nige1, on 2013-September-29, 19:01, said:
It's a deliberate bias. We don't know what the auctions were at other tables but if several Souths did pass after identical auctions (apart from the BIT), then that is a strong argument for Pass being a logical alternative.
gnasher, on 2013-September-30, 05:08, said:
It may be, or it may not. It depends on who your Souths are, and how big your field is.
Vampyr told us the size of the field and the names of the players.
gnasher, on 2013-September-30, 05:08, said:
First, you would have to limit your selection of Souths to peers of the player upon whose actions we were ruling.
Agreed. Gordontd (below) says that is hard but it's reasonable to start with players in the same event.
gnasher, on 2013-September-30, 05:08, said:
Having done that, you might be able to answer the question "Might some select it?", but that's only part of the test for whether an action is an LA. You would also have to determine whether your selection represented "a significant proportion" of the peers of South.For example, suppose that 100 peers of South faced this decision. Finding five peers of South who passed in the same auction wouldn't make pass an LA.
IMO that is one of the
advantages of the suggested procedure. Here, for example, by examining the results, you can put a (low) roof on the number of players who faced this (or a similar) problem. This information may be flawed but not as flawed as the other information, upon which the director, typically, bases his judgement. At worst, it would be a useful addition to that other information.
gordontd, on 2013-September-30, 06:59, said:
Although I would be happy to use that information if it came up, I wouldn't actively look for people in the same seat because their answers are more likely to be swayed by what worked. Players who sat in different seats are more likely not to recognise the hand, or else to avoid thinking through the consequences of what they do know about it. In any case, despite the impression given by some other posters (not you) in this and other threads, the practical limitations of time and other demands on TDs mean that we can't generally be so precise in who we choose. Mostly we're just glad to have been able to ask a few players of suitable standard.
The suggestion is not that the director just ask players what they would do, hypothetically, if faced with a similar problem. I agree that anybody who played in an event, may be prejudiced. The suggestion is that by examining results, the director might find players who actually faced a similar problem and determine what action they took, at the time, at the table. IMO, that is (relatively) objective information.