awm, on 2012-May-16, 16:57, said:
This business of "attitude about card X" is really bull. An attitude signal indicates your attitude about the suit. With a solid holding surely encouraging is automatic. Certainly T8xx may also encourage (since it appears from the queen lead that Meck has QJ) meaning its far from 100% clear to continue given encouragement, but I still think continuing must be a LA.
Claiming "not to have noticed" Brad's tendency to open balanced 11s also seems irrelevant and something of a dodge.
Of course, the writeup in these cases often fails to reflect what was said. And the winning margin was more than the value of this hand, so suggesting that "the wrong team won" is too much.
You rebut your opening comments in your closing comments!
I'm not stating, as a positive opinion, that the committee 'got it right', for precisely the same reason that I think it unfair, and arrogant, to assert that the committee got it wrong.
How on earth can anyone seriously assume, without hesitation, that no member of the Diamond team and no committee member didn't ask basic questions, such as: what would W have played under the Q with J108x? Or, if we accept that the Q doesn't ask about the J, what does it ask? Or, if the 3 were played in tempo, what would it have meant according to your carding agreements?
Without knowing if these or similar questions were asked, and what the answers were, it is incredibly presumptuous to publicly criticize the committee.
As a trial lawyer, I am sometimes asked about cases that are reported in the media....some of them cases in which I am counsel. I long ago realized that no media report is ever accurate, no matter how honest the reporter/editor combination tries to be. Yet people continually base their criticisms of the outcomes of such cases on the media reports and assume that they are completely justified in doing so. That mistaken attitude seems to dominate this thread. It is too bad for the game, the players, and the committee.