The Law's the Law?
#1
Posted 2010-March-16, 21:42
3rd quarter, Nickell had been up 2 IMPs.
A player from the Ng squad opened a multi 2D and Meckwell called the director because they weren't provided a written defense. The players were then banned from playing multi.
Thoughts?
#2
Posted 2010-March-16, 21:45
bed
#3
Posted 2010-March-16, 21:59
#4
Posted 2010-March-16, 22:01
#5
Posted 2010-March-16, 22:11
The_Hog, on Mar 16 2010, 10:01 PM, said:
all true---as most of your posts, with which i agree. And? Those happen to be the rules. Should they have acted against their interests by handling it differently?
#6
Posted 2010-March-16, 22:13
#7
Posted 2010-March-16, 22:20
aguahombre, on Mar 17 2010, 11:11 AM, said:
The_Hog, on Mar 16 2010, 10:01 PM, said:
all true---as most of your posts, with which i agree. And? Those happen to be the rules. Should they have acted against their interests by handling it differently?
Let me ask you this: if you had been playing a team of lols who used the multi, (a hypothetical in the US, I know), would you have called the director if you already knew how to defend against this perfidious convention? Of course you wouldn't. A bit of graciousness directed to those who are clearly your inferiors never hurt.
#8
Posted 2010-March-16, 22:43
The_Hog, on Mar 16 2010, 10:20 PM, said:
aguahombre, on Mar 17 2010, 11:11 AM, said:
The_Hog, on Mar 16 2010, 10:01 PM, said:
all true---as most of your posts, with which i agree. And? Those happen to be the rules. Should they have acted against their interests by handling it differently?
Let me ask you this: if you had been playing a team of lols who used the multi, (a hypothetical in the US, I know), would you have called the director if you already knew how to defend against this perfidious convention? Of course you wouldn't. A bit of graciousness directed to those who are clearly your inferiors never hurt.
Profound expression of the obvious. But that was not the situation, was it? I am not in their class and would have warned the LOL's who stumbled into a Vanderbilt long before, that their methods require a recommended defense.
I cannot know the history behind what occurred, nor would I presume to denegrate anyone who chose to use the rules to their advantage.
#9
Posted 2010-March-16, 22:52
Well, I don't know AqH; it certainly seems a similar situation to me. Regarding your last point, presumably Meckwell looked at the opps system card before pulling a card against this pair. If they saw Multi written there, why did they not as \k for a defence there and then. (Ok, maybe it wasn't on the system card - different story).
Anyway, what's the bet they wouldn't have used the written defence anyway, but used their own?
#11
Posted 2010-March-17, 00:00
#12
Posted 2010-March-17, 00:10
I count this as a similar situation to a basketball game of a few weeks ago, where Jason Kidd of the Dallas Mavericks saw the opposing team's coach on the floor during the play, shouting defensive signals, and deliberately ran into him so that the coach got called for a foul. It would be unsportsmanlike to do so in a rec league, where nothing is on the line, but as a professional athlete paid to win, it was a move that was lauded for its intelligence.
The Ng team was playing in one of the top bridge competitions in the world, they shouldn't expect to be treated the same was as they would be if they sat in a club duplicate game.
#13
Posted 2010-March-17, 01:34
#14
Posted 2010-March-17, 01:35
But Ron and me are allowed to dislike this behaviour.
It was the first round. Good sports had looked at the CC before they start and announced it to the foreigners if they had made a mistake.
So he was a good professional, but no gentleman in this incident. (If it had happened as we think it has- maybe the multi was mot marked, maybe they did overlook it while studying the card...many ifs).
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#15
Posted 2010-March-17, 01:54
Codo, on Mar 17 2010, 02:35 AM, said:
There is absolutely nothing ungentlemanly in playing a game by the rules of the game. I am appalled at the shots folks have aimed at Meckwell in this thread. Meckwell did the right thing from any perspective. Any comparison of Vanderbilt environment to playing against lol's at the club is utterly ridiculous.
#16
Posted 2010-March-17, 02:08
peachy, on Mar 17 2010, 04:54 PM, said:
Codo, on Mar 17 2010, 02:35 AM, said:
There is absolutely nothing ungentlemanly in playing a game by the rules of the game. I am appalled at the shots folks have aimed at Meckwell in this thread. Meckwell did the right thing from any perspective. Any comparison of Vanderbilt environment to playing against lol's at the club is utterly ridiculous.
Okay, maybe Americans have a different view of what a Gentleman should do.
F.E. Here in soccer, if a player of the opponents is injured, you kick the ball out to give them time to look after him. This is done till the very last minutes and even in a heated atmosphere.
There is no rule that you have to do this. If you continue to play, you follow the rules. But the whole stadium- including your supportes- will hate you.
So following the rules is not at all everything and may be not gentlemanlike.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#17
Posted 2010-March-17, 03:00
It would be prudent to tell the Ng team that they have to print out a recommended defense for the next match, of course. They might run into someone who are not used to defending multi. Oh well, they would probably not reach the next round.
#18
Posted 2010-March-17, 03:01
Anyway, I agree that it was not very smart from the Singapore team to want to play Multi without the necessary "precautions". So where do we draw the line? Do we need to divide the frequency of a convention with the seeding/WBF ranking of Meckwell, maybe multiplying it with the WBF ranking of the Singapore dudes and if the final result is smaller than 6.7 they are allowed to call the director? How about just respecting the rules????
Helene said:
Huh? This is the worst possible attitude to have, it sounds very patronizing and passive aggressive to me "just so you know, I could have called the Director on you but I didn't because I am awesome."
George Carlin
#19
Posted 2010-March-17, 03:22
To enforce this rule when you haven't been at all disadvantaged shows contempt for the game.
#20
Posted 2010-March-17, 03:25
Unless explicitly stated, none of my views here can be taken to represent SCBA or any other organizations.