MrAce, on 2012-May-17, 11:47, said:
Appeals have the luxury to sit down and think for hours and hours before they reach an agreement, a T.D will never have this luxury.
Actually, frequently the AC has less time than the TD did to make their judgement ruling. I certainly have both had and used "hours and hours", coming back and asking questions (on the players' break), and re-polling on different judgement issues. The AC starts at 2300 or so, and stays up as long as someone who wants to get home/whose spouse wants to get home/needs to be ready to play at 0900/whatever feels like it. I've also had 2 minutes, of course!
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-People who are complaining or defending themselves about a board at the table will NEVER have the luxury of fully analysing the hand before they complain or defend themselves against the complaint, at the table. It definetely needs some time to fully investigate the actions in this board and express your side of the story to whomever is making the final decision.
Note that this is sometimes also a downside of ACs - we all play better with coaching and 2 hours to find defences/find arguments as to why those defences are "obvious" than we do at the table. The AC has to deal with even more of that than the TD. I think they do a pretty good job at that, frankly.
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Imo those who are against A.C are trying to get rid of something that doesnt work perfect, instead of fixing it. I have ideas about how to fix it, i wont write in detail but mainly there should not be anyone in the committee who is a contender. In fact committee members should be professionalls who are dedicated, trained and paid just for this job. To start with, it can be seasoned Tournament Directors who are retired or promoted to this position after working in the field for long time as T.D. In each major event 3 or 5 of them should be paid just for showing up and waiting to be called to duty if needed.
Having just argued that TDs can, in fact, if they're not me, be good enough players to be peers of many more than think so, this may seem disingenuous, but if they're paid to *only* be AC members, they will eventually not be good enough players to be useful in this role - especially if they are retired TDs (Note the average age of players. Note also the average age of TDs, many of whom become TDs after playing for several years, after retiring from their real job. Imagine how old retired senior TDs are!)
Panels we use now do (in non-NABC events), in fact, poll players at the appellant's level when they themselves are not. That applies when they are clear C players or when they're pros playing in the Loser Swiss, or anything in between.
Note that I am not saying in any way that the current Appeals system is perfect. I just can't see removing it as a net win, and I can't see any reasonable way (save some really good and consistent education and case law - note: not precedent, but precedent that has been reviewed and found valid. There's a *lot* of bad precedent out there!) to improve it that doesn't introduce or exascerbate other flaws. And while publicising judgements is poison, and causes many problems, the alternative is, again, worse.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)