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Appeals Deposits

#1 User is offline   mr1303 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 00:34

To avoid further thread highjack, I thought the issue of appeals deposits warranted a separate thread.

My take on this is as follows. Back in my student days, I had enough budget for my transport to a congress and (just about) my entry fee. Accommodation invariably involved the floor of which ever fellow junior happened to live most locally, and dinner was chips from the local fish and chip shop, or pre-made sandwiches. I certainly wasn't alone in this regard.

Certainly the concept of paying £20/£30 for an appeal was comfortably unaffordable. Yes, I know it's only a deposit, but the point is I couldn't afford to be wrong, otherwise this would sometimes mean the sacrifice of my journey home.

Compare this to (for example) Janet de Botton, whom I refer to solely to suggest that she has more money than I. For her, I imagine, £20-£30 is a drop in the ocean, and would therefore be much more able to afford to appeal a decision.

As a suggestion for an alternative, a small fee for members of an appeals committee at the larger congresses might well be in order. This would avoid the comments of "wasting everyone's time".
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#2 User is offline   Lanor Fow 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 01:19

Which does nothing to deter 'we might as well appeal just in case...'
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#3 User is offline   jeremy69 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 01:22

You don't suggest what the alternative to a deposit is. If you had appealed in your impecunious days it would have cost you £10 if you then lost your deposit. I think there would be very few whose journey home would be affected by this.
Giving members of an appeal committee a small fee would add to costs and also not remove the wasted time feeling experienced when someone wastes the whole committee's time plus that of the director and the opposition. In English tournaments the number of kept deposits is quite small which suggests to me that it works reasonably well. IMO even people to whom the deposit is truly peanuts do not like someone telling them it is forfeit
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#4 User is offline   dburn 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 01:37

Those who serve on ACs at EBU tournaments, at least as Chairs, have their entry fee discounted. This probably does not make much difference to them - I have yet to hear of anyone whose decision to attend (say) Brighton was influenced by the fact that as an AC Chair, he might save a few quid. But I would not wish you to form the impression that the miserable old fogeys who rule against you on principle are not remunerated for so doing.

"To no man will we sell", says Magna Carta, "to no man refuse or delay justice or right." I have a lot of sympathy with the view that if monetary deposits are involved, it may well seem that "justice" or "right" could be sold to the highest bidder. That's why I hate them, and why I would much prefer that a system could be devised whereby any contestant had the right to a fixed number of unsuccessful appeals during a fixed period of time.

They already have such systems, you say? Cricket? Tennis? Maybe I should get out more.
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#5 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 01:47

jeremy69, on May 27 2010, 08:22 AM, said:

In English tournaments the number of kept deposits is quite small which suggests to me that it works reasonably well.

It suggests to me that committees are reluctant to keep deposits even when they should.
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#6 User is offline   jeremy69 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 04:02

Quote

They already have such systems, you say? Cricket? Tennis?


I look forward to the L&E buying a hawkeye machine for Brighton. That will help with appeals.

Quote

It suggests to me that committees are reluctant to keep deposits even when they should.


I think that has been true in the past and there are still one or two appeal committee members still who are reluctant but I have seen few appeals in the last year where it is clear to take the money. The system of advisers has cut out some but not all silly appeals. some get through still either becuase of obstinacy or the adviser being given an account which bears no resemblance to the facts.
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#7 User is offline   bluejak 

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  Posted 2010-May-27, 06:32

My view is that there are still too many silly appeals. But my experience as a TD suggests that there would be more if we did not have monetary deposits. I think the problem is not so much that monetary deposits are fair but that suggested alternatives are usually unfair or ineffective or both.

In Australia they have the right to give a PP for a meritless appeal. Just consider how effective that is at stopping appeals in the last segment of a knockout match, for example! :ph34r: In England in Swiss events, there are a lot of appeals where the quarter-green is at stake. To explain, if a player is doing poorly, he has no real worries about his score. But he gets a quarter of a national master point [a "quarter-green"] for winning a match. So if he has lost 12-8 and thinks an appeal could get him a win, he appeals. A PP if it is deemed meritless is totally irrelevant so ineffective. The point it that a PP is random in its effectiveness, and is unfair in the same way as a monetary deposit. Just as a monetary deposit seems far more effective against poorer players than richer, a PP sanction works far better in some cases than others, ranging from quite effective to totally ineffective.

How about an AWMW as in the ACBL? The trouble is that I understand that no-one ever gets anything as a result so they are understood to be ineffective. If they led to something, perhaps they would be effective, but it is difficult to see what they should lead to, and I have my doubts as to the fairness. Suppose, as was claimed when they were introduced, players get "investigated" if they have two in a year, or something. Investigated how? What happens as an effect? Do AWMWs from Sectionals get reported to the ACBL? What sanction is applied? Why has it never happened?

Talk earlier of the quarter-green has made me think of applying a master point sanction. Many average players in England lover the quarter-green, and enter Swiss events with no thought of winning, but just to see how many quarter-greens they can get. Suppose a frivolous appeal meant a quarter-green was taken away? Would that be effective? Would it be fair? I think the answer is the same as for monetary deposits. It would be unfair, and would be effective against some players and not others. Consider my case. I cannot reach the next rank because there is no higher rank. I do not play enough or in the correct events to win an annual master point prize. I am always the leading master point winner in my County. So to lose a quarter-green means very little to me, far less than losing ten or twenty pounds. and less to me than to my wife, who picks up very few greens a year but needs them for the next rank.

No doubt we could devise other sanctions. But when people talk about the unfairness of monetary deposits, I think they should consider the alternatives. We could fail to discourage meritless appeals, and there would be more and more from a certain type of player, wasting everyone's time. Yes, we could pay the AC members, but that may be impractical and is also ineffective: I have great trouble arranging appeals now: the system would not work for three times as many. Remember that wasting time includes opponents' time, and TD's time. Yes, I know TDs are paid to work, but appeals in the EBU are usually held when TDs have other jobs to do such as scoring or clearing the room. Most EBU TDs cover for each other at such times, but suppose all of them were involved in appeals?

Alternatively we could try one of the other methods above. But none are fair, in my view, even AWMWs which will affect serious players considerably more than casual ones, and there are problems of effectiveness because of the lack of fairness.

Have I any solution? Well, there are two solutions that have occurred to me, both cumbersome, and one that will definitely be disliked by ACs themselves. Since monetary deposits are effective with some people, PPs in some circumstances, losing master points with some people, and AWMWs might be effective with some people if some basis for further sanction really existed unlike th ACBL's toothless version, I suggest either:
  • If an AC decides an appeal is meritless, it then decides to sanction the people who brought the appeal, choosing one out of retaining a deposit, issuing a PP or AWMW, or deducting a quarter-green [or whatever is decided]. ACs will hate the extra decision. A possible alternative is they decide to apply a sanction, someone else [the L&EC, perhaps] decides what sanction: maybe a magic formula, or something. But it seems so cumbersome.
  • If an AC decides an appeal is meritless, it then decides to sanction the people who brought the appeal, applying all of retaining a small deposit, issuing a PP and an AWMW, and deducting an eighth-green [or whatever is decided].
I am not convinced these last two are right, and would go for the package - the last one - myself, but the advantage of these is that they should be fairer than the present system.

What would I do, personally? Stick with monetary deposits. Despite what people say, no-one likes losing money, whether Janet de Botton or mr1303.
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#8 User is offline   jeremy69 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 12:49

It's finally happened. I think I agree with all of the previous post. Now I must go and lie down in a darkened room!
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#9 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 13:14

I think that there are three reasons that the ACBL AWMW system hasn't shown any teeth:

1) The barriers are way too high. 3 "without merit" appeals in 9 NABCs? I know there are inveterate appealers, but how many average more than 1 a NABC? And even if they have 7 or 8 in the three years, that's 30-40% that have to be ruled without merit to trigger a C&E hearing.
2) The appeals committees are treating AWMWs as having in and of themselves, too strong an effect, and aren't handing them out when they should be. That means that for the above 30-40% to be ruled without merit, probably 50-60% of them have to *be* without merit.
3) My guess is that it is, in fact, working; once someone gets two, they either stop appealing, or don't appeal anything that isn't perfectly clear.

So, nobody's been hit with the automatic C&E hearing. How many have "modified" their appealing behaviour because they're on 2? No idea. Does it work? Not in enough cases to notice.
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#10 User is offline   Echognome 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 13:18

I rather like the idea of X appeals per year. Every time an appeal is made, all players on the appealing side use up one of their appeals. If one of the players has already used up their quote for the year, tough luck!

Perhaps as an alternative, if you get Y frivolous appeals per year, you can no longer appeal for the remainder of the year. This would be similar to an AWMW, except that there is a known and transparent penalty. This may be fairer, so that you have, in theory, an unlimited amount of legitimate appeals.
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#11 User is offline   Nickboss 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 15:40

One fun idea might be to, instead of retaining the deposit in the case of an appeal without merit, give it to the other side.

Perhaps this might reduce any possible acrimony, and you never know, if in your student days you end up buying Team Rich a round of drinks, they might be happy to reciprocate ;)
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#12 User is offline   jeremy69 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 17:25

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One fun idea might be to, instead of retaining the deposit in the case of an appeal without merit, give it to the other side.


Give it to the chairman would be more fun! :D
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#13 User is offline   Mbodell 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 19:15

Echognome, on May 27 2010, 11:18 AM, said:

I rather like the idea of X appeals per year. Every time an appeal is made, all players on the appealing side use up one of their appeals. If one of the players has already used up their quote for the year, tough luck!

I strongly disagree with this approach as I don't think there should be any cost to a successful appeal. I think, for instance, the NFL is quite silly in limiting coaches use of challenges when the challenges are correct. I mean if the ref/TD has made a mistake, why is it your fault?
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#14 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2010-May-27, 19:44

Because we're supposed to blame the victim?
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#15 User is offline   jeremy69 

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Posted 2010-May-28, 01:48

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I mean if the ref/TD has made a mistake, why is it your fault?


It isn't but if there isn't a limt the game will grind to a halt because the players always think the referee or umpire must be wrong. I think limits on appeals are also wrong but there needs to be some deterrent to the timewaster.
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#16 User is offline   Echognome 

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Posted 2010-May-28, 02:08

Mbodell, on May 27 2010, 06:15 PM, said:

Echognome, on May 27 2010, 11:18 AM, said:

I rather like the idea of X appeals per year.  Every time an appeal is made, all players on the appealing side use up one of their appeals.  If one of the players has already used up their quote for the year, tough luck!

I strongly disagree with this approach as I don't think there should be any cost to a successful appeal. I think, for instance, the NFL is quite silly in limiting coaches use of challenges when the challenges are correct. I mean if the ref/TD has made a mistake, why is it your fault?

I did offer an alternative! I also gave myself plenty of wiggle room, since X is a variable. Of course we can go farther and have both an X and a Y limit, with Y < X. Endless possibilities. But seriously, if we made Y something like 2 and X something like 10, would that be all that awful for one year?
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#17 User is offline   nigel_k 

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Posted 2010-May-28, 03:03

I agree with loss of deposit for truly frivolous appeals but I think committees take the money much too often.

It shouldn't be enough that the committee thinks the issue is clearcut. Ideally the appellant should keep their deposit any time they genuinely believe their appeal is reasonable, and have a basis for that belief even if not a particularly strong one. And I think appellants have this more than 95% of the time.
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#18 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2010-May-28, 09:17

In principle, I agree with Echognome. Rule-makers should mandate that a pair or team be denied an appeal if, during the previous 12 months, any member exceeds both
  • a specified percentage of unsuccessful appeals and
  • a specified absolute number of unsuccessful appeals.
We should count only unsuccesssful appeals -- because we should actively encourage successful appeals, in the hope of improving director decisions.

Counting unsuccesful appeals with an AWMW (or equivalent) might be a better candidate, if AWMWs were more consistent and frequent.

The percentage limit is to avoid handicapping frequent competitors.

Also, an unsuccessful appeal would count as several, if you refused or ignored the advice of an independent appeals advisor.
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#19 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2010-May-28, 09:34

nigel_k, on May 28 2010, 10:03 AM, said:

I agree with loss of deposit for truly frivolous appeals but I think committees take the money much too often.

Really? How often have you known them do it?

I've not actually experienced, either as a player, a director, or an AC member, an appeal where the appellants lost their deposit. I know they do exist, but I have no first-hand experience of it.

On the other hand, every year I read the round-up of EBU appeals which have many instances where the commentators think the deposit should have been kept but it wasn't.
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#20 User is offline   jeffford76 

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Posted 2010-May-28, 10:22

jeremy69, on May 28 2010, 12:48 AM, said:

Quote

I mean if the ref/TD has made a mistake, why is it your fault?


It isn't but if there isn't a limt the game will grind to a halt because the players always think the referee or umpire must be wrong. I think limits on appeals are also wrong but there needs to be some deterrent to the timewaster.

Why would the game grind to a halt? You're not going to be *right* over and over in thinking the ref made a mistake, so you'll soon exhaust your challenges. And if you somehow are right over and over, getting the calls right is worth the delay.
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