Trinidad, on 2014-April-09, 03:18, said:
Following the UI laws is difficult. You need to establish at each decision that you have to make:
- what your logical alternatives are
- which of these logical alternatives are made more attractive the others by the UI
and then you need to chose one of the alternatives that hasn't been made more attractive. At the same time, you will have to try and play winning bridge.
Some cases are fairly straightforward, but there are also cases where -for the vast majority of the players (and a surprising amount of TDs)- this is just too hard to do. At some decision, somewhere in the auction or play, the UI will mix with the AI. It is much easier (though it is also hard) to "just forget" the UI. So, if you are simply not able to follow the UI rules literally, you will have to do the best you can. "Forgetting the UI" and do what you were going to do without the UI, and let the TD sort it out later, is second best. People who work to the best of their ability to follow the rules are not cheaters. They are not in a grey area either. They do not deserve PPs. You might call them "victims of their partner's". But they did break the laws and a good TD will correct that by adjusting the score.
It is inappropriate to hand out PPs to people who try their best to follow the rules in a complex situation. But I think that in awarding adjusted scores, the non offending side should get more of the benefit of the doubt than they are currently getting. As a result, the offenders get less. You may see that as a deterrent, or better, as an encouragement to try to follow the UI laws even better.
Many experts, whom I've asked, go even further than Trinidad. They say that they always take the action that they would have chosen without UI. They explain that it is always too hard to work out what the LAs are and which the UI suggests. If an opponent complains and calls the director, they're prepared to accept his ruling without complaint. I've always argued that this is the wrong attitude but I suppose this is another area of legal disagreement.
rhm, on 2014-April-09, 03:55, said:
I see a certain arrogance and high handedness here against less experienced players. With experience and better levels of bridge comes a better understanding, how important it is not to transfer and use unauthorized information. I dislike arrogance against inexperienced players of low skill and I also think one needs to be patient and more lenient against them. Over time they will understand and get better. Even if they violate rules it is important not to lecture them in an arrogant way. I at least are more tolerant against them than I would be against known experts. Hesitating from novices is not cheating, even if it helps their partners to find better bids. Of course I will not tolerate everything even from weak and inexperienced players. Cheating starts when people understand the issue well and deliberately violate the rules.
In that sense grandmother Bridge is not cheating. It is Bridge at a different level. If you can not tolerate it, do not play at this level.
If you change the rules of a game, you are playing a different game. It seems patronising and demeaning to bend the rules for the poorer players, who are taking part in a competition. You might make exceptions for disabled players (but, IMO, that should be the prerogative of their opponents rather than a director).
Cascade, on 2014-April-09, 04:33, said:
I don't get the attitude they don't deserve penalties. Games typically have penalties when you are judged to have broken the rules. Intent is not important. 'But Ref I tried to stay onside I didn't intend to cross the line' or similar wouldn't work as an excuse. For some reason there is a strong resistance to penalising people at the bridge table. This in spite of the laws saying penalties should be more often than not in some situations.
I agree with Cascade, that decisions shouldn't over-rely on mind-reading. Unfortunately, with current Bridge rules, in practice, they do. IMO, when a player breaks the rules, the law should put as little weight as possible on the answers to questions like ...
- How experienced or skilled is the player?
- Does he know relevant rules?
- Can he divine the (currently and locally fashionable) meaning of those rules?
- Is he capable of applying those rules to this complex situation?
- Was his action deliberate (is he even capable of insight into his own motives)?
- Did he rationalise his action?
- Did he break the law in the hope of gain?
- Has he a previous history of this kind of infraction?