Fluffy, on Jun 25 2010, 06:16 PM, said:
I don't really understand the rematch thing, they truly deserve 12 VPs, and the netherlands and Rusia have something really to argue about this thing. We are on a different league so I don't really care much, but if I was Poland Ireland or some strong contender in the group I'd be outraged.
nige1, on Jun 26 2010, 04:49 PM, said:
For decades, I've argued that complete default regulations should be specified in the official WBF law book. Sloppy conditions of contest would have a less detrimental impact. Of course, a bolshy local jurisdiction could still impose an idiosyncratic local variant. But most jurisdictions would be relieved not to bear responsibility for plugging current gaps. And, globally, players would benefit from a level playing field.
cardsharp, on Jun 26 2010, 12:47 PM, said:
The WBF already provides a generic Conditions of Contest for its competitions. It does not cover this case. The WBF regulations for the World Bridge Series in Philadelphia in October, both the general CoC and Supplemental Conditions do not appear to cover this problem.
The EBL does appear to base its documents on the WBF ones. It would not surprise me if they have the same editor.
So it is happening. But there will always be topics that are not covered.
btw I think law book is the wrong term to use in this context.
The suggestion was that there should be
single document integrating laws, regulations, minutes, coc, and so on into a consistent whole. Hence, a suitable title might be
Rules of Duplicate Bridge.
Admittedly, initially, it would be a hodge-podge, little better than the current incomprehensible mess. The rules could be web-document, undergoing frequent revision to start with, (more frequent than every decade, anyway). Then
gradually, as rule-makers responded to feedback from players, it would become simpler, clearer, less subjective, more consistent and more complete.
A simple example: if anyone found an omission (for example what to do if two pairs from the same team sit the same way in a round-robin match) then a new default rule would be entered immediately into the global rule book. Local jurisdictions could re-invent the wheel, at some later date, if they wanted -- but they wouldn't have to do so, as at present.