awm Posted October 7, 2008 Report Share Posted October 7, 2008 There is another side of things, in that some people: (1) Have difficulty focusing on a single hand for 20 minutes. Is it really fair to these folks if one of their opponents is allowed to think for 20 minutes on a hand routinely? (2) Have trouble staying alert at 3 AM. Is it fair to these folks if the session doesn't end until 4 AM (even though it's supposed to end by midnight) because their opponents want to play slow? (3) Have trouble concentrating when the director is looming over the table issuing time warnings. Is it fair for them to have to deal with this because their opponents played slowly on the preceding hands? And all of this ignores the more obvious attempts at gamesmanship. I do think there is a serious problem here. But it seems that most people know who the frequent offenders are. A simple solution seem to be to keep track of who frequently finishes late (so there will be a formal record, likely matching the informal feel that most top players have already). Then have the directors watch these tables when they are "not doing anything" -- if it seems like the "frequent offenders" are once again taking more than their share of time, penalize them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cherdano Posted October 7, 2008 Report Share Posted October 7, 2008 There is another side of things, in that some people: (1) Have difficulty focusing on a single hand for 20 minutes. Is it really fair to these folks if one of their opponents is allowed to think for 20 minutes on a hand routinely? Yes that's entirely their problem. If a pair plays very quickly on 14 out of 16 hands, but takes 15-20 min on the two difficult hands of the set, then I think it's their opponents' problem if they can't handle that.No chess player would even get the idea to complain when his opponents uses 90% of his time during the opening. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jdonn Posted October 7, 2008 Report Share Posted October 7, 2008 (2) Have trouble staying alert at 3 AM. Is it fair to these folks if the session doesn't end until 4 AM (even though it's supposed to end by midnight) because their opponents want to play slow? (1) Ditto cherdano. (2) Remember when I played with you at the NABC where they had sessions start at 9 am.? Remember how bad I consistently played in the morning, and how much better we consistently played in the afternoon? (I think our sessions were something like 51 and 63 the first day, 49 and 51 the second, 45 and 56 the third) Life is unfair that way sometimes. (3) If the director is looming THAT closely, he should back off. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
awm Posted October 7, 2008 Report Share Posted October 7, 2008 Ah but this is more equivalent to.... Say we're playing in the Spingold, and it's supposed to start at 1 pm. Likely even Josh can manage to be awake and play good bridge at 1 pm! But the day of the match, we get a phone call at 7 am. The director is on the phone, and says that our opponents have decided they would like to start at 8 am. So now we have to drag ourselves out of bed and play at 8 am or the match will be ruled a forfeit by our team. How fair is this? How come our opponents get to decide when we have to play? How come we don't stick to the posted schedule? Yet this is exactly what happens when opponents decide to play slow. The session is supposed to end around midnight, but no one enforces the time regulations, so now we have to play until 2 AM, 3 AM, 4 AM. We did not get to decide this; we are playing every board within the regulation time. Our opponents decided this for us. How fair is this? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jdonn Posted October 7, 2008 Report Share Posted October 7, 2008 Say we're playing in the Spingold, and it's supposed to start at 1 pm. Likely even Josh can manage to be awake and play good bridge at 1 pm! Your argument starts with a faulty premise! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
awm Posted October 7, 2008 Report Share Posted October 7, 2008 My experience has been that occasionally opponents take a really long time to play a hand. Say we are in the LM pairs, we have to play two boards in about 16 minutes. Suppose my opponent declares the first board and takes 13 minutes to play it. Maybe it was a tough hand, maybe he's a slow player, who knows? Likely he should not get an automatic penalty for this (but perhaps if he does this a lot he should be penalized). But what actually happens in a real event? The director will come to the table when our next-round opponents notice that we are still playing the second board. He will tell all of us that we must hurry up. He will threaten us with slow play penalties. So here I am, trying to declare the second board of the round (unfortunately for me I am declarer this time) and I have the director interrupting and threatening me with penalties. Good luck me, now I gotta declare the board in 3 minutes (including the bidding) just to get back on time. And I've got the director bothering me in the middle too. ------- To give yet another example, say I am leading a head-to-head match. My team has six people, opponents have four. It's probably to my advantage to take forever to play each board. This will tire out my opponents. It might tire me out too, but I'm sitting out the next session. Perhaps the director will come and confiscate boards, but that's fine, the fewer boards we play the better for me (I am leading remember). Maybe the director will let us play, and my opponents will be up until 4 am playing the second half when I am long-since gone to bed and my teammates (who spent the first half napping) are tearing my exhausted opposition apart. Either way, I win. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted October 8, 2008 Report Share Posted October 8, 2008 At some arbitrary time, say with 5 minutes left in the round, the TD announces to the room "do not start any new boards". The board becomes a late play. I've seen two late plays for a single pair in a session, but it's rare. If the TD uses and enforces this, and calls the rounds on time, there should be time for a single extra board at the end of the session, even if there is more than one table where a board is played late. TDs who interrupt players' thought processes with announcements, harrassment, or what have you should be shot. B) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mycroft Posted October 8, 2008 Report Share Posted October 8, 2008 1)Cherdano, he said "routinely". That's not "the two hard hands of the set". That's the day I showed up early to the Reno NABC, and decided to watch the round of 16 in the Spingold. The game started at 2000, I sat down at the table at 2010, they finished board 8 at 2130. Sure, it was with screens, but screens don't add *that much* time. It was one player taking all the time, as well. He routinely - that word again, I'm talking twice a hand - went into the tank for over a minute on a play. Now, he *always* came up with the Right Play out of that tank, and he really, really is a world-class player that used all of that time productively, but should the opponents have to, in addition to attempting to beat a world-class team, have to have the stamina to play 700 minutes of bridge in the one match? And then, should they manage to beat the slow team, have to meet a team that only took the regulation 520 minutes to play their 64 boards? I ran into Terje Åa (one of the opponents) the next day, and congratulated him on pulling off the win, and asked him two questions: 1) When did the game finish? 0200. And remember, that was probably after a first session of 1300-1800 or later, then dinner, then start up again at 2000.2) Is it always like this? "Usually", he said, "at least after the first two rounds." If I ever had wanted to be a bridge pro, that stopped it dead in its tracks. I note from the latest BoD meetings that someone recommended reducing the Spingold and Vanderbilt matches to 56 boards. We're already moving to 24 instead of 26/27 in the lower games at NABCs "to keep up to time". I am quite firmly convinced that given the choice between speeding up play or playing less, there's a right decision and a wrong decision, and we're making the wrong (but easy) one. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoTired Posted October 8, 2008 Report Share Posted October 8, 2008 I think ALL matches should be 56 boards. None should be longer. I think 128 board matches are ridiculous. If the Super Bowl can be played in one day, then the bridge world championship can be played in one day also. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
skjaeran Posted October 8, 2008 Report Share Posted October 8, 2008 1)Cherdano, he said "routinely". That's not "the two hard hands of the set". That's the day I showed up early to the Reno NABC, and decided to watch the round of 16 in the Spingold. The game started at 2000, I sat down at the table at 2010, they finished board 8 at 2130. Sure, it was with screens, but screens don't add *that much* time. It was one player taking all the time, as well. He routinely - that word again, I'm talking twice a hand - went into the tank for over a minute on a play. Now, he *always* came up with the Right Play out of that tank, and he really, really is a world-class player that used all of that time productively, but should the opponents have to, in addition to attempting to beat a world-class team, have to have the stamina to play 700 minutes of bridge in the one match? And then, should they manage to beat the slow team, have to meet a team that only took the regulation 520 minutes to play their 64 boards? I ran into Terje Åa (one of the opponents) the next day, and congratulated him on pulling off the win, and asked him two questions: 1) When did the game finish? 0200. And remember, that was probably after a first session of 1300-1800 or later, then dinner, then start up again at 2000.2) Is it always like this? "Usually", he said, "at least after the first two rounds." If I ever had wanted to be a bridge pro, that stopped it dead in its tracks. I note from the latest BoD meetings that someone recommended reducing the Spingold and Vanderbilt matches to 56 boards. We're already moving to 24 instead of 26/27 in the lower games at NABCs "to keep up to time". I am quite firmly convinced that given the choice between speeding up play or playing less, there's a right decision and a wrong decision, and we're making the wrong (but easy) one. Are you telling us that Terje Aa wasn't the slowest player at the table? That's got to be close to a record, he's one of the consistently slowest players I know.... Your description of his opponent fits very well with how most would describe Terje's tempo at the table. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NickRW Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 Say we are in the LM pairs, we have to play two boards in about 16 minutes. Suppose my opponent declares the first board and takes 13 minutes to play it. Maybe it was a tough hand, maybe he's a slow player, who knows? Likely he should not get an automatic penalty for this (but perhaps if he does this a lot he should be penalized). But what actually happens in a real event? The director will come to the table when our next-round opponents notice that we are still playing the second board. He will tell all of us that we must hurry up. He will threaten us with slow play penalties. So here I am, trying to declare the second board of the round (unfortunately for me I am declarer this time) and I have the director interrupting and threatening me with penalties. Good luck me, now I gotta declare the board in 3 minutes (including the bidding) just to get back on time. And I've got the director bothering me in the middle too. I hate it when that sort of thing happens. My commonest experience is a pairs - we're sitting NS - the EW pair is slow arriving at the table by about a minute or so. They declare the next two boards - not necessarily taking forever, but quite methodically - and you end up another couple of minutes behind. Then the next board comes, the opening lead has been made and the director calls a move - and then makes a bee line for your table and says please hurry up. "Bbbbut I was ready to start this round on time - we didn't through no fault of mine - and we weren't slow defending the last two boards and now you're blaming me!!!" What is worse - even if it is the other side declaring - the TD still looks at me - "I didn't do it guv". Maybe I have a guilty look - or maybe they think I can magically hurry everyone up by quickly banging cards on the table or something. Humbug. Frankly I wish they'd just go for 24 boards in about 3hrs and if runs 5 or 10 mins late then no sweat - instead of trying to cram 27 in 3hrs 15mins (or less if they possibly can) - it would make quite a bit of difference. Nick Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 Heh. There has been a move afoot locally to play 27 boards in a session — but nobody has suggested extended the total time past the "traditional" three hours. As a result, the "round timer" is set to 6.5 minutes per board, with about 20-30 seconds "move time" between rounds. Three minutes before the round ends, the timer warns us not to start a new board. Ten seconds after that, the TD is running around the room telling us all we're late and we should be moving. :o To complicate matters, players who finish early almost immediately start bugging the next higher table for boards - even if the round isn't half over yet - with the result of usually slowing that table down. Then too, sometimes they turn the volume down on the timer, making it hard to hear. So if the next higher table is still playing, but hasn't heard the round called, we get upset people at both tables. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shintaro Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 :) In the real Bridge World we employ Tournament Directors to run out Competitions; thus it is only logical that the TD is the one who decides what is a reasonable amount of time to take over a Board (Or are they taking too much time); They are by nature TIMED events like the fact or not; We allow 1 hour for 8 Boards that is generally suffice; We also give a 5 minute warning to the end of the round and even tell them NOT to start any more Boards. Why should a Player GOOD BAD or Indifferent be allowed to hold a whole competition to ransom? :o Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JoAnneM Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 I am more than honored to be mistaken for Jan :D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 Heh. Apologies to Jan and Joanne for mixing them up. That's what I get for playing too quickly. :D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mycroft Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 I ran into Terje Åa (one of the opponents) the next day, and congratulated him on pulling off the win, and asked him two questions: 1) When did the game finish? 0200. And remember, that was probably after a first session of 1300-1800 or later, then dinner, then start up again at 2000.2) Is it always like this? "Usually", he said, "at least after the first two rounds." If I ever had wanted to be a bridge pro, that stopped it dead in its tracks.Are you telling us that Terje Aa wasn't the slowest player at the table? That's got to be close to a record, he's one of the consistently slowest players I know.... Your description of his opponent fits very well with how most would describe Terje's tempo at the table.Well, to give Mr. Skjæran his due, Mr Åa was dummy for 4 or 5 of the 8 hands I had the patience to watch... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gerben42 Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 To complicate matters, players who finish early almost immediately start bugging the next higher table for boards - even if the round isn't half over yet - with the result of usually slowing that table down. Then too, sometimes they turn the volume down on the timer, making it hard to hear. So if the next higher table is still playing, but hasn't heard the round called, we get upset people at both tables. Sounds like you should put an automatic penalty on touching the timer, which is really no ones business. People who bug other tables get a warning first, then a penalty. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jdonn Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 To complicate matters, players who finish early almost immediately start bugging the next higher table for boards - even if the round isn't half over yet - with the result of usually slowing that table down. It is my biggest pet peeve in the UNIVERSE when directors don't let us start the next round early if we are all ready. Like slowing down that table by about 3 seconds to hand us a board (or not at all? I can usually get a director or passerby to grab it for us) compares to making us wait 5 minutes. Maybe that table is slow since their first board was very difficult, so by playing it a little early we PREVENT the game from slowing down since it will possibly be difficult for us too. Or maybe we are a slow pair who just had a passout or easy board and can use the time to get ahead. Players aren't automatically fast or slow - some of us are often fast, but need extra time on other boards. As you can see this really aggrevates my liver :D Directors, if a table played a round quicky and is ready to start the next round, let them start it! They have earned it, it might prevent them from falling behind next round, and it avoids people just sitting there mindlessly wondering whether they left the oven on. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 Sounds like you should put an automatic penalty on touching the timer, which is really no ones business. People who bug other tables get a warning first, then a penalty. My fault, I was unclear. It's the directors who are turning the volume down — usually because some player sitting close to the timer complains it's too loud. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 It is my biggest pet peeve in the UNIVERSE when directors don't let us start the next round early if we are all ready. You need to get out more. B) If you (or whoever) is polite and courteous and shows due consideration for the North player (who is responsible for the movement of the boards) at the next table, then fine. If I am North (and I usually am) and I'm trying to deal with a difficult hand and the round has not been called, you can pound sand. If you annoy me in that situation I will call the director. Which will, of course, slow the game down more, and probably not solve the problem, because the <expletive deleted> directors around here will not sanction a player "just for asking for a board". :( If the round has been called then I agree that passing the boards already played takes precedence over playing the last board. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Echognome Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 If you annoy me in that situation I will call the director. Which will, of course, slow the game down more, and probably not solve the problem, because the <expletive deleted> directors around here will not sanction a player "just for asking for a board". :( Have you asked yourself why this is? I don't understand the axe you have to grind with people asking for boards. Having the boards move along helps speed up the game and alleviate when play has fallen behind. So not only do you find this to be a problem, you make sure it becomes one by sitting North! Yuck. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 I don't sit north in order to cause a problem - and most of the time there isn't one anyway. As for axe grinding, I don't think so. I object to rudeness, and players asking for boards are often rude. I have seen a hand an arm appear over my shoulder, and heard an imperious "boards please". I have replied "just a minute", hoping not to lose my train of thought, to no avail because the person ignores that and insists on getting his boards now. If the round is called, I try to pass the boards already played immediately. If the round has not been called, I'll pass the boards if asked politely and I'm not in the middle of something, or if I am but it's not something that requires a lot of concentration. But when a request for boards comes halfway through the time alloted for a three board round, I have a problem - for one thing, I've directed too many games where this results in half the field being a round ahead of the other half. When the request is ahead of schedule (because the round has not been called) and the request is rude, I have a problem. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jdonn Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 I don't sit north in order to cause a problem - and most of the time there isn't one anyway. As for axe grinding, I don't think so. I object to rudeness, and players asking for boards are often rude. Glad to see you simply assumed I ask rudely. Dare I ask you what you would do if I actually asked politely?? Call the director on me for ruining your train of thought, when you freely admit he will do nothing about it? I wouldn't pound sand. If you didn't hand me the board and no one was walking by to grab it for me, I WOULD yank it off your table. (Of course it has never come to that, since I've yet to meet a person at the next table that pigheaded.) I would probably bump into you "by accident" as I did it, because watching you get upset about it and call the director would make me laugh. You can explain to him how "I" slowed the game down by you not passing me the board and you calling the director which you know would accomplish nothing. Then I would laugh more as you tell the director what happened, he walks away, and him/her and I laugh about you after the game. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 I had started a reasonable response to your post, Josh, but then I read the rest of it. I see that you're an ass, and we have no grounds for discussion, so I'm done. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jdonn Posted October 9, 2008 Report Share Posted October 9, 2008 I had started a reasonable response to your post, Josh, but then I read the rest of it. I see that you're an ass, and we have no grounds for discussion, so I'm done.Lol. Did you read your first response? Your response was "If you ask for a board from me there is a good chance I will act like a dick. If you then take the board from me I will act like a bigger dick." Meanwhile, I need to get out more, I can pound sand if I don't like it, and if my request annoys you then you will call the director (who if he doesn't sanction me for wanting to play bridge instead of just sitting there is an <expletive>). Your next post showed I'm automatically rude for asking for a board. So yes, I didn't reply to that very nicely at all. Sorry my reply didn't have a bunch of yellow faces in it and therefore I'm an ass! It's such a shame we didn't get to see your, um "reasonable response". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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