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Scoring Passed out hand

#1 User is offline   keithhus 

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Posted 2016-November-29, 14:50

Playing ACOL, Ops failed to open with 13 HCP (mistake, not tactical). Hand was passed out. We scored 0 bottom board, whilst Ops obviously scored top board. How can this be equitable? It has no reflection on either pair's play. Is this not a mis bid? Would it not be fairer to average ? I suppose you're going to tell me life's a bitch and then you die. Appreciate your comments/sympathy.
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#2 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2016-November-29, 15:12

Would you also be asking for an average if you had got a top from it, which is more likely?
Gordon Rainsford
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#3 User is offline   1eyedjack 

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Posted 2016-November-29, 15:13

Next time it happens you get a top.

Hopefully it is not a one-board movement.
Psych (pron. saik): A gross and deliberate misstatement of honour strength and/or suit length. Expressly permitted under Law 73E but forbidden contrary to that law by Acol club tourneys.

Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mPosted ImagesPosted ImagetPosted Imager-mPosted ImagendPosted Imageing) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.

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#4 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2016-November-29, 16:24

It was a misbid. It worked. Just like that time when you forgot the answers to Gerber, answered Blackwood (at the 4 level), and were the only pair not in slam off an ace and a 5-0 split.

Bridge is a game of mistakes. Not all mistakes are punished. Some are even rewarded. Just not very many.
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#5 User is offline   keithhus 

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Posted 2016-November-29, 17:15

Thank you everyone for your responses, I suppose I'll find sympathy in the dictionary! To be fair, I probably would not have raised the matter if we had not scored 0 (dropped us a few places down the ladder). However that does not change the fact that in my opinion, the scoring is not equitable. No one should benefit to that degree from such a misbid and I would find no solace if it works in my favour next time. I still feel an average would be a better outcome. Thanks again everyone, I'll continue trying to learn from my mistakes.
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#6 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2016-November-29, 20:44

There is, as you seem to be aware, no legal basis for "an average" in this case.

Where do you draw the line? "Director, I made a defensive error on boards 3, 5, 12, 15, 16, 17, and 19. Would you please adjust the score to average for both sides?"

The other day, some quarterback threw a pass which was intercepted and run back for a touchdown. Should that QB get a do-over?
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#7 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 02:53

The scoring system of duplicate bridge makes no attempt to determine whether a good or bad score is "deserved". Sometimes you get a good or bad score through no effort or fault of your own, just because of what the opponents do.

How is this not "equity"? If the same thing happens at another table, they get the same scores, that's equity.

#8 User is offline   billw55 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 08:25

View Postkeithhus, on 2016-November-29, 17:15, said:

Thank you everyone for your responses, I suppose I'll find sympathy in the dictionary! To be fair, I probably would not have raised the matter if we had not scored 0 (dropped us a few places down the ladder). However that does not change the fact that in my opinion, the scoring is not equitable. No one should benefit to that degree from such a misbid and I would find no solace if it works in my favour next time. I still feel an average would be a better outcome. Thanks again everyone, I'll continue trying to learn from my mistakes.

I assure you with absolute certainty, that you have at times made mistakes and gotten a higher score because of them. You just didn't notice, or didn't consider it unfair. All those times you took a 50% finesse when you didn't see the 80% line that was available - but the finesse worked. Or when you bungled your way to a dismal slam, that made on a 10% lie of the cards. And so on.

I certainly have done so. I have botched a great many hands over the years. I didn't count how many times I lucked into a good score from it. Most of the time I got what I deserved. But not every time. That's part of the game. I remember a few hands where ops and us offered each other a top several times in one deal, back and forth as if nobody wanted to win.

This time, it worked out for the ops. Inevitably, it will again in the future. Don't waste time worrying about it. Next board.
Life is long and beautiful, if bad things happen, good things will follow.
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#9 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 10:56

Sympathy I will give you - in abundance. It's horrible when you zone out for a minute and get a bad score; it's much much worse when they zone out for a minute and get rewarded for it. It truly sucks when you get fixed - especially when you get fixed by the weakest pair in the room that you were expecting to have a 65% round against like all your competitors. I hate it, almost as much as when I don't win because I made one too many stupid mistakes. When we fix the opponents, I don't feel very good either - but I'm not going to give the result back.

I've bought more than one beer for my friends with the bad beats (especially when I was the one doing it); and had more than one bought for me. Maybe if we meet we'll do just that.

Bridge is a game of mistakes (both good and bad). As a TD, a common argument I get (and a common opinion I hear people having) is "they did something wrong, we deserve a good score." It is my job to have sympathy for them, too, but only to give them what the Law allows.

As an example, I was playing in an individual last weekend; the last board of the set was 1-x-2-3; 3-p. I had a nice hand, but all my partners play that as strictly competitive. So I passed. Partner meant it as a game try, we should absolutely be in game, everybody else was in game; but the 4-0 break offside meant that we had three trump losers to go along with our outside loser. Clear top, based on just as obvious a misunderstanding as missing an Ace and passing a 13 count - but it counts. And my partner won the event because of it.
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#10 User is offline   keithhus 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 14:25

View Postblackshoe, on 2016-November-29, 20:44, said:

There is, as you seem to be aware, no legal basis for "an average" in this case.

Where do you draw the line? "Director, I made a defensive error on boards 3, 5, 12, 15, 16, 17, and 19. Would you please adjust the score to average for both sides?"

The other day, some quarterback threw a pass which was intercepted and run back for a touchdown. Should that QB get a do-over?


Thank you and everyone else for troubling to respond. However, I am going to keep digging! I am not convinced this is equity; ask the man on the Clapham Omnibus. When a board is not played due to slow play on a previous board(s) an average score is given. The QB analogy is akin to the wrong card being discarded during play. I do not see this as similar to the board being passed out due to a bidding error, resulting in the hand - I.e. Game, not being played. I appreciate mistakes are made during play which affects the scoring and I accept that is part and parcel of the game. However, I still feel these specific circumstances are different and that the laws should allow discretion to award an average score, say if both pairs agree. I appreciate I am inexperienced, and that it's not going to happen, but at the moment, I still feel an average would be a fairer outcome. Thank you all once again, onward and upward (hopefully).
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#11 User is offline   sfi 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 14:58

View Postkeithhus, on 2016-November-30, 14:25, said:

When a board is not played due to slow play on a previous board(s) an average score is given.


A passed in board has been played, so the comparison isn't valid. I'm not sure why you want to treat this mistake any differently from the myriad of other mistakes made at the bridge table.
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#12 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 15:35

First, when a board is not played, a range of scores (from Not Played, of dubious legality, to average, to 60/40, to 40% all round) is given depending on why it was not played.

Second, the board was played. Passed Out is a legitimate contract, just as legitimate as 1NT=. In fact, I used to hate Passouts, because we played 10-12 NT first three seats NV, and it was very likely that we were getting a bottom on those passout hands because we weren't passing. Note: this is also why you don't just shuffle and redeal passouts in the first round - others' judgement of an opening bid is different from yours.

Third, the issue with this is that if I miss an Ace and open my 12-14 NT with 17 high, and play 1NT+3, I deserve my zero just as much as if I missed an Ace and passed my "9-count". Of course, what that means is that I also deserve my top when the limit is 8 tricks on that 1NT hand, *or when zero is better than any score I would have got from opening*. Mistake or brilliant judgement, I deserve my reward.

The last time I remember ruling on this, someone was busy talking about their previous hand and didn't count and passed his 16-count. Of course game was bid and made at all other tables. If you were the opponents, would you be happy if I said this board was "not played" and assigned you average for getting the best score on the board? If not, then in the much less common case where you get fixed, it's not fair to take away their top.

It may not be equity; restoring equity when there has been an infraction is a goal of the Laws, but here there was no infraction, and the Laws are silent where "bidding like an idiot" or "unable to count to 13" is concerned.

You got jobbed; I agree with you. They played badly and got a good result. But the poker players who bad beat you won't give back their winnings (on that hand, at least; if they continue to play that well, you will win your losses back and more), and neither will the bridge gods. Make them pay with your better judgement on the other boards.
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#13 User is offline   keithhus 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 16:12

View Postsfi, on 2016-November-30, 14:58, said:

A passed in board has been played, so the comparison isn't valid. I'm not sure why you want to treat this mistake any differently from the myriad of other mistakes made at the bridge table.


I understand your point but the difference is that I did not have an opportunity to influence play.
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#14 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 16:14

A few years ago a pair bid a grand slam off a cashing AK. Unfortunately my partner was on lead with the K and didn't lead the suit. We didn't deserve our bottom. Should the board have been scrapped and everyone given an average? Where is the dividing line, OP?
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#15 User is offline   sfi 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 16:50

View Postkeithhus, on 2016-November-30, 16:12, said:

I understand your point but the difference is that I did not have an opportunity to influence play.


Sure you did - you had an opportunity to open the bidding and chose not to do so.

There are many hands where no normal action of yours influences the outcome, and this is just one more of them.

It feels like you're looking for sympathy, and you'll get that because we've all been fixed by something at least this ridiculous. What you won't find much of is support to change the laws.

One similar example: LHO opens a nebulous forcing 1C and RHO passes because they momentarily forget the system. You have KQJTxx in clubs and the contract goes down 1 when everyone else is bidding the obvious 7D. We're ould you recommend adjusting here, and how? If not, why is it different?
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#16 User is offline   keithhus 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 17:22

View Postmycroft, on 2016-November-30, 15:35, said:

First, when a board is not played, a range of scores (from Not Played, of dubious legality, to average, to 60/40, to 40% all round) is given depending on why it was not played.

Second, the board was played. Passed Out is a legitimate contract, just as legitimate as 1NT=. In fact, I used to hate Passouts, because we played 10-12 NT first three seats NV, and it was very likely that we were getting a bottom on those passout hands because we weren't passing. Note: this is also why you don't just shuffle and redeal passouts in the first round - others' judgement of an opening bid is different from yours.

Third, the issue with this is that if I miss an Ace and open my 12-14 NT with 17 high, and play 1NT+3, I deserve my zero just as much as if I missed an Ace and passed my "9-count". Of course, what that means is that I also deserve my top when the limit is 8 tricks on that 1NT hand, *or when zero is better than any score I would have got from opening*. Mistake or brilliant judgement, I deserve my reward.

The last time I remember ruling on this, someone was busy talking about their previous hand and didn't count and passed his 16-count. Of course game was bid and made at all other tables. If you were the opponents, would you be happy if I said this board was "not played" and assigned you average for getting the best score on the board? If not, then in the much less common case where you get fixed, it's not fair to take away their top.

It may not be equity; restoring equity when there has been an infraction is a goal of the Laws, but here there was no infraction, and the Laws are silent where "bidding like an idiot" or "unable to count to 13" is concerned.

You got jobbed; I agree with you. They played badly and got a good result. But the poker players who bad beat you won't give back their winnings (on that hand, at least; if they continue to play that well, you will win your losses back and more), and neither will the bridge gods. Make them pay with your better judgement on the other boards.


Moving the issue on a little, when is a bid a mis bid/illegal? I think I have been told 1 card/2 points outside declared range. At our club, we play standard ACOL unless announced/alerted. Hence, standard opening is 12-14 points. Bear in mind we do not psyche at our level. Thanks
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#17 User is offline   keithhus 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 17:37

View Postsfi, on 2016-November-30, 16:50, said:

Sure you did - you had an opportunity to open the bidding and chose not to do so.

There are many hands where no normal action of yours influences the outcome, and this is just one more of them.

It feels like you're looking for sympathy, and you'll get that because we've all been fixed by something at least this ridiculous. What you won't find much of is support to change the laws.

One similar example: LHO opens a nebulous forcing 1C and RHO passes because they momentarily forget the system. You have KQJTxx in clubs and the contract goes down 1 when everyone else is bidding the obvious 7D. We're ould you recommend adjusting here, and how? If not, why is it different?


I refer you to my question to mycroft. I had 9 hcp sitting 2nd. First bidder had 13 hcp and should have opened. If you feel I had an opportunity to bid then with respect I play a different system to you. All I am doing is pointing out where I feel the scoring system, in a specific instance, could be more equitable. I understand the points everyone has made and I appreciate there is no support for change but I still feel justified in raising the matter. Thanks for your response.
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#18 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 17:56

Misbids are not illegal. Deviations (deliberate or otherwise) are not illegal, even if gross and deliberate (psychic calls). Giving an incorrect explanation of your *agreement* is illegal, even if the agreement has not been explicitly stated, but has worn itself into your partnership minds by implication or repeated use. This is true whether or not you accept that you have that agreement, if a reasonable person with your partnership experience would know about it.

The relevant Law is 40C1: Deviation from System and Psychic Action.
A player may deviate from his sides announced understandings always, provided that his partner has no more reason to be aware of the deviation than have the opponents. Repeated deviations lead to implicit understandings, which then form part of the partnerships methods and must be disclosed in accordance with the regulations governing disclosure of system. If the Director judges there is undisclosed knowledge that has damaged the opponents, he shall adjust the score and may award a procedural penalty.

Another relevant Law is 75: MISTAKEN EXPLANATION OR MISTAKEN CALL, which explains the difference and how the TD will decide if a call that disagrees with explained agreement is to be ruled a misbid or misexplanation.

If what you're looking for is "what counts as a minor deviation", unfortunately there isn't (and can't be) a hard rule on that. The "two points/one card" guideline is just that (even if there are world-class players who will spout it as gospel) and works "in general" for wide-ranging bids - if you opened 1 (assuming 5+) on AQJT that would be minor (but 5432 likely not), as would opening a "12+" 1 on x AQJ8xx - KT9xxx. Sometimes one card is clearly a gross deviation - say a Flannery 2 call on 5-5 (unless it's 85432 AKJ85) because the whole point behind Flannery is to bid it when you have 4=5 in the majors and not enough to reverse, and 5=5 has an easy 1/2 rebid. Similarly, if you're skirting the edges of allowed system regulations, otherwise "minor" deviations will be treated much more harshly, because some people (not you, of course) try to play an illegal method by announcing all of the bids that would be illegal if they explained their real method as "upgrades" or "minor deviations" or even "psychics". They aren't, of course, they're just trying to play something by deviousness that they wouldn't be allowed to play straight up.

I certainly think that someone who opens a flat boring 10-count a 12-14 NT is not making a minor deviation, "2 points" or no. I think that someone who opens pretty much every 11 count that isn't a 10 count is not making a minor deviation either, and if partner expects it and doesn't invite without a solid 12, they should be announcing their real range.
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#19 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 18:01

View Postkeithhus, on 2016-November-30, 17:37, said:

I refer you to my question to mycroft. I had 9 hcp sitting 2nd. First bidder had 13 hcp and should have opened. If you feel I had an opportunity to bid then with respect I play a different system to you. All I am doing is pointing out where I feel the scoring system, in a specific instance, could be more equitable. I understand the points everyone has made and I appreciate there is no support for change but I still feel justified in raising the matter. Thanks for your response.
You had the opportunity to open. Your system says that it is a bad idea. You chose to follow system - almost always the right thing to do! - but that doesn't mean you didn't have the opportunity. It's just the same as when they have 36 between them and find the cold grand, and you never bid; you didn't get the opportunity to bid (or play, if you weren't on opening lead, as they claimed at trick 1), but you still get the score.

I ask again - if it turned out that everybody who held the 13-count went plus instead of minus when they opened, and you got a top, would you be calling for the TD to restore the hand to average? Unless the answer is "yes, of course" - and I'm not sure I've ever met the bridge player I'd believe if they said that - then there's no case for you (except for "they did something wrong, we deserve a good score", which I have a lot of sympathy for, but it cuts no ice with the Laws).
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#20 User is offline   sfi 

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Posted 2016-November-30, 18:10

View Postkeithhus, on 2016-November-30, 17:22, said:

Moving the issue on a little, when is a bid a mis bid/illegal? I think I have been told 1 card/2 points outside declared range. At our club, we play standard ACOL unless announced/alerted. Hence, standard opening is 12-14 points. Bear in mind we do not psyche at our level. Thanks


Misbids and psychs are (almost) never illegal. Anyone who tells you otherwise is not doing you a favour in the long run.
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