lamford, on Sep 28 2010, 11:53 PM, said:
NickRW, on Sep 28 2010, 05:12 PM, said:
Well - hmm - where did the occur?
At a recent congress, but, more relevantly, every day at every club around the world there is a comment about the previous hand after the auction period has started on the next board. The vast majority of these comments have no relevance to the hand in question. Those that do must, sadly, be punished.
Well, if it was a congress - then I guess you have to follow the rule book. However, I don't follow your extrapolation to the club environment - it is a pity perhaps that there is a gulf between the law book and 'real life' - but there is - and failing to recognise this is peeing in the wind.
Every other month David has a column answering readers letters in the Mr Bridge mag - which I have to say he does very well - sort of gently informing folks who often don't know what they should and shouldn't be doing in (mostly) simple book ruling scenarios. And quite often there is a readers letter grumping about his answer to one question or another in a previous issue and stating that they wouldn't stand for such unfriendly rulings wherever it is they play. Well - that is - whether law makers and enforcers like it or not - a reality on the ground. And if you want to change it - it is no good moaning that what they are playing isn't "real bridge" - they don't care - they would quite literally rather throw you out first.
Further, the EBU (and I suppose other NBOs) want to increase the attendance at major events - but one of the main reasons ordinary players won't go there is that they don't like what they see as an unfriendly environment. And we're talking, in some cases, people who have been there and have heaps of masterpoints to prove it - but they don't want to go back.
I agree sometimes you gotta stomp on rule breakers - we had a case a couple of sessions ago. 1NT-p round to 3th seat where the lady had been paying no attention and counting the table money. She pulled out the stop card and plonked down 2
♥. They were playing Benji. It was fairly clear to one and all that the lady hadn't been paying attention and thought she was opening a weak 2. 4th seat summoned the director for the night (not me) to the table and the director quite properly informed the opener about not using unauthorised information and told the other side they could call him back. So opener duly bid 2
♠ (they were playing xfers - no problem). So now the lady thought she should bid 3
♥ - which put opener in a pickle - eventually he decided he should bid 4
♥. Well that contract duly made, but the guy in 4th seat wasn't happy - opener was 3/3 majors and felt that responders sequence showed 5=4 majors GF and that 4
♥ was definitely not a logical alternative. Well - the director agreed and assigned a score. When I heard about it I thought it reasonable enough - but I can't go along with the "get a life" example in the OP. Blackshoe is going to complain, no doubt, that "everyone thinks they know what the rules should be" - but I live, mostly, in the real club world.
Nick
"Pass is your friend" - my brother in law - who likes to bid a lot.
West North East South
2H Dble Pass 2NT*
Pass 3C All Pass
3C= N/S +110