UI from another table again
#1
Posted 2019-June-09, 13:30
Partner noticed that the board was passed REALLY fast.
First question: Should he share this so everybody has the same info ? Should he call the director ?
Second question: Partner opens 1♥, you have one of those hands with 4 spades and longer clubs right on the borderline strengthwise for 1♠/2♣, if you are made aware of this, what is your ethical position (given that if the hand was passed out at the other table, 1♠ is suggested).
#2
Posted 2019-June-09, 14:12
Cyberyeti, on 2019-June-09, 13:30, said:
Partner noticed that the board was passed REALLY fast.
First question: Should he share this so everybody has the same info ? Should he call the director ?
Second question: Partner opens 1♥, you have one of those hands with 4 spades and longer clubs right on the borderline strengthwise for 1♠/2♣, if you are made aware of this, what is your ethical position (given that if the hand was passed out at the other table, 1♠ is suggested).
With barometer movements we usually do not pass boards directly between the tables, instead a player brings the just played board to an exchange table and takes the next board from there.
When we have the "luxury" we some times have helpers that walks around in the room with the boards and exchanges boards at the tables when called.
#3
Posted 2019-June-09, 19:59
pran, on 2019-June-09, 14:12, said:
When we have the "luxury" we some times have helpers that walks around in the room with the boards and exchanges boards at the tables when called.
Wow thIs is not even tangential to the question being asked. But I do wonder why you would take each board to an entire other table when you can just get it passed by the table next to you.
Anyway, most people hold a passed-out board for a little while before passing it. This didn’t happen, so... you need to call the director, who may well cancel the board and caution the people at the next table. Probably the person to call would be the person who received the board very fast, if this was not noticed by the other players. If this person speaks to the director away from the table, the director may board to be played until such time as that player felt that he could not proceed due to his possession of UI.
#5
Posted 2019-June-10, 01:46
#6
Posted 2019-June-10, 09:48
#7
Posted 2019-June-10, 10:25
Cyberyeti, on 2019-June-09, 13:30, said:
Partner noticed that the board was passed REALLY fast.
If the movement is as stated then surely it would be more appropriate that we play our two initial boards and then we ask the other table to pass their first played board? And the others don't pass it until asked to do so. If the Director enforced this then there would be very limited risk of UI in either direction.
#8
Posted 2019-June-10, 10:32
Quote
Here, a player has extraneous information from the speed with which the board was passed. That's not a circumstance in the list of examples, but it is a list of examples; it's not exhaustive. This law doesn't really give him a choice. He should call the director as soon as he gets the board. "Should" here means not doing it is an infraction. A player who thinks "maybe I should just keep my mouth shut and it won't be a problem" is not thinking clearly.
Quote
(a) adjust the players’ positions at the table, if the type of contest and scoring permit, so that the player with information about one hand will hold that hand;
(b) if the form of competition allows of it order the board redealt for those contestants;
© allow completion of the play of the board standing ready to award an adjusted score if he judges that the extraneous information affected the result;
(d) award an adjusted score (for team play see Law 86B).
Note that it's the Director, not the players, who gets to make this decision, which is the reason for my last comment in the first paragraph.
The downside to strictly following these laws, as has been alluded to upthread, is that now all four players are aware, whether they were before or not, of the problem. But that is not the original player's problem. A player may come up with several reasons why they think ignoring Law 16D is justified; the player is wrong, it is not justified or justifiable.
If the player does not call the director, and no problem arises, so that the director never finds out about it, well, the player may feel "no harm, no foul", but again, he's wrong. If something goes awry and the director does find out about it, he'll have to deal as best he can with the problem as presented to him, but he should, in addition, counsel all four players to call the director when they have extraneous information about a board. The player(s) who originally recognized the problem and did not follow the law should be given a PP — in a club game, for a first offense, a warning. In a tournament, or for a second offense in a club game, a "standard" PP.
Note: there is no "standard" PP in the law book; the size of a PP is at the discretion of the TD. At least some, if not all, RAs do specify a "standard" PP. In the cases of which I'm aware, that's a recommendation, not an instruction, but it's worth knowing what your RA recommends, and a club TD should decide whether to use that standard or his own, but he should IMO set one, and stick to it.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
#9
Posted 2019-June-10, 10:38
#10
Posted 2019-June-10, 21:46
pescetom, on 2019-June-10, 10:25, said:
A movement where you have to ask for boards to be passed would be super aggravating. Suppose you are playing an 8-board Swiss Pairs or Swiss teams match. Asking for 6 boards, one at a time, is truly a ridiculous proposition.
#11
Posted 2019-June-11, 00:42
Vampyr, on 2019-June-10, 21:46, said:
Do you have any experience or other foundation for this assertion?
#12
Posted 2019-June-11, 01:07
pran, on 2019-June-11, 00:42, said:
Well she does play in lots of 7 & 8-board Swiss events and they do rely on tables passing on a board as soon as they've finished it (assuming it wasn't passed out). It would indeed be annoying to have to ask for each board instead of finding it arrive beside your table ready for when you need it.
London UK
#13
Posted 2019-June-11, 02:07
gordontd, on 2019-June-11, 01:07, said:
On a point of order: We are discussing barometer movements - all tables play the same set of boards during the same round, not like Howell or Mitchell where different tables play different sets of boards. Barometer has more or less been the standard here for more than 40 years now.
We want as little communication between the tables as possible so no boards are normally passed directly between tables during a round. A pile of each (duplicated) board is kept at an exchange table to which one of the players at a table brings a just completed board fetching the next board to be played at his table. (Occasionally we may have assistants responding to calls from tables and providing exchange of boards.)
My experience is that these procedures are fully appreciated and certainly not considered any inconvenience, which in fact direct contact between tables most certainly is.
#14
Posted 2019-June-11, 03:25
pran, on 2019-June-11, 02:07, said:
We want as little communication between the tables as possible so no boards are normally passed directly between tables during a round. A pile of each (duplicated) board is kept at an exchange table to which one of the players at a table brings a just completed board fetching the next board to be played at his table. (Occasionally we may have assistants responding to calls from tables and providing exchange of boards.)
My experience is that these procedures are fully appreciated and certainly not considered any inconvenience, which in fact direct contact between tables most certainly is.
Swiss teams events are not uncommonly run with all tables playing the same boards here with 4 tables sharing 7 boards for the round (extra copy of 1 so each table has 2 boards).
#15
Posted 2019-June-11, 03:45
Cyberyeti, on 2019-June-11, 03:25, said:
With 4 tables sharing 7 boards we have 2 copies of each board (like you). Each of the 4 playing tables has (normally) only one board at a time. The excess boards are located at the exchange table.
Works beautifully with very little disturbance or communication of any kind between the tables, and to everybody's satisfaction.
#16
Posted 2019-June-11, 06:48
Okay, we're not there yet. But we sure seem to be getting there.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
#17
Posted 2019-June-11, 07:03
pran, on 2019-June-11, 02:07, said:
The person to whom you replied was talking about Swiss movements, which are a form of Barometer.
London UK
#18
Posted 2019-June-11, 07:46
pran, on 2019-June-11, 03:45, said:
Works beautifully with very little disturbance or communication of any kind between the tables, and to everybody's satisfaction.
We get a board from an “exchange table” when we are ahead of the people passing the boards to us. And we return it when we are through.
Again, I cannot imagine the annoyance of doing this for every board.
#19
Posted 2019-June-11, 07:50
blackshoe, on 2019-June-11, 06:48, said:
Okay, we're not there yet. But we sure seem to be getting there.
Fantasy - come and see for yourself before imagining things that just do not happen.
As I said: This is 40+ years old routine with which everybody is familiar and satisfied here.