How to describe vulnerabilities
#1
Posted 2007-April-27, 10:17
Since I came back into bridge in England, I learned their method:
vul vs. not - red
vul vs vul - amber
nv vs nv - white
nv vs vul - green
I suppose because I learned the latter first, the former bugs me. I find it hard to follow. But even when I try to look at the two methods objectively, I think the English method is better.
What do others think?
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
#3
Posted 2007-April-27, 10:44
Of course, there are really 16 possible boards based on both vulnerability and dealer. So we could always define sixteen colors and use them as shorthand for both? But I don't see anyone seriously doing this.
I do agree that the scoring method in North America (where 2♠+2 is two spades making) is counterintuitive and that the method used in most of the rest of the world (2♠+2 is two spades making two overtricks) is superior.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#5
Posted 2007-April-27, 11:05
Harald
#6
Posted 2007-April-27, 11:24
#7
Posted 2007-April-27, 11:26
#8
Posted 2007-April-27, 11:54
I think the English method sucks
#9
Posted 2007-April-27, 11:58
"no-one vulnerable", "favourable", "unfavourable", "both vulnerable".
#10
Posted 2007-April-27, 12:02
#11
Posted 2007-April-27, 12:04
Al_U_Card, on Apr 27 2007, 07:02 PM, said:
and slower than "red"
#12
Posted 2007-April-27, 12:15
pclayton, on Apr 27 2007, 05:26 PM, said:
"One-N" is the standard term here. Also used are "One-no", "A nut" and occasionally "One without".
#13
Posted 2007-April-27, 12:38
awm, on Apr 27 2007, 06:44 PM, said:
The latter used in the BBO software too. 2♠ just made is 2♠= which makes more sense than 2♠+2. That would be two overtricks on BBO.
You get around all the confusion and make it universal if everyone would write 2♠ 8 .... 2♠ 10 .... 2♠ 7, etc. In other words, the number of tricks declarer took in his contract.
Roland
#14
Posted 2007-April-27, 12:45
awm, on Apr 27 2007, 11:44 AM, said:
I have never heard of what you refer to as the North American method, I have always considered 2♠+2 to be two overtricks.
For Roland's suggestion, on the score sheets used in most bridge clubs I've been to in US, there is one column labeled 'contract' and one labeled 'tricks' where everyone writes exactly as you describe. I don't think this was true in Los Angeles though. I actually prefer the = method better because it relates the tricks taken to the contract, but whatever.
To the original poster, I have occasionally but not often in North America heard green used to mean not vul, but almost always have heard and used white.
#16
Posted 2007-April-27, 14:38
#18 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2007-April-27, 15:24
I generally say red/white, nobody vul, everybody vul, or white/red.
#19
Posted 2007-April-27, 15:47
jdonn, on Apr 27 2007, 10:45 AM, said:
awm, on Apr 27 2007, 11:44 AM, said:
I have never heard of what you refer to as the North American method, I have always considered 2♠+2 to be two overtricks.
For Roland's suggestion, on the score sheets used in most bridge clubs I've been to in US, there is one column labeled 'contract' and one labeled 'tricks' where everyone writes exactly as you describe. I don't think this was true in Los Angeles though. I actually prefer the = method better because it relates the tricks taken to the contract, but whatever.
To the original poster, I have occasionally but not often in North America heard green used to mean not vul, but almost always have heard and used white.
In Los Angeles, whenever Adam tried to be cute and write 2s+3 for taking 11 total tricks, I'd get called to the next table over confusion about how the score doesn't match the result.
Josh is correct about how the score sheet looks, though.
In fact, before I was directing, I was told that it was a REQUIREMENT for scorers in ACBL to write the number of tricks as the odd tricks making, rather than the overtricks. I've been told many things that aren't true, but I know that it's definitely the standard here in LA to write it like that.
jchiu said:
I believe it's a result of people who still calculate the score by counting the tricks, multiplying by the correct number, and then adding the value (50, 300, etc). It is a lot more intuitive in this method to write the odd tricks, rather than the overtricks.
eta: Los Angeles is not in the interior of the country.
#20
Posted 2007-April-28, 11:30
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit

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