two hands from wrong board
#1
Posted 2011-November-30, 20:45
It turns out that North and West took their cards from one board, while South and East took them from another. It was 3-board rounds, and after we finished the first board, someone flipped the board, two players pulled their cards, then someone else flipped the board again and the other two pulled cards. The director ruled that both boards were unplayable, and scored them as No Play for both pairs.
17D talks about what to do if you discover this error during the auction period: you start the auction over and award artificial adjusted scores if the offender's call differs. But in our case, the auction period had ended when we discovered the error. And there were also two offenders, one from each side.
Did we get the ruling right? No one remembered being the one to do the second flip, so I don't think we could assess a PP to them.
#2
Posted 2011-December-01, 02:56
barmar, on 2011-November-30, 20:45, said:
There's no legal basis for scoring them as NP - point the director towards L12C2 for guidance on how to score it.
NP gives a pair their session score for a missing board - for either pair who scored well, your director has effectively awarded two good scores for being involved in making those boards unplayable. That cannot be correct.
London UK
#3
Posted 2011-December-01, 04:09
Quote
Is that so?
If North put a board on the table, then East or West replaced it with another board, only EW have offended.
If North put a board on the table, then South replaced it with another board, only NS have offended.
If East or West put a board on the table, then North, unaware that they had done this, replaced it with another board, it's not clear that North has done anything wrong. We can't expect him to continuously monitor EW's behaviour in case they're about to break the rules.
#4
Posted 2011-December-01, 08:03
gnasher, on 2011-December-01, 04:09, said:
If North put a board on the table, then East or West replaced it with another board, only EW have offended.
If North put a board on the table, then South replaced it with another board, only NS have offended.
If East or West put a board on the table, then North, unaware that they had done this, replaced it with another board, it's not clear that North has done anything wrong. We can't expect him to continuously monitor EW's behaviour in case they're about to break the rules.
The word "flipped" suggests to me that all the boards were on the table, and the top board was put at the bottom of the pile. Twice.
#5
Posted 2011-December-01, 10:21
Vampyr, on 2011-December-01, 08:03, said:
That is common practice in North America. Well, not the "twice" part.
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
#6
Posted 2011-December-01, 11:16
This happened in the Tollemache about three years ago when another EBU TD and I were playing at the table.
London UK
#7
Posted 2011-December-01, 17:37
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
#8
Posted 2011-December-02, 02:30
He then sees whether the other board is playable - read Law 17D3. However, it probably is not, so the TD does the same again: probably repeating whatever type of Averages he gave on the first board.
Merseyside England UK
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#9
Posted 2011-December-05, 13:17
gnasher, on 2011-December-01, 04:09, said:
If North put a board on the table, then East or West replaced it with another board, only EW have offended.
If North put a board on the table, then South replaced it with another board, only NS have offended.
If East or West put a board on the table, then North, unaware that they had done this, replaced it with another board, it's not clear that North has done anything wrong. We can't expect him to continuously monitor EW's behaviour in case they're about to break the rules.
The "offense" I was referring to was having cards from the wrong board, not the extra flipping of the boards (we have no idea who did that).
#10
Posted 2011-December-06, 18:40
Others don't...and I get about one of these a tournament as a result.