weejonnie, on 2023-May-04, 09:40, said:
Obviously [16D2]a) and b) are impossible and c) is likely to be impossible if there is a playing TD, so you walk into d) and an artificial adjusted score.
Why?
Surely you're not saying that the playing director's game is more important than the paying players' games? If I'm playing (as the spare, or taking over from director who had to cancel last minute, or asked to direct a game I usually play in), and a call that requires me to spend time at a table, or witness the hand, happens, that's what I do. Revokes, penalty cards, bad claims, whatever.
If it turns out that we miss a board at my table? Oh well, A+/A, that's what you signed up for.
If it turns out that *I now* have EI that requires an invocation of L16D at my table when I have to play the board? Well, that happens, too (although I frequently *can* trigger L16D2a, or some other way to play the hand under 16D2c). And I will definitely tell the opponents what the EI was after the hand, so they can dispute my belief that it didn't matter, should I believe that.
(Note: if there is a way that I can do my job while still protecting my game/partner, of course I will do it. "Score it as it stands for now. I will look at it. However, if you don't mind, I will wait until after I've played the board to do the investigation." But if that's not possible, one of the reasons I'm not paying for the game is that I might not get to play all 27 boards.)
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So the awarding of the AAS depends on circumstances.
a) wrong traveller in right board: neither side is at fault. NB sometimes the travellers are numbered incorrectly - rather like players entering a result alongside the board number rather than the NS pair number. I cannot see why someone should be penalised for doing something which is automatic and has resulted from a procedural irregularity at another table. Obviously the other pair (usually EW) are exonerated but it seems unreasonable to penalise a pair just because they were the ones sitting NS.
b) traveller taken from another board: this is a procedural irregularity and 40/60 seems to be the correct decision if the TD cannot rule as in c) above.
This I basically agree with - except that if another table swapped the travellers and caused issue a), I'll happily take the 20% I'm giving the new table from that table. How it gets done will depend on how the travellers were switched, but even if it's just "paying for my time" (finding out how far back the travellers were switched, at least, so I know which scores I have to move from one to another. What, you think that would never happen?)
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)