Director's ruling on slow play
#21
Posted 2012-April-01, 10:37
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
#22
Posted 2012-April-01, 10:59
I can see nothing in the laws that allows cancelling a board before it has started for slow play that would not also allow stopping a board once it has started.
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#23
Posted 2012-April-01, 12:11
dcrc2, on 2012-April-01, 06:37, said:
How do you understand
Law 8B1 said:
1. In general, a round ends when the Director gives the signal for the start of the following round; but if any table has not completed play by that time, the round continues for that table until there has been a progression of players.
Where in the laws do you find any authority for the Director to cancel a board after the auction (period) has begun on that board unless there has been an irregularity that makes normal play of the board impossible?
#24
Posted 2012-April-01, 13:14
pran, on 2012-April-01, 12:11, said:
As Robin just said -
Quote
#25
Posted 2012-April-01, 14:37
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
#26
Posted 2012-April-02, 07:18
Law 80B2 said:
...
(e) to establish the conditions for bidding and play in accordance with these laws, together with any special conditions (as, for example, play with screens provisions for rectification of actions not transmitted across the screen may be varied).
(f) to announce regulations supplementary to, but not in conflict with,these Laws.
...
(i) to establish suitable conditions of play and announce them to the contestants.
Law 81 said:
The Director is the official representative of the Tournament Organizer.
B. Restrictions and Responsibilities
1. The Director is responsible for the on-site technical management of the tournament. He has powers to remedy any omissions of the Tournament Organizer.
2. The Director applies, and is bound by, these Laws and supplementary regulations announced under authority given in these Laws.
C. Directors Duties and Powers
.... The Directors duties and powers normally include also the following:
1. to maintain discipline and to ensure the orderly progress of the game.
(Note the last sentence of Law 81B1.)
Law 82A said:
It is the responsibility of the Director to rectify errors of procedure and to maintain the progress of the game in a manner that is not contrary to these Laws.
If it is accepted that there are no other specific provisions for these to conflict with, then it seems to me that these confer sufficient powers on the TO / TD to halt play of a board at any stage in order to deal with slow play. I'd certainly agree with
RMB1, on 2012-April-01, 10:59, said:
In response to pran's
pran, on 2012-April-01, 12:11, said:
Law 8B1 said:
1. In general, a round ends when the Director gives the signal for the start of the following round; but if any table has not completed play by that time, the round continues for that table until there has been a progression of players.
(My enhancement)
Where in the laws do you find any authority for the Director to cancel a board after the auction (period) has begun on that board unless there has been an irregularity that makes normal play of the board impossible?
(1) I understand Law 8B1 as being solely about defining when the end of a round is deemed to occur (an interpretation re-inforced by the heading "End of Round") - I don't think it was ever intended to say anything specific about the regulation of the play of a board; instead, it's just saying that if a table over-runs for a while they're not deemed to have ended the round until they move on. As far as I'm concerned, play can be completed not only by playing the board out, but also by the Director terminating play of the board. After all, surely you accept that if the players took hours to complete the board the Director would have to step in sooner or later?
(2) My answer to your question "Where in the laws do you find any authority for the Director to cancel a board after the auction (period) has begun on that board ..." lies in the Laws I cited above.
In EBU-land the RA's guidance would seem to offer the Tournament Organiser the opportunity to set its own conditions, and is only saying "play the board out" in the absence of such conditions:
White Book 81.4.1 (p 111) said:
...
As a matter of principle, a TD should not remove a board from a table because it is late once an auction has commenced, unless the table was told not to play the board. In the latter case a procedural penalty for both sides should be issued and the board cancelled.
#27
Posted 2012-April-02, 12:34
1. One player has taken his hand out of the board. He hasn't looked at it.
2. As above, but he has looked at it.
3. As the two above, but two or more players have taken their hands out.
4. Dealer has made a call, but no one else.
5. It is the first round of the auction.
6. It is the second round of the auction.
7. The auction is over, but the opening lead has not been chosen.
8. The auction is over, the opening lead has been chosen.
9. The auction is over, the opening lead has been faced.
10. As #9, and the dummy has come down.
11. They are on trick two.
12. They are on trick six.
13. They are on trick twelve.
14. They've finished the play, but the score has not been entered.
15. In any of the above scenarios, one (or more) players have suggested ignoring the clock.
In which of the above scenarios does the TD have the authority to cancel the board? Where is the line? Why is the line where you say it is?
FWIW, unless and until I become convinced that "you can't cancel a board once someone takes his hand out" is wrong, I will not cancel a board in that situation.
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
#28
Posted 2012-April-02, 15:33
PeterAlan, on 2012-April-02, 07:18, said:
WB 81.4.1 said:
Thanks for finding the White Book reference. Having seen this, I take back what I said earlier about cancelling the board during the auction being illegal. It seems clear from the White Book wording that, while we are indeed instructed not to cancel a board after the start of the auction, this instruction is purely advice and not an interpretation of law. A club could choose to overrule this advice, though I think this would be seriously misguided for the reasons others have given.
#29
Posted 2012-April-02, 17:30
blackshoe, on 2012-April-02, 12:34, said:
1. One player has taken his hand out of the board. He hasn't looked at it.
2. As above, but he has looked at it.
3. As the two above, but two or more players have taken their hands out.
4. Dealer has made a call, but no one else.
5. It is the first round of the auction.
6. It is the second round of the auction.
7. The auction is over, but the opening lead has not been chosen.
8. The auction is over, the opening lead has been chosen.
9. The auction is over, the opening lead has been faced.
10. As #9, and the dummy has come down.
11. They are on trick two.
12. They are on trick six.
13. They are on trick twelve.
14. They've finished the play, but the score has not been entered.
15. In any of the above scenarios, one (or more) players have suggested ignoring the clock.
In which of the above scenarios does the TD have the authority to cancel the board? Where is the line? Why is the line where you say it is?
FWIW, unless and until I become convinced that "you can't cancel a board once someone takes his hand out" is wrong, I will not cancel a board in that situation.
For the reasons I gave above, and provided the Tournament Organiser / Tournament Director has previously made clear to all concerned what slow play rules are to be applied and that the situation in question is within those parameters, I would maintain that in any of these scenarios the TD has the authority to cancel the board. It would normally be unusual to draw the line so that scenario 14 is included, but in order to rule out wasting further time if the result of the board might be in dispute, I can see some merit in that too.
What's reasonable depends on how those parameters are expressed, and I suggest that there's an implict requirement of reasonableness. I would, for example, regard it as reasonable to say "if you haven't finished a board, including scoring it, by [say] 2 minutes after the move is called, then I'll cancel it" (your scenario 14). I would not regard it as reasonable to say "you can't start the second board any later than 3 minutes into the round" (your scenario 1). Within that constraint, it's up to the TO / TD to decide what the rules are, and in terms of which state of the board (start, auction, lead, etc) they are defined, and they have the authority to do so and to enforce them.
dcrc2, on 2012-April-02, 15:33, said:
I think you should look again at all the White Book wording I quoted. From the first sentence, the Tournament Organiser (here the club) may "prescribe[s] the speed of play, and the actions the TD takes if players play more slowly than prescribed", and the rest of the advice applies only to events where this is not done. Even then, I would suggest that the TD, under Law 81B1, has the authority to set these parameters him/herself at the start of the event, provided they are made clear to everyone. Where these slow play parameters are set, by the TO/TD, I don't have a problem with them involving the termination of play on a board where the auction has started, and so don't agree that this is necessarily "seriously misguided". To repeat my earlier question, surely you would accept that if the players took hours over the auction then the TD would have to step in sooner or later? In many events, any significant late play time is just not practical.
#30
Posted 2012-April-02, 21:14
PeterAlan, on 2012-April-02, 17:30, said:
In ACBL clubs, at least, this is not going to happen.
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
#31
Posted 2012-April-03, 02:02
PeterAlan, on 2012-April-02, 17:30, said:
How much better it would be to tell them that they won't be able to play one of the boards from the next round.
PeterAlan, on 2012-April-02, 17:30, said:
It still seems seriously misguided to me, for the reasons given at the start of this thread. I'm not quite sure what it achieves (on any round but the final one) that can't be achieved by taking away boards not yet started, but it does open the door to all sorts of underhand behaviour.
London UK
#32
Posted 2012-April-03, 06:43
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
#33
Posted 2012-April-03, 07:02
blackshoe, on 2012-April-03, 06:43, said:
Yes, I'm not particularly suspicious by nature, but in this case it's just blindingly obvious that in some circumstances players would be able to affect the outcome of an unfinished board simply by speeding up or slowing down.
How many players would manage to get a lead on the table fast enough to be allowed to play a board that they believed they lost in the auction? Would they even know what their normal tempo would be in selecting their lead, when they have all the distraction of potentially having the board taken away, and not wanting to do anything unethical?
So much simpler for us all just to accept that standard TD practice in this situation has developed for a reason, and follow it.
London UK
#34
Posted 2012-April-03, 07:58
Chris3875, on 2012-March-30, 14:21, said:
While the reason given is good, the method is poor. No session is going to finish 20+ minutes late because of slow play when I am directing, nor any other competent TD I have known. But if I traveled 80+ kilometers and had a board taken off me where I had acquired a top in the bidding then I would never visit your club again.
TDs should just control slow play by other means. Pushing the players works most of the time, and the occasional board removed, whether you allow late plays or not, helps. Timers help.
As for the legalities, I just cannot see how a board once started can be stopped without a Law permitting it. While I accept you have started a board once you have looked at the cards, I accept the practical approach of taking a board away if no calls have been made, though I believe it to be illegal.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#35
Posted 2012-April-03, 08:12
I suppose, also, that I'm starting from the viewpoint that your concerns about players gaming the cancelling of current round boards would be overstated, in the places I play most of my bridge anyway, but maybe I'm just naive! Incidentally, it seems to me that there could also be some, though probably lesser, opportunities for that sort of shennanigan if you're removing board(s) from the next round, though I don't want to think particularly hard about it! That practice, of course, also has the disadvantage that it affects pairs who were not any part of the slow play, even if they do get Ave+ by way of compensation.
#36
Posted 2012-April-03, 19:04
#37
Posted 2012-April-05, 05:46
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>