Posted 2012-December-19, 11:31
I remember, in the session from hell, I gave two rulings (more than two, but these two caused the "from hell"). One was my first overturn on appeal, and even the head of the panel said that it's because none of us involved in the ruling can think like someone so bad they would bid like that. The other was a clear use of UI by the pros, and a clear rollback. They tried about three arguments, which were frankly BS, and would have been clearly no dice on appeal - basically "we're pros, we would get it right after the mistake even without the UI". At the end of the session, however, they pointed out something that should have been glaringly obvious to me - that although the bid taken at the table was clear use of UI and led to 6♦+1, if they *didn't* use the UI, they would have been forced into 6NT, which makes. Even though it took them two hours to find that argument, it was clearly and legally correct, and I should have found it originally. Ruling reversed, Director error.
So, no, TDs don't accept experts' arguments willy nilly. And you only have to listen to the number of times TDs get told "Did you ask a *player*? You know, someone who can play at A level?" (yes, it looks like a question. It isn't) or the number of times TDs get stopped in the lobby by the local bull session who believes that "well, any of us Experts would have got it right, so why did you rule it the other way?" and won't listen to the answer, to know that.
And it truly does work the other way, too - I explain to players regularly (especially because I frequently run the novice game at the tournaments) that were they more experienced, they would know what that UI meant, and they would be barred the action they took, and therefore, this is what they have to be careful about; and my first appeal (which was upheld) was based on a 12-card dummy. Against any reasonable player, the defence taken would have been insane, even without the missing card that made it an option; against this pair, however, it was reasonable on the face where it wouldn't have been with the 13th card; as he wasn't going to do the next layer of thinking that would show that it was unreasonable anyway, because he never does.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)