Rude, unreasonable Tournament Director Rude, unreasonable Tournament Director
#1
Posted 2010-September-10, 06:56
#2
Posted 2010-September-10, 07:52
I think you will get the same advice as always, if you don't like the way a tournament is run, avoid that TD
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
"Hysterical Raisins again - this time on the World stage, not just the ACBL" mycroft
#3
Posted 2010-September-10, 09:03
Here is some practical advice, hope it helps you to have a good time
If you want high quality directing, many for-fee tournaments, especially the ACBL tournaments, are better than the free ones. [you have choice]
If you are unhappy with a particular game or TD, don't go there again [you have choice]
If you are unhappy with all tournaments, don't enter them. Host a table or set up a team game yourself, or enter individual Robot tournaments [you have choice]
If you enter a speedball tournament, don't delay the game [it is rude to delay. Also, TDs are busy enough without having to assign Ave-/Ave+ and adjudicate whose fault the lateness was]
If you want to decline a claim, don't ask for the hand to be played out [that would be against the laws]
#4
Posted 2010-September-10, 10:24
No, I'm not upset at you - but it seems the obvious solution.
OTOH, I got autoadjusted to 3S-2 on a hand last week, where I can't see how to lose the extra trick, unless I change my mind from the line of play I was taking (give them trump tricks, repeated endplay) to a dumb line (take my top trumps, give them theirs, get endplayed myself). But I didn't really worry about it (and, of course, my analysis skills aren't exactly world-famous, so I could be wrong).
#5
Posted 2010-September-10, 11:06
peachy, on Sep 10 2010, 08:03 AM, said:
Altough what Peachy says is accurate, many BBO TD's ask for the hand to be played out and will boot you if you don't.
The OP has my sympathy, when you enter a tournament I think it is reasonable to expect a certain level of compentency and for the game to be run in accordance with the laws of the game.
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
"Hysterical Raisins again - this time on the World stage, not just the ACBL" mycroft
#6
Posted 2010-September-10, 15:02
Besides, unlike IRL tourneys where there will often be a competent TD that has the time and the communicative means to sort it out, online there is usually no alternative to playing it out.
And if the rule on BBO was that you should stop playing when a claim had been rejected then obviously the software would not allow you to play on.
So: if the TD (or host) says that in case a claim is rejected you must stop playing and call the TD then of course you must adhere to that. But the default procedure at online bridge is to play it out after a rejected claim.
#7
Posted 2010-September-13, 14:20
helene_t, on Sep 10 2010, 03:02 PM, said:
I'm not sure I agree here; "there was an objection" is frequently enough, no need for "who objected":
Yes, if you are careful, you play it that way from the start. But the Law says that if you think all the tricks are yours, there's no reason to start with diamond to the Ace, or (more reasonably) the CK.
#8
Posted 2010-September-17, 20:09
Some shysters on BBO claim when they know they dont have all the rest of the tricks, and are hoping to slip one over (sometimes even happens, lots of unconfident players will accept rather than challenging, esp in a tourney.) Others sometimes have made mistakes, forgetting a trump or a spot card still out, or thinking their spot card was higher or some such. Having the line of play delineated makes things a lot easier and quicker. That can as someone above said, apply to the defenders making a claim as well.
#9
Posted 2010-September-18, 07:42
onoway, on Sep 17 2010, 10:09 PM, said:
Some shysters on BBO claim when they know they dont have all the rest of the tricks, and are hoping to slip one over (sometimes even happens, lots of unconfident players will accept rather than challenging, esp in a tourney.) Others sometimes have made mistakes, forgetting a trump or a spot card still out, or thinking their spot card was higher or some such. Having the line of play delineated makes things a lot easier and quicker. That can as someone above said, apply to the defenders making a claim as well.
BBO players hardly ever state a line of play when they claim, even though there's a place in the claim box for them to fill in.
I've rarely had anyone deliberately try to claim too much. Sometimes they just forget there's a trump out, and sometimes they just click the claim button too quickly, forgetting to change the number of tricks they're claiming.
#10
Posted 2010-September-18, 10:03
#11
Posted 2010-September-18, 12:20
TylerE, on Sep 18 2010, 11:03 AM, said:
If need 40+ characters to explain the line, then perhaps premature to claim.
#12
Posted 2010-September-18, 14:11
#13
Posted 2010-September-18, 14:17
George Carlin
#14
Posted 2010-September-18, 14:32
#15
Posted 2010-September-18, 16:18
TylerE, on Sep 18 2010, 03:11 PM, said:
How about "draw, fin club" or whatever the suit is where the finesse will be taken. That is 14 characters including the spaces and the comma. Anyone who has played more than a month will understand this simple claim. Still 24 more characters left.
#17
Posted 2010-September-19, 08:25
kenohr, on Sep 10 2010, 08:56 AM, said:
The second time declarer claimed, you could have called for the director, specifying "we get 2 aces and another spade" in your call explanation. That way, the director should respond to you, not to the opponent, when he arrives at the table since you're the one who called.
#18
Posted 2010-September-19, 08:30
kenohr, on Sep 10 2010, 08:56 AM, said:
This should be reported to both abuse@bridgebase.com and the tournament sponsor, if any. They'll prefer screenprints over copied-and-pasted text. They have more power to punish bad behavior.
#19
Posted 2010-September-21, 10:04
#20
Posted 2010-September-21, 10:07
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
"Hysterical Raisins again - this time on the World stage, not just the ACBL" mycroft

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