011-July-09, 11:13
gnasher, on 2011-July-09, 10:48, said:
Dunno about "legal", but it might change my opinion about dummy's intent as he was saying it
#36
Posted 2011-July-09, 11:15
gnasher, on 2011-July-09, 10:48, said:
It would at least be consistent with your argument above.
But no, dummy's right to attempt to prevent another player’s committing an irregularity is subject to Laws 42 and 43, which only allow him to try to prevent any irregularity by declarer. I think it's implied in the original post that it was the defenders who were being presented as the cause of the suggested slowness.
In answer to the original question, I don't think the defenders have any redress (and as I've already remarked I'm surprised that top-class players allow themselves to be disturbed by such a mild remark), but I do think dummy's comment might merit a PP.
London UK
#37
Posted 2011-July-09, 11:40
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2011-July-09, 11:42
#38
Posted 2011-July-09, 12:08
gnasher, on 2011-July-09, 11:40, said:
That's my understanding of it. Let's see if anyone else reads it differently.
I have had a look in the White Book, and the relevant bits (from Ton Koojman) don't really clarify it to my mind.
London UK
#39
Posted 2011-July-09, 12:38
Or maybe you do think it is clear, Andy?
London UK
#40
Posted 2011-July-09, 17:11
Quote
I don't think it's "clear" in the sense of being easy to understand. In fact, it's almost a model of obfuscation.
I do, however, think that when you read 9A3, 42 and 43 together, there's only one reasonable interpretation: Law 9A3 doesn't extend dummy's rights beyond what is granted in Law 42, so dummy can't try to prevent an irregularity by a defender.