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EBU if it matters

#21 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted Yesterday, 04:24

I raised it, the director ruled I should have protected myself by asking if the XX was alertable.

I knew the W player, and knew that he would know he should have alerted (Confirmed by the fact he admitted as much while the director was at the table and said he just forgot)
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#22 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted Yesterday, 10:45

Well then. You wanted to appeal that ruling? Because that, that is a ruling.

So now, the comment to the director after the game is "I was going to appeal your ruling, but as we won anyway, I won't put you to the trouble."

Again, this puts the notion in the director's head so that, when it turns out that you didn't "win anyway", something should happen.

What do I think of the ruling? Don't know - I'd have to walk through all the posts to find the actual case, hand and ruling and see. It is (to go back to your title) "EBU matters", though, because the ruling was "you are expert enough to know this is a situation where you need to protect yourself, and could 'without putting [your] side's interests at risk'" (Blue Book 2A3). The old ACBL Alert Procedure had something similar in it; the new one says "However, a player who is misinformed by an opponent’s failure to Alert will be protected."

There are two pins to that ruling: it needs to be a situation where we can expect "players [of your experience] will protect themselves", and it needs to be a situation where that can be done without prejudicing your own interests (by "alerting the opposition" [to a misunderstanding]'). Those two pins can be knocked over. However, "yeah, I should have alerted it" or even "sorry, forgot it was alertable" doesn't knock over either of those pins; it's therefore not relevant to the ruling.

"There was misinformation, there may have been damage. There would have been no damage if you had asked about the XX, it's obvious to check for someone of your skill, and there was no danger to your side in checking. So by regulation you are not entitled to redress when you chose not to ask. Score stands."

Is the director right? As I said, I don't know, and won't guess. Is there a valid appeal here? Pretty certain I could, in your shoes, attack either pin of the 2A3 ruling (especially the "putting their sides interests at risk" one). Is the appeal still available after a score correction makes a "doesn't matter" appeal matter? That's a question for the game's regulations. Does it matter that no mention of a possible appeal was made at the time? Again, a question only the RA for the game can answer.

But as I was looking up the BlueBook quote, I saw this from 2B7: "The use of specific questions should be avoided since the answer, whilst correct, might be incomplete." To me, the lesson here is that that regulation does not only apply to auctions at the bridge table.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)
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#23 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted Yesterday, 12:49

The ruling came days later.

The reasons for the ruling was that "You knew the standard of that room, you needed to protect yourself", I was saying that I knew the standard of the player and shouldn't have had to. I also knew he played fairly traditional stuff and didn't think he'd have agreed this over a 1N overcall.

I also feel the director could have done more (I didn't think about it at the time) and taken me away from the table to ask why I thought I might have been damaged before I knew how the hand was going to unfold ie with the auction at 2, and I would have told him what I wanted to do. This would have removed any possibility of a "you weren't going to bid that anyway" ruling.

Obviously if this was a SOS or single suited redouble, I don't want to jog W's memory and miss defending 1Nxx.
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#24 User is offline   sanst 

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Posted Yesterday, 12:56

I'm afraid that your original post wasn't very clear. We are fed bits of information piecemeal. I think there are two issues, one about the decisions by the director and the impossibility to get a ruling or appeal, the other about you first having won and then not.
From what you wrote I gather that during an auction a redouble that should have been alerted wasn't. You think that damaged your side, but the director told you that you should have protected yourself by asking and ruled against your claim. You thought that decision was wrong, but you didn't appeal till it was too late.
Here it becomes confusing, at least to me. You wrote about the final result having been made public, but was it really announced as ‘final’? Or was it the ‘official’ result as in Law 79C1, after which the Correction Period starts? Was there a correction period and if so, for how long? Was the score corrected in the CP or afterwards as made possible by Law 79C2? Could you have appealed and decided not to because your names were at the top of the list? That last question plays a major role. If you don't appeal because you think you've won, in my opinion you have forfeited your rights.
Till here this is in the field of the Laws and the conditions of contest. But I get the feeling you feel cheated. Had you already been given the winner's price - which might have been anything from a chocolate bar or a bottle of mediocre wine to a substantial sum - and did you have to give this back? That, IMNSHO, would be a rather stingy act. It would be different if it was the winner's trophy or a substantial sum. But in the last case I wonder why the organisers didn't hire a non-playing director.
You might argue that the director should have asked you whether you would still appeal after the play, since you said that you ‘reserved your rights’. But I don't think that he was obliged to do so.
I'm sorry, but the wisest thing is to consider it a lesson learnt.
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#25 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted Yesterday, 13:31

View Postsanst, on 2024-November-25, 12:56, said:

I'm afraid that your original post wasn't very clear. We are fed bits of information piecemeal. I think there are two issues, one about the decisions by the director and the impossibility to get a ruling or appeal, the other about you first having won and then not.
From what you wrote I gather that during an auction a redouble that should have been alerted wasn't. You think that damaged your side, but the director told you that you should have protected yourself by asking and ruled against your claim. You thought that decision was wrong, but you didn't appeal till it was too late.
Here it becomes confusing, at least to me. You wrote about the final result having been made public, but was it really announced as ‘final’? Or was it the ‘official’ result as in Law 79C1, after which the Correction Period starts? Was there a correction period and if so, for how long? Was the score corrected in the CP or afterwards as made possible by Law 79C2? Could you have appealed and decided not to because your names were at the top of the list? That last question plays a major role. If you don't appeal because you think you've won, in my opinion you have forfeited your rights.
Till here this is in the field of the Laws and the conditions of contest. But I get the feeling you feel cheated. Had you already been given the winner's price - which might have been anything from a chocolate bar or a bottle of mediocre wine to a substantial sum - and did you have to give this back? That, IMNSHO, would be a rather stingy act. It would be different if it was the winner's trophy or a substantial sum. But in the last case I wonder why the organisers didn't hire a non-playing director.
You might argue that the director should have asked you whether you would still appeal after the play, since you said that you ‘reserved your rights’. But I don't think that he was obliged to do so.
I'm sorry, but the wisest thing is to consider it a lesson learnt.


OK, full chronology:

Auction goes 1-1N-X-XX (no alert)-P-2

at this point I'm thinking whether I can call the director when it's not my turn to bid when P-2 hit the table rapidly, at this point I call him, it's too late to rewind back to my bid, I have a nasty guess to make and opt to bid 3 ending the auction +130.

we are half a board late with the directorials, it took a little while for him to arrive so we move for the final round.

after the final round, I see we have won. I look at the hand records and notice we have in fact been damaged so approach the director.

I ask "are the results final" he said yes and I made it clear I'd have asked for redress if we hadn't won.

I had also told the pair that finished 2nd that we had a ruling waiting if we hadn't won.

The pair that finished 2nd found a scoring error in their favour that evening when the results were put on the web and had the courtesy to email me to tell me I might need to get that ruling.

I asked the director for a ruling and he said out of time.

I said that's unfair, given that I felt I made it very clear I would have asked for a ruling if we hadn't won.

He came back a couple of days later with the "you should have protected yourself" ruling

I gave notice I was going to appeal.
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#26 User is offline   sanst 

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Posted Yesterday, 15:43

Although it's besides the question you asked, I would like to know who you were in the auction. It goes - sorry, I can't insert a clear diagran - but I thnik you were the dealer and made the 1♧ call:
1♧ - 1NT - X - XX
P - 2♧

At this point you consider calling the director, but before you can do so the auction continues:
1♧ - 1NT - X - XX
P - 2♧ - P - 2♡

Now you call the director who tells you that's too late to change your call and you make the final call, 3♧.

Now what is the problem? You didn't ask about the redouble because

Quote

Obviously if this was a SOS or single suited redouble, I don't want to jog W's memory and miss defending 1Nxx.

I don't get it. You knew the meaning of the XX, but hoped for W not to remember. That didn't happen. What would you have done if the bid was alerted? Anything else than 3♧? Why didn't you make that call instead of 3♧ when you still had the chance? And why didn't your partner bid something?
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#27 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted Yesterday, 16:51

View Postsanst, on 2024-November-25, 15:43, said:

Although it's besides the question you asked, I would like to know who you were in the auction. It goes - sorry, I can't insert a clear diagran - but I thnik you were the dealer and made the 1♧ call:
1♧ - 1NT - X - XX
P - 2♧

At this point you consider calling the director, but before you can do so the auction continues:
1♧ - 1NT - X - XX
P - 2♧ - P - 2♡

Now you call the director who tells you that's too late to change your call and you make the final call, 3♧.

Now what is the problem? You didn't ask about the redouble because


Quote

Obviously if this was a SOS or single suited redouble, I don't want to jog W's memory and miss defending 1Nxx.


Quote

I don't get it. You knew the meaning of the XX, but hoped for W not to remember. That didn't happen. What would you have done if the bid was alerted? Anything else than 3♧? Why didn't you make that call instead of 3♧ when you still had the chance? And why didn't your partner bid something?


You missed the word IF. I know from the non alert that the redouble is business and in that case I am EXTREMELY happy to defend 1Nxx, I actually thought (as did Richard Fleet on another site) that the NV/V 1N psyche might be in play.

The remark about not alerting opps to a mistake was in reference to this paragraph:

Quote

There are two pins to that ruling: it needs to be a situation where we can expect "players [of your experience] will protect themselves", and it needs to be a situation where that can be done without prejudicing your own interests (by "alerting the opposition" [to a misunderstanding]'). Those two pins can be knocked over. However, "yeah, I should have alerted it" or even "sorry, forgot it was alertable" doesn't knock over either of those pins; it's therefore not relevant to the ruling.


Saying I think it does prejudice my own interests
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