Posted 2015-November-09, 12:24
"I see it now, sorry".
As a TD, *most* of my contested claims rulings (the ones that aren't "he didn't mention the trump" ones, anyway) are "I don't understand what declarer said", and usually, having the TD understand it and reword it, or move a couple of cards around, clarifies the situation. In fact, I strongly encourage this behaviour (especially from the weaker players) rather than griping about "why can't we play on" or "I hate it when they claim" or "they're just trying to show how much smarter they are than me" - or saying this at the table before the TD gets called (with 4 pissed off players, now, instead of one). As in a lot of cases, it's just easier to say "I contest the claim"/"I can't see it"/"I don't agree", call the TD, and let the TD handle it.
Oh, and when declarer asks "what's your problem with the claim" - don't give him any information to help him "get it right" without the TD present. "I don't think the diamonds run" == "oh, of course I would play them this way and pick up your 5-0 break because..." Having said that, accept the TD ruling in their favour with good grace (such as when declarer had a two-way guess for the queen, and I could have not had it for my 12-14 NT rather than the 14-count I had; "but he didn't tell me what his problem was so I could explain" - of course I didn't. However, the TD's ruling was disappointing, but reasonable (an expert would know that my partner wouldn't have played the way she did with the queen) and I thanked him for the ruling and went on.)
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)