Barry Margolin wrote
>In article
><
blackshoe-2B256...@news.eternal-september.org>,
> Ed Reppert <
blac...@mac.com> wrote:
>
>> The TD (via the clock, perhaps) has determined that you have
>> insufficient time to play the board. He has the power (and duty) to
>> "ensure the orderly progress of the game" (Law 81C1). In exercising this
>> power and duty, he has the power to "require, postpone, or cancel the
>> play of a board" (Law 82B2). Granted the latter law is contingent on an
>> irregularity having occurred. What is an irregularity? It is "a
>> departure from correct procedure". It is correct procedure to follow the
>> instructions of the TD. "Don't start any new boards" is an instruction
>> of the TD (even if it comes from the clock). So the director has
>> instructed you not to play a board. Correct procedure is to follow that
>> instruction.
>
>But if you don't play the board, you're following the director's
>instructions, so there has been no irregularity. Therefore, 82B2 doesn't
>apply, and he can't postpone play of the board.
If you ignore the arguments that show how this is based on the Laws
for a moment, what are you actually trying to prove? That a method
employed throughout the world and approved of by the authorities is
wrong because of a different reading of the Law book?
There is o point, really, in arguing that something generally accepted
should not be when the vast majority not only are prepared to follow it
but believe it is legal.
Sure, you can decide that Ed's approach is wrong. But not only is not
obviously wrong, it is also the generally accepted approach. What is
the point of trying to do otherwise? All you would do is cause trouble
in slow play cases - and they cause enough trouble anyway.
So why not accept the general approach of the authorities?
======================================================================
Barry Margolin wrote
>As far as I can tell, no. Which Law says that a hand must be played in
>a limited amount of time?
No Law does precisely. But it is intrinsic in the Conditions of
Contest for all duplicate events, whether specified or not, and those
Conditions of Contest have the force of Law.