ahydra, on Aug 23 2010, 05:15 AM, said:
What I'm proposing is that the law be changed to not look at logical alternatives but whether the action chosen is a logical possibility based on the AI factors available to the player at the time.
~snip~
But surely the law should be written in an "innocent until proven guilty" kind of way, and take into account the factors above. So (broadly speaking) if the bidder can justify his bid after the hesitation, it should be allowed; and if it's a gamble that pays off, the result should stand.
I disagree that the law should be written in an "innocent until proven guilty" kind of way. There's no point in taking every decision to a judge to decide if the player was allowed to do what he did. It's pretty much impossible to prove anything at the bridge table.
At the moment you could say it's written in a "
reasonable doubt" kind of way, which is imo pretty perfect.
Your partner didn't pass immediately. Yes, he could be thinking about some fishing trip or whatever. But what are the chances?
Most of the time he's just thinking about the hand. So there's reasonable doubt that he has some values, which creates possible UI. This doubt is later verified by the fact that he holds 4
♠s,
♣ support, and 5HCP. If partner had a 3-4-3-3 with 0HCP there wouldn't be a problem since the reasonable doubt (and UI) is considered invalid.
Now it's your turn. There's possible UI in play. If you had
♣AKQxxxx and out, nobody would mind you bidding 3
♣ because your action can't possibly be influenced by partner's hesitation. However, if you have a crappy 6 card suit you
might have taken advantage of the UI. Nobody says you did, nobody can prove this, you also can't prove you didn't,... but the possibility exists.
Also, look at it from another perspective. What if we'd follow your advice and only punish people if they're proven guilty. There would be tons of cheating accusations, false and correct ones. But since nothing can be proven, nobody would be punished and nobody would like to play against nobody since we think they cheat. Would you really like that?
Imo you use lots of arguments that are irrelevant.
1. A hesitation doesn't necessarily imply anything at all.
True, but most of the time it does. Partner seems to have something to think about, so he either has values or some shape. If you look at the hands later on, and there's no reason to hesitate, then there also isn't any UI and your bid would be accepted. But if he has a reason to hesitate, it's considered UI.
2. An LA for one person isn't necessarily an LA for another.
True, and that's taken into account. Btw, you claim that poll sizes are too small. The more people you include in your poll, the more chance you get that pass is considered a LA. Strictly speaking, you only need 1 poll member to say "pass is a LA" to change the score.
3. Lots of factors, all AI, are overlooked.
This is not true. If you can make a good case with valid arguments to prove you didn't use/need UI to come to your decision, then there won't be an issue. Table feel however isn't something you can prove, so you can hardly expect anyone to believe in your supernatural powers. It's your job to eliminate the "reasonable doubt", not everyone's job to prove you used UI. Again, if you had
♣AKQxxxx there wouldn't be any problem.
4. Opponents get a "shield" against bad results.
If there's reasonable doubt that UI has been used, then there are basically 2 situations:
- the offenders get a good result: the auction would change back and the UI will not be used this time. Opps will likely get a better result.
- the offenders get a poor result: this is considered their penalty for taking advantage of UI. Hope they learn next time. If they haven't used UI, then they've made a poor gamble, so why would anyone need to change that?
5. Bridge is a mind sport - thinking is a part of the game.
True. But thinking implies we have a reason to think. It would be great if we were all able to bend space and time so we can think all we want and nobody would notice any change in tempo. Perhaps this is the future for bridge?
6. Gambling is a part of bridge too - and you should always be allowed to play bridge.
Bridge can be seen as a gambling game from time to time, but you don't gamble on every hand. Just accept that if partner creates possible UI, your gambles won't be successful for sure. So save your gambling for another deal.
"It may be rude to leave to go to the bathroom, but it's downright stupid to sit there and piss yourself" - blackshoe