rhm, on 2014-April-20, 00:45, said:
[SNIP A LOT OF GOOD STUFF (THE NUMBERS ADDED TO THE POINTS FOR DISCUSSSION TOO]
- Wladow had clearly alerted his 1♣ bid and it was in my opinion hard to overlook.
- Bates wanted to retract a call he had clearly made and which the rules do not allow in my opinion.
- Wladow had every right to call the director. There was also UI because of the retraction attempt.
The director decided against Wladow, probably because he did not have the video evidence at that time or because of Wladow's bad image.
This is a typical Wladow incidence. Wladow is very brisk and gets quickly emotional. I agree, he is not someone you like to play against, but his behaviour there is not clearly unethical.
I agree with the first part of each points above (Wladow DID alert his bid, Bates DID want to retract his call, Wladow DID have every right to call the director. I Also agree that UI would/could exist because of the retraction attempt whether or not the bid ended up being retracted or not.
However, I have to disagree with the second part of point one and two.
First, we can agree that #3 is absolutely correct. Wladow had 100% right to call the director.
Point one (first part): there is no argument, Wladow did "alert" the 1
♣ bid by the usual short hand method of pointing at the bid on the bidding tray. I acknowledged this in my post on the video (here quoting myself, I said "Finally, Wladow (who is not vulnerable) slowly reaches for the 1
♣ card at 1:12:40 and slowly moves it to the tray, with a very deliberate putting in on the tray not removing his hand until 1:12:48. With his hand just above the tray, in slow motion, you can detect that he points at the 1
♣ card in rapid succession twice [ibid, CORRECTION: ACTUALLY THREE TIMES]. The time between when he removed his hand from the card and when he finished pointing at it is less than one second as he is finished pointing and the recorder time is still at 1:12:49 when he has both his hands back on his cards. ...[SNIP]... and then later "Waldo is quite animated afterwards (and from his point of view, he did wave a finger over the 1
♣ bid for literally a fraction of a second, so he truly thinks he alerted the bid)."
So anyone who suggest that Wladow did not alert the bid or did not have a right to feel perhaps he was being jobbed (taken advantage of, "cheated") in the ruling would be wrong. However the second part of the point 1 I take exception too, the alert to 1
♣ was in fact very easy to overlook. This is because of four reasons. 1st this was the first strong club opening of this session. Second, as noted above, it took 7 seconds to get the bid from the tray box, with three seconds of laying it on the tray itself, then the actual pointing at it (three quick jabs with the index finger with the arm not moving just the finger and hand) took less than one second (slow it down to speed 0.25 on the youtube setting). Third, there was a lot of commotion on the S/W side of the table with the complaining about board 10 to add to the confusion. Fourth, Bates was not looking at Wladow at this time, you can tell by his looking as the cards at the time the alert occurred. (I noted that someone says you can't tell if Bates was looking at when the alert occurred, but if you watch the video, you can see Bates turn his head to look towards Wladow and the tray at 1:12:38 and the turn his head back to the left (center) away from the bidding tray at 1:12:46 with the 1
♣ bid on the tray still in contact with Wladow's hand. The head movement is easiest to see in the 0.25 speed setting, but he clearly is no longer looking to his right. You can also see at 1:12:54 when Wladow complains to his team captain and wave his hands around in a complaining gesture that Bates again turns to look back in that direction. )
So it seems clear to me at least, that 1) the official rules of alerting were not followed (the alert card played and acknowledged by the opponent who returns the alert card.). Ok, almost no one does that. Hayden made a point later on this same hand of throwing the alert card onto his partners bid, which I believe is the only time that happened in the match, although a few times the alert card was turned over to indicate an alert. I just note this for completeness. 2) the unofficial rule spirit was not followed this time either. The unofficial rule that virtually everyone follows is to point to the bid and give some indication the bid was alertable and get confirmation the opponent understands the bid was alertable. Watching the video it is clear that Wladow did not get any confirmation (the equivalent of the having the opponent return the blue alert card in the official policy) that he alerted the bid from Bates, who in my view did not see the rapid gesture.
So while Rainer thinks it is HARD to overlook the alert, I think exactly the opposite is true. It was extremely short duration (clearly less than a second) and his opponent had clearly turned away from him when it occurred (he held the bid on the tray for six times as long as he pointed at during his alerting). Wladow clearly missed the spirit of the official and unofficial rule by not making certain his opponent was aware of the alert.
Part two, there is no doubt Bates wanted his bid back. Why? Because from
his point of view, he was not ALERTED and his bid was based on MISINFORMATION. In such cases, a player is allowed to CHANCE HIS CALL without penalty (and this can occur anytime before the end of the auction). So in fact, unlike the end of statement #2, the RULES do allow for the change of a call (WBF rule 17E).
Wladow who "thinks" he alerted believes even trying to change the call is a violation, Bates who "thinks" there was no alert believes he has every right to change his call for misinformatipn. This is why a director should be called, in fact, they both should call the director.
To determine which side is right, is the job of the director who will then make a ruling. The director came and discovered the facts: Wladow says he alerted the bid, Bates claim he did not "see it" and said something like I must have been looking at may hand (I couldn makeout the reason why he didn't see it time around 1:14:50. These seem the correct initial facts, and I believe the director believed that Wladow alerted and believed the Bates did not see the alert. Next the director tried to determine how Wladow alerted his bid. Around 1:15:30 Wladow says he alerted 1
♣, Bates says clearly "I didn't see it", to which Wladow responds "You should have", The director ask Wladow how he alerted, in response he grabs the blue alert card, points it towards Bates and says "alert". Perhaps this was just pointing out to the director he did alert (he has said he did many times prior, the blue card was first time in response to direct question of how). AT 1:16:15 while talking off camera captain, Wladow again flashes the blue alert card (the director was talking to Bates at that time, so this was just between the captain and Wladow). At 1:16:49 the director as Wladow "are you sure you alerted with that" as he (the director indicated the blue alert card). Wladow turns up the blue card again, I don't think he said anything.
At 11:59:57 the director seems to rule misinformation and allows Bates to change his bid from DBL to pass. Nowhere did the director rule that Wladow lied (unless he actually said he used the blue card, everyone, even the director knew he did not use the blue card because no one was using the blue card the entire match). I think the director was being pedantic here, he was going to believe Bates didn't see the alert and that Wladow did alert all along. The question he wanted to answered, but didn't ask, was "did Bates seem to acknowledge your alert?". He couldn't do that because the WBF rules say how an alert is suppose to be made, and he was going to rule against Wladow if he didn't alert with the Blue card. Rainer said "The director decided against Wladow, probably because he did not have the video evidence at that time or because of Wladow's bad image." This had nothing to do with Wladow being mis-like or rude or having a bad reputation, or video evidence. The director's hands were tied by the rules requiring the responsibility ON THE ALERTER to make sure his opponent see's the alert.
In another posted someone suggested that the alert came while Bates was looking away, rhm responded by saying "I could not see Bates looking in a different direction.". I suggest you go back and look (slow the video down). The camera angle is not good for seeing where Bates is looking, but you can observe slight head turns when he is looking towards Wladow and away from him in the 15 or seconds centered around the alert. He was clearly looking away when the alert was made (I gave the times earlier). The point of where he was looking is a red herring however, because of the rules the ruling was always going in Bates favor here.
Finally, I never said anything about the exchange was unethical, just unpleasant. One can call the director, states ones views, without all the dramatics, hand waving, etc. There might have been an implied unethical where I question what he was saying with waving the blue card around, but I did say in my post... "
clearly he did not use the blue card when he made the bid if that is what he is trying to say". Suggesting I didn't know what he was saying when he used the blue card for the director. I certain accept Rainer's explanation.