Winstonm, on 2017-February-06, 12:59, said:
Sorry, but the only factual accuracy is that you bid 2S and had the chance to bid 1S. What would have happened after a 1S call is subjective. Is it likely you would have reached 3S? Of course. And that is where reporting and subjectivity collide - whose subjective claims to report and what weight to given those claims is the job of the reporter, not simply reporting he says/she says.
Analogies often are a bad idea, perhaps I should have practiced restraint. This was an afternoon club game but imagine it as a consequential event, with CNN, FOX, MSNBC all covering the event. Surely more would be said than "Ken bid 2S". One of the five Ws is "Why?: And of course there certainly re other factual matters. The opponents went on to 4H, undoubled, off 3 for a bad result for the Ken pair. And "subjective" comes in different forms. I prefer Whoppers to Big Macs". Entirely subjective, I have no intention of arguing the point with someone who has the opposite preference. But what would have happened if i had bid 1S? This is speculative, sure, but not a crazy random guess. My partner, hearing a third hand weak jump overcall from me, is highly unlikely to double 4H. Had I bid 1S he might or might not have, but we could make reasonable speculations.
I am assuming that neither you nor greenwald nor much of anyone would insist on simple factual reporting. "Ken bid 2S. The opponents bid 4H. Off three." That's it. Improper to say more.
My thinking is that of course reporters are allowed to say more, and often they should. But when they do, they need to do more than say "Someone should have doubled".
That's what I had in mind with this analogy. I am not sure I have ever made an analogy that didn't cause more confusion than clarity.
And then there are the Patriots and the Falcons. No, I won't make any analogy. Hell of a game though.