Break in Tempo ACBL
#21
Posted 2012-October-17, 14:03
By the way, after declarer played ♦Ace, as East I would stop to count distribution and probably will take more than 12 seconds too.
#22
Posted 2012-October-17, 14:11
olegru, on 2012-October-17, 14:03, said:
Doesn't that depend on how quickly partner and declarer took to play to trick 1? It's recommended to plan the play and defense at that time.
If third hand played quickly to trick 1, does that mean his partner gets extra time to think during trick 2? I don't think it should. 3rd hand should probably make a general habit of pausing at that time, either to plan himself or allow partner to plan. Many RAs explicitly allow defenders to take this time, and indemnify them against UI and MI concerns.
#24
Posted 2012-October-17, 15:15
barmar, on 2012-October-17, 14:11, said:
If third hand played quickly to trick 1, does that mean his partner gets extra time to think during trick 2? I don't think it should. 3rd hand should probably make a general habit of pausing at that time, either to plan himself or allow partner to plan. Many RAs explicitly allow defenders to take this time, and indemnify them against UI and MI concerns.
I don't think time of West's play in trick 1 could be usefully used by East in that board.
Ace of ♦ by declarer was a telling (and probably not very expected) card and East should reconsider hie thoughts about full distribution at this point.
#25
Posted 2012-October-17, 18:03
olegru, on 2012-October-17, 15:15, said:
Ace of ♦ by declarer was a telling (and probably not very expected) card and East should reconsider hie thoughts about full distribution at this point.
As soon as he sees the 7-card suit in dummy he should start thinking about the distribution. There aren't many different combinations, so it shouldn't be that hard. Declarer winning might be unexpected, but it shouldn't have much effect on what to do when declarer plays on hearts. As soon as dummy comes down, you can see that the heart suit is an issue and plan what to do when declarer starts working on it.
#26
Posted 2012-October-18, 01:32
Phil, on 2012-October-17, 13:22, said:
The most charitable explanation is that, disgusted by his partner's hitch, he decides to give declarer the contract, which he does by failing to take the trick which takes the contract down by force, and by giving declarer a wire on how to make it. (Though as RMB points out, simply taking the K would be above criticism.)
The most uncharitable explanation is that he thinks declarer is daft enough to fall for the duck despite being given a wire as to what is happening, and daft enough to go for the overtrick even though he can now make it without any further finesse. If this is what he was thinking, he was in fact correct.
The middle way is that he isn't quite bright enough to think through any of this properly, and certainly not quickly enough, and SNAFU-ed it, but was then rescued by declarer's own limitations. I think this the most likely explanation.
#27
Posted 2012-October-18, 04:44
Karl
#28
Posted 2012-October-18, 05:57
lamford, on 2012-October-17, 09:50, said:
As quoted later, the White book does not agree. The decision of the L&EC enshrined in that was not based on a WBFLC minute, but was based on their understanding of the interpretation of this law not only in England but internationally.
Suppose I am playing. I give count religiously, except in certain specified situation. The knave is led from my right. I will always give count so partner knows whether to duck or not. I hesitate then play a card. The TD is called and asks me why I hesitated.
If I reply "I was wondering whether to show count or not." then I am lying.
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#29
Posted 2012-October-18, 06:24
bluejak, on 2012-October-18, 05:57, said:
Suppose I am playing. I give count religiously, except in certain specified situation. The knave is led from my right. I will always give count so partner knows whether to duck or not. I hesitate then play a card. The TD is called and asks me why I hesitated.
If I reply "I was wondering whether to show count or not." then I am lying.
But many other players don't give count religiously. If such a player did the same and gave the same answer, he would probably be telling the truth.
I accept, without much liking, the EBU's interpretation of 73D1 in this context, but I think we should leave honesty out of it.
#30
Posted 2012-October-18, 08:03
olegru, on 2012-October-17, 14:03, said:
There is no provision for extra time on the second trick; "out of tempo" then is "out of tempo". And if all players take 10-12 seconds over every card, then that would be about 8 minutes per board for the play of the hand only, which would not leave much time for the auction, as 16 minutes for two boards is a fairly common time limit. I would say 2-3 seconds was normal tempo for most people.
#31
Posted 2012-October-18, 09:30
The ACBL recommends 15 minutes for two board rounds. Around here, we typically get 14, and sometimes 13. It usually depends on how much hurry the director is in to get out of there, and how much she thinks she can get away with.
All that said, I agree that 2-3 seconds is normal tempo for most people, but would add that we don't, or at least should not, base a judgement of what is "out of tempo" for a particular player on what is "normal for most people". Rather we should base it on what is normal for that player if, of course, we can determine what that is.
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
#32
Posted 2012-October-18, 09:38
barmar, on 2012-October-17, 13:28, said:
And what's the 'normal' time to play to this trick? For me, its 2 - 2.5 seconds, since its early in the play and I'm still processing things unrelated to the trick. I'm also not necessarily expecting the ♥J to come out, so it takes a moment to think, "oh, ♥J, better not cover with AQT9 (vs AQT8)". I realize this contradicts my "nothing to think about" statement, but its still de minimus.
Over the AQT9, I need to figure out the outstanding spots, because there can be technical reasons to duck if partner has a doubleton. 3-4 seconds is my guess, but I can do some of this before partner plays.
For another player this might take 4-8 seconds, but for a junior that processes quicker than I do, it might be less than a second.
So normal tempo seems very dependent on the person, as well as the situation. Is declarer really that tuned in to the electrochemistry of a defender's nervous system to detect a 1 - 1.5 second variation?
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#33
Posted 2012-October-18, 09:52
barmar, on 2012-October-17, 18:03, said:
Of cause he should. And probably he did. But Ace of ♦ gave a lot more information to reconsider situation.
lamford, on 2012-October-18, 08:03, said:
And if all players take 2-3 seconds over every card and exery call then that would be about 2.5 minutes per board. Simple math gives us that average time to make every decision in normal 15 minutes for two boards time limit is 7.5 seconds per play.
And (for my experience) people usually dont think every card. There are 2-4 situatins to pause:
- After seeing dummy to imagine distribution and make plans;
- After unexpected card played to review possible distribution;
- One or two critical moments to choose between plans.
I would expect standard timing for a play of hands to be something like:
first trick - 10 plus minus 3 seconds
second trick- 10 plus minus 3 seconds
3rd........ - 5 .............second
4th........ - 3 .............second
5th........ - 2 .............second
6.......... - 10 ............second
7.......... - 3 .............second
8.......... - 2 .............second
9.......... - 3 .............second
10......... - 1 .............second
11......... - 1 .............second
12......... - 1 .............second
13......... - 0 .............second
Complain about 1 or 2 extra seconds taking during the first 3 tricks caused declarer to misplaced high cards sounds absolutely ridiculous for me. The only exception is hesitation with singleton, but it is not the case here.
It could be much trickier with complain about hesitation during the "second critical moment" (trick 6 in my example)that may alarm hesitators partner but it is different discussion.
#34
Posted 2012-October-18, 10:14
Phil, on 2012-October-18, 09:38, said:
Yep, it is. Nope, he's not.
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
#35
Posted 2012-October-18, 15:22
"deciding whether to falsecard with xx or xxx" in tempo-sensitive situations, has been deemed to be "not a bridge reason" by many NBOs.
#36
Posted 2012-October-19, 17:55
mycroft, on 2012-October-18, 15:22, said:
"How many legs has a sheep?"
"Four."
"And if I call its tail a leg, how many legs has it?"
"Five."
"No, four, for calling a tail a leg doesn't make it one."
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
#37
Posted 2012-October-20, 04:56
#38
Posted 2012-October-20, 06:55
mycroft, on 2012-October-18, 15:22, said:
"deciding whether to falsecard with xx or xxx" in tempo-sensitive situations, has been deemed to be "not a bridge reason" by many NBOs.
Linguistically I may well consider such a reason to be "a bridge reason"; however, with regard to avoiding the consequences of improper deception it would "not be a valid bridge reason". How to better put it? When 'the deciding whether to falsecard' is done within the unvarying normal tempo [should the player have such a history**] there would be no such evidence of improper deception from unsteady tempo, would there?
** on the whole players are trained to not normally have unvarying tempo- as by admonitions such as bridge is a thinking game and I can think when I want; so, for a player to normally have unvarying tempo is an abnormality in spite of the pressure from his surroundings to have unsteady tempo
#39
Posted 2012-October-20, 08:05
It's the same with bridge. A beginner has enough to think about in the bidding and play without worrying about his tempo, facial expressions, and so on. It will take some time, probably at least a year, perhaps longer, before he's ready to move on from "what do the bids mean?" to "I need to keep a poker face", and "I need to maintain steady tempo". A lot of people seem to think bridge players come "out of the box" with the ability to do it all correctly. They don't it takes years of practice. The problem is that the only "guidance" they get is when somebody calls the director, and they get "punished" with an adverse ruling. Perhaps we need a curriculum of "tempo training" for intermediate players.
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
#40
Posted 2012-October-20, 12:36
blackshoe, on 2012-October-20, 08:05, said:
It's the same with bridge. A beginner has enough to think about in the bidding and play without worrying about his tempo, facial expressions, and so on. It will take some time, probably at least a year, perhaps longer, before he's ready to move on from "what do the bids mean?" to "I need to keep a poker face", and "I need to maintain steady tempo". A lot of people seem to think bridge players come "out of the box" with the ability to do it all correctly. They don't it takes years of practice. The problem is that the only "guidance" they get is when somebody calls the director, and they get "punished" with an adverse ruling. Perhaps we need a curriculum of "tempo training" for intermediate players.
Some of us already "vary our ruling and appearence at the table" depending on the (class of) players involved and I see no problem with it.
I remember (must have been at least 10 years ago) I was called to a table in what one would probably call a "C-flight" event. It was a judgment case involving one of the best Norwegian TDs at the time and I eventually came back to the table announcing my verdict which went against her. I added: "This is a situation where I rule differently in A-flight and C-flight".
My (female) fellow burst out in laughter and stated she had absolutely no problem with that.