Go out of tournaments without losing TCR?
#1
Posted 2021-April-29, 08:07
Sometimes it can happen that something urgent come up in a middle of a tournament, important phone call etc.
To avoid just abandoning the tournament, logging off, closing the website etc. and lose TCR, is it any other way one can drop out of the tournament and not lose TCR?
#2
Posted 2021-April-29, 08:12
anderswen, on 2021-April-29, 08:07, said:
Sometimes it can happen that something urgent come up in a middle of a tournament, important phone call etc.
To avoid just abandoning the tournament, logging off, closing the website etc. and lose TCR, is it any other way one can drop out of the tournament and not lose TCR?
This is a feature, not a bug.
From the perspective of folk's running events, I don't think that they really care whether or not you believe that you had a good excuse to quit a tournament. Rather, they care about the impact that your quitting has on their game and the other players.
I don't think anyone much cares whether someone's TCR is 100% versus 95%. They're going to let you play.
Where TCR comes in handy is if someone is down around 60%. Then there is a really issue.
If you get some many urgent calls that your TCR is only 60%, well maybe you need to rethink what urgent actually means or, alternatively, rethink entering tournaments when you are on call.
#3
Posted 2021-April-29, 08:56
Apart from "wait 60 days for the incomplete to fall off the record", the answer should be, and is, no.
#4
Posted 2021-April-29, 13:35
anderswen, on 2021-April-29, 08:07, said:
Sometimes it can happen that something urgent come up in a middle of a tournament, important phone call etc.
To avoid just abandoning the tournament, logging off, closing the website etc. and lose TCR, is it any other way one can drop out of the tournament and not lose TCR?
If you are that concerned about TCR, take the phone call and play like cr*p for the duration of your tournament. Problem solved.
#5
Posted 2021-April-29, 17:50
Can you provide a ranked list of your "important calls" with a cut-off point for importance?
Sometimes my poodle needs to be taken out for an important call.
Where does this rank on your list?
We need an open-ended importance scale.
#6
Posted 2021-April-30, 09:07
As others said, we don't care why you dropped out. If something urgent comes up every day, you're just too busy to play in tournaments that have TCR requirements. It's not a punishment or judgement, just an estimate of how likely you are to complete a tournament based on your track record.
#7
Posted 2021-April-30, 09:17
The tournament organizer wants the tournament to finish with a minimum of substitutions, delays, or robot intrusions. Or maybe it's more laid back, and can go a little slower, and people know that some will just disappear and be replaced.
As a result, it doesn't matter if a player drops because they don't like their partner, don't like their game, have flaky internet, or if they get The Call. Arguably, it even goes as far as "bushfire evacuation" or "active shooter", but, you know, there's a reason people don't require 100.0%.
IRL, once or twice a year, I'd be asked to hold a cell phone either from a doctor on call or an about-to-be grandparent. They figured the chance was low but non-zero (and I think I've answered one call, so they've been right), so they took the risk. When the chance was "as likely as not", they stayed home and played the next tournament (or organized their on-call schedule to not hit tournament week). Same thing. If you can't book two hours for a tournament without a significant chance of getting That Call, the tournament organizers would prefer you not show up.
#8
Posted 2021-April-30, 10:26
#9
Posted 2021-April-30, 11:20
It's not the fault of the player; it's the failure of the connection that looks like "too long for player to call".
It is hard to tell the difference, of course.
#10
Posted 2021-April-30, 18:43
anderswen, on 2021-April-29, 08:07, said:
Sometimes it can happen that something urgent come up in a middle of a tournament, important phone call etc.
I don't understand what you mean getting a phone call more important than a bridge tournament. Nobody expects to ring someone anymore without being prepared for voicemail. Now if you were making a 911 call, as happened to a partner of mine during a tournment when rioters set fire to the house next door, that I can understand.
#11
Posted 2021-May-01, 04:31
This happens to me quite often and it does have a TCR impact. Also I get the will be replaced in about XX seconds far faster then one would expect if the decission time indeed is 30 seconds.
#12
Posted 2021-May-08, 08:48
Huibertus, on 2021-May-01, 04:31, said:
There's no setting to change. The server sends the update immediately to the browser (we use WebSockets, not push messaging). If you're not getting it right away, there's a problem with your connection.
Quote
If you get disconnected, login again and the TD should reseat you. Some tournaments are also set up to automatically reseat you at the beginning of the next board.
Unless you're talking about Express tournaments. If you take more than 30 seconds to bid or play in these, you get kicked out of the tourney and there's no way to rejoin. If this is happening to you on a regular basis, your Internet connection is simply not good enough to play in these kinds of games. Avoid them to prevent your TCR from dropping.
#13
Posted 2021-May-09, 07:30
Thanks for your answers.
#14
Posted 2021-May-10, 10:06
anderswen, on 2021-May-09, 07:30, said:
There are only 2 types of tournaments where you're kicked out if you're too slow.
1. Express tournaments. These are only for people who can play within 30 seconds of thinking for each action. If you frequently lose focus, you shouldn't play these. Your TCR appropriately reflects this.
2. Robot duplicates. These have a time limit for the entire game (30 minutes for 8 boards, 1 hour for 12 boards), not each action or board. However, getting kicked out of these tournaments doesn't cause your TCR to go down.
If something just happens once or twice, it shouldn't have a big effect on your TCR, since it's averaged over all the tournaments you've played in 2 months.