EW calls director when they found that north did have ♥ instead of ♠. There is no CC to substantiate the explanation by south. How will you rule this hand?
How to rule? (Misinformation?) Assume it as wrong alert?
#1
Posted 2011-March-22, 00:05
EW calls director when they found that north did have ♥ instead of ♠. There is no CC to substantiate the explanation by south. How will you rule this hand?
#2
Posted 2011-March-22, 01:16
twcho, on 2011-March-22, 00:05, said:
EW calls director when they found that north did have ♥ instead of ♠. There is no CC to substantiate the explanation by south. How will you rule this hand?
First I need a little bit more about north-south's methods. Just because they don't have a convention card doesn't mean you can't ask a few probing questions.
Do they have any agreements about transfers in other low-level competitive aucitons?
What do they play over an opponent's 1NT opening?
What did north-south say when you asked them what their agreements are?
Do north-south have a general agreement about changes of suit being forcing?
Does the 2♠ bid promise reversing values if 2♥ is natural?
I ♦ bidding the suit below the suit I'm actually showing not to be described as a "transfer" for the benefit of people unfamiliar with the concept of a transfer
#3
Posted 2011-March-22, 06:01
#1 the pair do not have a convention card, this restricts the pair to playing "SAYC" (assuming this is ACBL land) and standard carding.
You must rule misinformation rather than misbid.
#4
Posted 2011-March-22, 09:29
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
#5
Posted 2011-March-22, 11:03
jillybean, on 2011-March-22, 06:01, said:
#1 the pair do not have a convention card, this restricts the pair to playing "SAYC" (assuming this is ACBL land) and standard carding.
You must rule misinformation rather than misbid.
Like Ed, I do not see why we should assume this is ACBL. But anyway I do not think this approach is right. If they have no SC then the TD may insist they play an SAYC card. But that does not mean they are playing SAYC before a TD says they have to.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#6
Posted 2011-March-22, 15:07
However what do people make of X by east? If it was intended as penalties but W misunderstood, EW shouldn't be given a "perfect" result?
Given that without the MI, the bidding probably continues pass (by east) - p - X - p - 2S - all p, I say award 2S by E making 8 tricks to both sides.
ahydra
* Actually I'd say he can here - W overcalled 1NT so game unlikely, spade fit better than club fit.
#7
Posted 2011-March-22, 17:55
ahydra, on 2011-March-22, 15:07, said:
"Without MI" doesn't mean "if South had known what was going on". If some good fairy had come along and correctly informed E/W then South would still have bid 2♠.
To address your other point, I have sympathy for West not being sure the double is penalties based on what he has been told about the N/S bidding and his own length in spades -- how can partner have a penalty double? If it were not for the MI, I don't suppose he would have made that mistake.
In addition to MI, as twcho suggests, we might consider the UI position for North's pass.
#8
Posted 2011-March-23, 03:49
bluejak, on 2011-March-22, 11:03, said:
So a pair without a SC may play whatever methods they like until a TD rules they can't? The laws seem woefully inadequate here.
#9
Posted 2011-March-23, 06:46
Players are governed by Laws and Regulations. Players break Laws and regulations all the time, whether they are Bocchi, Meckstroth, Mrs Guggenheim or the lady who tends the bar in the golf club and sits in if they are a player short. Sensible TDs apply the Laws and Regulations with commonsense and with differing effect in different situations.
Players are generally required to have SCs available and, in England/Wales, to exchange them with their opponents for each round. When I played in th Nationals in South Africa I think I was the only pair with two completed SCs. In Northern I Ireland fewer than 20% have completed SCs: in France very few. Despite comments about SCs in th ACBL it is actually far better there than in most jurisdictions: the majority of pairs have them.
In clubs players tend not to have them everywhere. In an English club where player after player plays "Benji, weak no-trump" it rarely matters. That is probably the same in clubs worldwide where most pairs play the normal local system. The Regulations may say that the TD can go to each and every such pair and insist on them playing some sort of set card but this is nonsensical: in some cases the basic card is more complex than what they play, but the main thing is that that sort of treatment just gets people to leave the game.
There are long term solutions, such as persuasion and education. But the big stick approach is not the way to go.
Nothing is black or white. When a pair do not have a completed SC to say not just that they are expected to play a simple card but they are deemed to have played it all along [even if they have not even heard of the regulation nor ever seen such a card] is not the way to go. On the other hand if a pair comes in playing a forcing pass system with transfer pre-empts and three way no-trump openings without a SC they will be treated harshly and rightly so.
You do not go to stupid extremes as a TD. Neither do you penalise a pair playing simple local methods for not having an SC nor do you permit people who should know better to treat the regulations with contempt while playing complex methods.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#10
Posted 2011-March-23, 08:54
bluejak, on 2011-March-23, 06:46, said:
Playing with yourself?
#13
Posted 2011-March-24, 15:27
barmar, on 2011-March-24, 14:33, said:
(Does that have the same meaning on all sides of the ponds?)
Just make sure nobody shoots their wad.
I ♦ bidding the suit below the suit I'm actually showing not to be described as a "transfer" for the benefit of people unfamiliar with the concept of a transfer
#14
Posted 2011-March-24, 15:29
barmar, on 2011-March-24, 14:33, said:
I think so.
The appropriately named user "wank" used the phrase "playing with a mirror" in the topic "Wuss" recently, which avoids the double ententre.
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#15
Posted 2011-March-24, 17:34
RMB1, on 2011-March-24, 15:29, said: