Do you adjust the table score? If so, what do you adjust to? (Remember, this is the ACBL. While weighting the score might be a good academic exercise, if you decide to adjust I would like in any case to see your reasoning under Law 12C1e.)
Break in Tempo ACBL
#1
Posted 2012-October-16, 12:45
Do you adjust the table score? If so, what do you adjust to? (Remember, this is the ACBL. While weighting the score might be a good academic exercise, if you decide to adjust I would like in any case to see your reasoning under Law 12C1e.)
#2
Posted 2012-October-16, 13:03
suprgrover, on 2012-October-16, 12:45, said:
I would start by asking east and west if they agreed they broke tempo, and if so what they were thinking about.
#4
Posted 2012-October-16, 15:04
So, NS are claiming that the breaks in tempo damaged them, how? Perhaps that east's tempo might draw west's attention to his count signal? But the play of the ♥7 and all the information that goes with it is AI. Are NS saying that this west would not get the message if east played the seven one second faster? I'm a bit skeptical on that point.
-gwnn
#5
Posted 2012-October-16, 15:44
barmar, on 2012-October-16, 14:51, said:
Sure, but that information wasn't in the original problem statement, and it seems relevant. If E/W have something legitimate to think about then their break in tempo isn't an infraction. I wouldn't rule they didn't without hearing from them what they were thinking about.
Not that I'm convinced there should be an adjustment anyway. It's unclear to me exactly how declarer thinks the tempo caused damage.
#6
Posted 2012-October-16, 17:25
billw55, on 2012-October-16, 15:04, said:
An extra second or two? This is supposedly a break in tempo? Their normal tempo must be really fast.
I agree; this is East's first opportunity to pause and review the dummy.
I would be pinged on every trick if held to an extra second or two...
Carl
#7
Posted 2012-October-16, 20:32
billw55, on 2012-October-16, 15:04, said:
So, NS are claiming that the breaks in tempo damaged them, how? Perhaps that east's tempo might draw west's attention to his count signal? But the play of the ♥7 and all the information that goes with it is AI. Are NS saying that this west would not get the message if east played the seven one second faster? I'm a bit skeptical on that point.
NS claim that East's break in tempo implied that he held the ♥K and made retaking the finesse marked. I think they were annoyed at West's break in tempo more than anything else.
CarlRitner, on 2012-October-16, 17:25, said:
I would be pinged on every trick if held to an extra second or two...
Didn't East have that opportunity after leading to trick one?
#8
Posted 2012-October-16, 21:06
Anyway, that is the question I would ask Declarer if I were the TD called to the table.
BTW: The whole value of a Grosevenor Gambit, such as the duck of the heart finesse was realized. It gained nothing, it might have cost, and it irritated declarer.
This post has been edited by aguahombre: 2012-October-17, 02:34
#9
Posted 2012-October-16, 21:16
#10
Posted 2012-October-17, 02:18
I think the only likely result without the hitch is the line that declarer actually took at the table. If declarer is trying to make the contract, he'd need at least the one finesse. As for the second round, the fact that the jack held seems to be a stronger inference than any BIT. I don't really buy declarer's claim that without the hitch, he will suddenly be scared that West made a weird duck and play differently.
I think the alternative line, playing to the ♥A and pitching spades on the ♦K and the ruffed ♦J, is possible enough to be regarded as "at all probable."
So let's say 3♣-2, -100 for NS, and 3♣=, -110 for EW. That's assuming there actually was a break in tempo and that East had no reason for pausing, premises of which I am doubtful.
#11
Posted 2012-October-17, 02:38
suprgrover, on 2012-October-16, 12:45, said:
So West broke tempo, thus making it look like he had the king. Which he did. What is declarer complaining about? That he can't work out the different implications of non-misleading hesitations by players under and over finessing positions? I'm afraid you don't get rectification for being misled by things that aren't misleading.
#12
Posted 2012-October-17, 03:27
Whether this is a case of coffeehousing is an entirely different question. Given the layout (AQT9 in dummy with the J led), I don't think that it is. But that is not relevant. If declarer thought it was -or might have been- he should tell the TD.
Rik
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#13
Posted 2012-October-17, 09:05
Trinidad, on 2012-October-17, 03:27, said:
Whether one gets adjustments for misleading breaks in tempo has nothing to do with whether anyone thinks anyone is coffeehousing, and both players and directors should scrupulously avoid any accusation without cast iron evidence.
But East does need a lesson here. It suffices to break tempo in a situation where there is no good reason thing to think about anything to risk being adjusted against, there need be no accusation of the misleading being done deliberately. Now the uninformed player might think that they are allowed to break tempo to think about whether and how to signal, but there is a directive that they are not allowed to break tempo for that. If a break in tempo for such a purpose is misleading, they will be routinely adjusted against. So this is what East needs to be told, nicely.
#14
Posted 2012-October-17, 09:50
iviehoff, on 2012-October-17, 09:05, said:
That is not in accordance with 73D1:
It is desirable, though not always required, for players to maintain steady tempo and unvarying manner. However, players should be particularly careful when variations may work to the benefit of their side. Otherwise, unintentionally to vary the tempo or manner in which a call or play is made is not in itself an infraction. Inferences from such variation may appropriately be drawn only by an opponent, and at his own risk.
In this example, the variation in tempo cannot work to the benefit of his side, as declarer would repeat the finesse when West ducked if East had played slow smoothly. There is nothing in the Law book that I can find which indicates that one is not allowed to think whether to give count or not. 73F makes it clear that the requirement to adjust is that there is "no demonstrable bridge reason", and the time taken to give count correctly is clearly a bridge reason.
#15
Posted 2012-October-17, 10:14
lamford, on 2012-October-17, 09:50, said:
[i]In this example, the variation in tempo cannot work to the benefit of his side, as declarer would repeat the finesse when West ducked if East had played slow smoothly. There is nothing in the Law book that I can find which indicates that one is not allowed to think whether to give count or not. 73F makes it clear that the requirement to adjust is that there is "no demonstrable bridge reason", and the time taken to give count correctly is clearly a bridge reason.
When this topic has come up before, see (http://iblf.matthew....opic=4316&st=15) the consensus here has been that breaking tempo with small cards is problematic. (See page 94 of the White Book, for example. It would be nice if the ACBL had something one-tenth as useful as the White Book. We do have the Tech Files, which no one reads, and Laws Commission minutes that they stopped posting a year ago.)
I would expect that, at least some of the time, South might decide to go up with dummy's ♥A after East's in-tempo play of a small heart (doing this would be playing for down 1)--the old maxim that "if they don't cover it, they don't have it" comes to mind.
#16
Posted 2012-October-17, 10:26
lamford, on 2012-October-17, 09:50, said:
The authors of the EBU White Book, as OP correctly points out, do not read 73D1 like you do. At para 73.1 they write, as OP has read:
"Players have argued that they were wondering whether to play high-low, but Law 73D1 makes clear that this is an infraction."
I'm mistaken in thinking that there was a directive from WBFLC on this, it was this clear instruction in the White Book I was recalling.
#17
Posted 2012-October-17, 12:40
#18
Posted 2012-October-17, 12:53
Cyberyeti, on 2012-October-17, 12:40, said:
If West wanted to clarify the position he would just win ♥K?
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#19
Posted 2012-October-17, 13:22
West's duck isn't very bright. I wonder what he is playing for?
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