barmar, on 2014-October-21, 09:53, said:
What's the point of calling the TD in a case like this? He'll ask the last passer if he would have done anything different, he'll say no, and the TD will say to call him back at the end of the hand if we feel damaged by the failure to alert. Since everyone could tell that it was a transfer, no one feels damaged, so we don't call back.
Is there really no middle ground between keeping silent and a useless director call?
Who decides which laws to ignore?
The game is rapidly becoming one which is run by players who believe they know the rules, mostly learned by observing other players enforcing rules. These players often make their own rulings, tell the table to disregard the infraction and get very upset when a player insists on calling the director. On the other hand, I think the directors job is becoming one of taking the money, getting the game going and keeping everyone happy.
The laws, proprieties, regulations, COC are consistently ignored or adjusted including those which include the word MUST, which to my understanding means there is no room for discretion. For example in the General COC "Each member of a partnership
must have a completed convention card available." And I have just discovered there is even a line: "A pair
must have a carding agreement listed on their convention cards"
Before anyone jumps up and down and says you can't enforce the laws on inexperienced players, I am not talking about 0-99'er games, this happens through out the game, at club and tournament level.
During a recent conversation with a player (200+ MP), they were telling me how they had gone down in a slam because they had inadvertently pulled a card from their hand and were told by the opponents that they had to play the card because one of them had seen it, and could prove it, it was the XX so there was no point in calling the director.
Guess what this player will say next time they see a card inadvertently played?
"And no matter what methods you play, it is essential, for anyone aspiring to learn to be a good player, to learn the importance of bidding shape properly." MikeH