Screen Scrape An unusual situation
#1
Posted 2017-February-06, 05:00
#2
Posted 2017-February-06, 06:07
lamford, on 2017-February-06, 05:00, said:
The insufficient 1C is not an inadmissible call. Who passed the tray through the first time?
London UK
#3
Posted 2017-February-06, 07:57
lamford, on 2017-February-06, 05:00, said:
(My Enhancement)
assumed???
How could they assume anything so long as they couldn't see the actual call by South (or notice the "alternative" fact that South had not called)?
IMHO the ruling must be that the auction so far had gone: 1♣ - 1♣ (accepted) - PASS - 1NT
Any irregularity from this first round of the auction must be resolved with North and East both at fault.
#4
Posted 2017-February-06, 08:04
The mess is due to all four players. Pushing the tray half through and bidding without seeing all the bids is a recipe for disaster. But the IB has been accepted and that there is a IB is AI for all concerned. That W mispulled, making it an unintended call, and would have bid 1♦ is UI for E and AI for NS because E has already put a call on the table. But the fact that both N and E have bid without noticing the 1♣ from S, is UI to their partners. The bidding continues from 1NT and the director should watch the auction and the play, making sure that nobody uses the UI. That might be a daunting task.
#5
Posted 2017-February-06, 10:00
sanst, on 2017-February-06, 08:04, said:
The mess is due to all four players. Pushing the tray half through and bidding without seeing all the bids is a recipe for disaster. But the IB has been accepted and that there is a IB is AI for all concerned. That W mispulled, making it an unintended call, and would have bid 1♦ is UI for E and AI for NS because E has already put a call on the table. But the fact that both N and E have bid without noticing the 1♣ from S, is UI to their partners. The bidding continues from 1NT and the director should watch the auction and the play, making sure that nobody uses the UI. That might be a daunting task.
How can that be?
South and West have no (legal) reason to know that their first calls were not completely noticed by the other side. If they were so informed by the Director then we have a Director's error and the consequences of this must be judged upon after the play has ended. And if instead they were somehow informed by either or both players on the other side then they have received UI.
South and West have every reason to believe that North and East were all the time fully aware of all calls made.
#6
Posted 2017-February-06, 10:11
gordontd, on 2017-February-06, 06:07, said:
I think South, the dealer, and he did not notice 1C was insufficient perhaps partially because it was being alerted by pointing to it, maybe partially covered by the hand alerting and partially as he had missed his last Specsavers appointment. It was pushed through almost far enough but the "draught excluder" covered up the opening bid.
#7
Posted 2017-February-06, 10:15
pran, on 2017-February-06, 10:00, said:
Surely the fact that the tray came back without a TD call having occurred makes it obvious what has happened.
#8
Posted 2017-February-06, 10:26
lamford, on 2017-February-06, 10:15, said:
Unless any comments were made that could be heard on the other side of the screen, I think I would just expect them to continue the auction and make of it what they can for themselves. Certainly, South's passing the tray through has accepted West's insufficient bid.
London UK
#9
Posted 2017-February-06, 10:27
lamford, on 2017-February-06, 10:15, said:
I recall a thread a few months ago where the players on the other side of the screen were not aware that a director call had occurred. IIRC, it was about an actual tournament, not a hypothetical. I questioned how this could be possible, but I was assured that it was.
#10
Posted 2017-February-06, 10:35
pran, on 2017-February-06, 10:00, said:
South and West have no (legal) reason to know that their first calls were not completely noticed by the other side. If they were so informed by the Director then we have a Director's error and the consequences of this must be judged upon after the play has ended. And if instead they were somehow informed by either or both players on the other side then they have received UI.
South and West have every reason to believe that North and East were all the time fully aware of all calls made.
#11
Posted 2017-February-06, 10:40
barmar, on 2017-February-06, 10:27, said:
I have little experience directing with screens, but I believe that a call for Director and the corresponding process can very well take place on one side of the screen with the players on the other side being completely unaware of what is going on?
#12
Posted 2017-February-06, 10:48
#13
Posted 2017-February-06, 10:56
#14
Posted 2017-February-06, 11:05
pran, on 2017-February-06, 10:40, said:
- establish the facts, ALL the relevant facts,
- make, if possible, sure that all players agree on these facts.
Your idea that you can direct half a table is not only in contradiction with these instructions, but sounds ridiculous to me.
#15
Posted 2017-February-06, 13:01
sanst, on 2017-February-06, 11:05, said:
- establish the facts, ALL the relevant facts,
- make, if possible, sure that all players agree on these facts.
Your idea that you can direct half a table is not only in contradiction with these instructions, but sounds ridiculous to me.
The idea of screens is that the other side should be totally unaware of what takes place on the other side. Is it really necessary to get agreement from the other side about something they were supposedly oblivious of?
#16
Posted 2017-February-06, 14:41
Yes, from experience it is possible to have a TD call without it being known on the other side of the screen. Not always, of course, but there does tend to be a higher TD-to-table count than normal in screen events, and you can frequently just flag one without saying anything, given the sightlines and wandering directors.
The pause of the bidding on one side of the screen is obvious (especially in this auction, had it happened), but that's another "figuring out why is one of those counterproductive things" situation.
#17
Posted 2017-February-06, 18:56
barmar, on 2017-February-06, 13:01, said:
Yes, you have to tell both sides what is UI and what is AI. The auction continues after 1C*-1C*-Pass-1NT. I think that the Precision bidder should alert the Pass and say something like "0-4" if you had bid 1D*, but no agreement over 1C*. The second 1C* bidder should say "no agreement" about 1NT as we are not allowed to have an agreement after an infraction by our side. The passer should tell the director that he should have alerted the original 1C* bid which was Precision, but he didn't see it. I think the 1NT call can then be corrected (Law 21; call based on misinformation which still appears to apply) and I cannot see that the fact that it has gone through the screen prevents this, but I may be wrong on this (help, please, gordontd!). Let us say the auction continues 1C*-1C*-Pass-1NT-X-2S. Now the full auction is AI to both sides, I think, as the auction always is. The insufficient bid of the second 1C* is now AI because the call was accepted (27A1). I don't think there is any further problem with the auction!
#18
Posted 2017-February-07, 08:16
EBU White Book said:
Modification of Rectifications when screens are in use
(a) An irregularity passed through the screen is subject to the normal laws, with the following provisions:
(i) an inadmissible call – see Law 35 – must be corrected
(ii) if a player infringes the law and, inadvertently (otherwise Law 23 may apply), the irregularity is passed through the screen by his screenmate the latter has accepted the action on behalf of his side in situations where the laws permit LHO to accept it.
(b) Before an irregularity is passed through the screen the offender or his screenmate shall draw the Director's attention to it. Infringing calls shall not be accepted and shall be put right without other rectification (but see (a)(ii) above); any other irregularity shall be rectified and the Director ensures that only the legal auction is passed through the screen.
No player on the other side of the screen shall be informed of the occurrence unless the application of a law requires it.
N and S should pass the tray to the other side. By doing so, the bid of E or W is accepted. In this case S passed the tray and thereby accepted the insufficient 1♣ bid of W on behalf of N.
What happened here is in complete violation of the rules. The tray wasn't passed properly, S didn't check W's bid and therefore didn't notice that it was insufficient, N and E put their bids on the tray seeing only W's 1♣. Anyway, the TD, who was called only now, should treat the situation according to the 'normal' law. If possible, the TD should handle a 'situation' in silence on the side of the screen where it occured, but now that's impossible.
Maybe there should be a pillory (like this one, which actually is a stock, or is it stocks?) in the room just to frighten all players enough to stop them creating a mess like this.
#19
Posted 2017-February-07, 08:40
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
#20
Posted 2017-February-07, 09:31
blackshoe, on 2017-February-07, 08:40, said:
If you're right, all bridge programs I know of are in violation with the laws. You can't make IB's, BOOT's, LOOT's and what more have you. You can't even revoke.