gordontd, on 2012-October-02, 02:44, said:
When I'm polled, I don't find it hard at all just to answer the question, without first trying to guess why I'm being asked it. I suppose it goes with being able to look at an unshuffled hand and not feeling the urge to attempt to reconstruct the play at the previous table.
I agree.
gordontd, on 2012-October-02, 02:44, said:
The bigger problem with polling is that often the only people who can be asked are those who have already played the hand, and therefore know what the outcome was. That's why TDs often start by asking each other - we often won't have seen the hand already, and we generally have a good idea, based on experience, of what other players do.
I don't see this as a big problem. When I am given a bidding problem, I base my answer on the hand and auction I am given. Even if I know all four hands, I will often come up with a "losing" answer. Like everyone else, I get decisions wrong at the table, so there's no reason to pretend otherwise when someone asks me what I would bid on a particular hand. Even people who always like to be right will tell you when they think it's close between several options; this information is very helpful to the TD in assessing the logical alternatives and/or possible hypothetical auctions which might lead to a weighted ruling. Polling other TDs is fine if the person polled is close to a potential peer of the player involved, but there's little point in asking a TD of average club standard a bidding problem to assess what the logical alternatives might be for, say, Geir Helgemo.