Posted 2014-July-21, 14:23
You're throwing Law 16B2 right out the window. I agree that a bald "I reserve my right to call the director later " seems a bit rude, and that asking them whether they agree there was a break in tempo (I would use those words) is better, but I wouldn't go further unless they object - and if I end up calling the director at this point, one of the things I'm going to ask him is "who's supposed to call you when one side asserts UI may have been transmitted, and the other side disagrees?" Hopefully my opponents will actually hear the director's response to this, instead of letting it go in one ear and out the other.
While technically if a pair don't call the TD as Law 16B2 requires when they object to such an assertion, they should get little sympathy later, I would call (as the NOS) myself, because I don't want to get into an ethical morass. I do think a lot of players who should know this law either never learned it, have forgotten it, or willfully ignore it, perhaps because they feel inconvenienced by it. Hence the effort to get the TD to educate them.
The purpose of Law 16B2 is to quickly establish, when possible, that there is agreement that UI may have been transmitted, so that when you call the director later you don't get into a "he said, she said" about whether it actually happened. Although I have (in application of other laws, as it happens) had a player say one thing before the director arrived, and then claim backed up by his partner that he never said that, he said something else entirely. So it's certainly possible that might happen in a Law 16 case.
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As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean