fred, on 2013-February-04, 15:30, said:
I can't speak for Wolff, but some players (including me) think that bridge is not much fun when you are told X and Y exists instead (regardless of the result). The bigger the difference between X and Y the worse it gets in my view.
I think all players agree that mistakes make the game less fun. And that goes for any game. I guess you also prefer a basketball game with awesone "nothing but net" three point shots over one where air balls are exchanged.
But just as much as an air ball in basketball is not a foul (not even if the ball ends in the basket off a defender's back), a bidding mistake is not an infraction in bridge (not even if it leads to a winning contract).
Both basketball and bridge are played by people. And people make mistakes. That means that mistakes should be allowed in the game, otherwise we have to stop playing until we are all perfect.
Having said all that, I am perfectly willing to lose a board to someone who got lucky making a mistake. BUT... I need to be reasonably convinced that it truely was a mistake. The Laws require a TD to assume misinformation, rather than a mistake, unless they have evidence for a mistake. IMO this evidence should be pretty strong.
In these cases, a TD can go wrong in two ways:
- He can rule misinformation for something that in reality was an honest bidding mistake
- He can rule a bidding mistake for something that in reality was misinformation
In each of these two cases injustice is done. However, I find it much easier to accept that a TD ruled MI when I know that I only made an honest bidding mistake than to accept a ruling by a TD that my opponent made a mistake where I know that there was misinformation. Therefore, IMO we should make the requirements as to what is evidence for a mistake much stronger than they are right now.
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 “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
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