roghog, on 2012-September-14, 14:37, said:
Declarer took the obvious 10 tricks. The hand is from Division 1 of a local event (IMP scoring) and EW are reasonably experienced. NS called the TD and suggested that E's decision to reopen may have been affected by W's (agreed) hesitation.
The TD declined to change the result on the grounds that E legitimately knows that W is short in ♥ and must have some values.
Do you agree with the TD? Perhaps you could advise on how TDs should come to a decision in this sort of circumstance.
Many thanks for your help.
A good start would be for the TD to actually read Law 16B. He will find nothing there about not adjusting because East knows West has some values. Furthermore, it is not really true.
He should consider whether there are sensible alternatives to the double, and if so whether double is suggested by partner's hesitation. He should ask some players what they would do in this position. He would find that most of them would pass since they have what they have shown, nothing more.
Doubling rather than passing is suggested by the hesitation. Since pass is a reasonable alternative, double is suggested, he should adjust to 3
♥ passed.
Another thing he can do is to find some good TDs to ask: since this is England there is a list of TDs on the EBU website and in the EBU diary. All are trained and good: the highest ranks tend to have the best TDs. For example, I get a lot of phone calls and emails asking for help. I expect that the other TDs, especially the National ones, do as well.
aguahombre, on 2012-September-14, 15:52, said:
This TD should definitely consult with someone else. Most TD's would not need to do so.
All competent TDs consult. Any TD that believes he does not need to consult is incompetent and should not be giving judgement rulings.
Trinidad, on 2012-September-15, 03:26, said:
The only point of these three that I find doubtful is the second. After all, if the TD at the table doesn't know that doubling is blatant use of UI, can we expect a player to know that?
In general, PPs are given for things that show a blatant disregard for the rules or for repeated offences. These are judgement matters for the TD. Here it is unlikely that the TD will have sufficient judgement for a PP since he does not seem to know the correct approach to UI.
roghog, on 2012-September-18, 13:16, said:
We have unpaid volunteer TDs who do an excellent job but struggle with this sort of problem. I guess we need to find ways to help and support them.
It is perfectly normal in England to have unpaid volunteer TDs. Some go on courses, some learn from magazines, eg BRIDGE a free magazine for which I write, available anywhere in the British Isles, some come on forums like this one, some learn from each other, some consult leading TDs in England.