blackshoe, on 2013-February-06, 16:07, said:
I would explain to the TD exactly what I had heard from the opponents that caused me to call him. Now he has the same information I do. If he reaches a different conclusion with that information, so be it. I would not consider that I have a leg to stand on if I don't give him that information.
What makes you think that the TDs didn't have that information? Of course they did.
But the instruction from the NBO's LC was clear: The player says he misbid. That is "evidence to the contrary" and it must be ruled a misbid (no matter what).
The reasoning behind this instruction was something like:
- Bridge is a gentleman's game. Therefore, bridge players don't lie.
- The pair knows better than the opponents what their actual agreements are.
As a result, the evidence that I brought was viewed as a cheating accusation (perhaps rightly so). And for an accusation of cheating the evidence needs to be much stronger (definitely rightly so) than for the determination misbid/MI. And let's face it: In the end there is not more than our word against their word. End of story.
So that is why there always needs to be more evidence than just the word of the player that he misbid. I don't care much what kind of evidence. A system book would be nice, but a reference to a bridge book or a player who taught them the convention or "we also play this with Bob and Jim who are sitting over there" or previous experience of the TD or a sound logical argument why it must be a misbid or ...whatever... are also fine. Just something. But a player's statement that he misbid should not be sufficient evidence that he misbid.
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When I started playing bridge, I lived in the USA. I was told by my bridge teacher that the ACBL was responsible for the rules of the game. At the time, I didn't think much more about that, but I think that most players within the ACBL see it like that (and ignore the fact that the WBF LC is a higher authority).
Then I moved to other countries and I saw that the rules of the game changed. Since I moved, my view has always been that the WBF defines the Laws, but in practice everybody looks at the local authorities. They have to translate the lawbook into the local language. They have to interpret the laws. And they have to deal with the local culture. And different people in different countries lead to different interpretations.
Now I am living and playing in The Netherlands. Here nobody knows who is in the WBF LC. But people know who is on the Dutch LC. They write articles on the Laws in the bridge magazine and that is what the public sees. And their views are respected as the correct ones. The same holds for the ACBL. If I understand correctly, Mike Flader writes articles about the Laws in the ACBL magazine. Most players in the ACBL regard him as the ultimate oracle in matters of law. But ask aunt Millie or Uncle Bob who is on the WBF LC and they will deny that there is such a thing as the WBF LC. (They might even deny that there is an ACBL LC. After all, Jim, the nice club owner who bakes this delicious banana bread, is
the authority on the rules of the game.)
Just imagine that somebody else would sit on Mike Flader's chair... Let's say... Bobby Wolff. How long do you think it will take before "Convention Disruption" will be considered as a solid basis for a ruling within the ACBL? I think not very long. After all, the Law book is like the bible. Nobody reads it, everybody just believes what the local oracle/minister says. And whoever starts to point out, with the Lawbook/Bible in his hand, that the local oracle/minister is wrong is just regarded as a very annoying, arrogant and unpleasant
besserwisser.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!), but Thats funny
Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg