blackshoe, on 2013-March-31, 12:20, said:
My question would be "why?" Do the WBF and the EBL feel that the right to appeal should not exist? If so, why not? if not, what is their rationale?
Over many many years there has been a shift in decision making. Sixty years ago it was to rule against the offending side and let the AC sort it out. Slowly it has moved more and more towards good TD rulings. This seems an obvious further step in that direction - once you really trust TD rulings ACs become redundant.
gnasher, on 2013-April-01, 03:14, said:
That would be my second question, but my first question is still "What?" That is, will appeals on judgement matters be heard by a committee of directors, by a single director, by a single player, or by nobody? The last of these would be illegal, of course.
No "of course" about it: I am not sure you are even right.
Quote
LAW 93: PROCEDURES OF APPEAL
C. Further Possibilities of Appeal
3. (b) With due notice given to the contestants a Regulating Authority may authorize the omission or modification of such stages as it wishes of the appeals process set out in these Laws.
blackshoe, on 2013-April-02, 17:12, said:
We apparently agree that what the WBF is doing is probably good for world championship level bridge. Equally, what the EBL is doing may be good for top level bridge in the EBL. Similar actions may even be good for top level bridge in the ACBL. But when you get below the top level, even at the Regional level, and especially at the club level, the quality of directing cannot support it. There has to be some reasonable way to appeal bad rulings at these levels - including bad rulings on points of law rather than judgment.
Sounds reasonable, but I am never sure it is true. If ACs had never been invented, people would take rulings, both good and bad, and complain about them. At club level TDs may be poor, so let us suppose their rulings are 60% correct. ACs will not be wonderful, with little idea of the Laws or what they should be doing. So how correct will their decisions be? 65%? 70%?
There is a lot of fuss and wasted time in appeals. I do not believe that they are justified and as soon as they consigned to history, the better.
[Sorry, Nigel, for not following the EBU line: I shall try harder in future. ]
McBruce, on 2013-April-04, 06:41, said:
I am baffled by the last sentence of 93B1, which says that if the TD makes a ruling based on Law or regulation you can appeal this to the committee, which according to 93B3 is forbidden to overrule the TD on a point of Law or regulations!
An AC can recommend a TD to overturn his ruling on a point of Law or Regulation. The EBU considers he should normally do so unless he can demonstrate to the AC why he is right and they are wrong.
Vampyr, on 2013-April-04, 14:54, said:
I hadn't realised that these warnings had replaced monetary deposits. The solution is simple, really -- make the deposit in the form of VPs or MPs.
There is no "simple" answer, certainly not the MP/VP solution. Shortly I shall be directing the Schapiro Spring 4s. There have been several tense appeals when the final score is 2 imps to one side, and the side being eliminated will appeal anything it can think of. Do you think that the chance of losing imps matters?
Everyone seems to think one way is best: I don't. The possibilities seem to me to be:
1 Money deposits, as in the EBU. The obvious disadvantage is that some people can afford them much more than others: no sponsor at the Schapiro Spring 4s is going to let a £30 deposit put him off appealing. But a team of four juniors in a local EBU event might. The advantage is that no-one, even the millionaires, likes losing money.
2 PPs, as in the ABF. The obvious disadvantage is that if it does not matter, as above, it does not stop meritless appeals at all. The advantage is that in some cases it might be critical and thus dissuade.
3 AWMWs, as in the ACBL. The obvious disadvantage is that they don't seem to work! No-one in the ACBL has ever had any further action from getting them. The advantage might be that they are working: no-one has ever had further action because they are not pushing meritless appeals.
4 Master points, tried nowhere. The obvious disadvantage is that lots of people don't care about them. The advantage is that many people do care!
I have made two suggestions over the years: no-one liked either!
1 Choice. Give the AC a choice of which of the above four to apply. But the AC might not know, so it is probably a bad idea.
2 Package. This is the one I like! Give them a package of disincentives: so in the EBU if an appeal is deemed frivolous, a team or pair will lose £15 and 1 VP/6 imps/20% of a top and a National Master Point and gain an AWMW.