foo Posted June 6, 2007 Report Share Posted June 6, 2007 Hog, NZ Symmetirc Relay has one hand opening a 2way 1C to show a weak or strong hand and Responder bidding 1D as a similar 2way bid. Then there's an entire relay system based on the strong hand asking and the weak hand answering. The NZSR pair knows who is strong and who is weak.The opponents do not. This got a lot of attention as being hard to defend against until in some major event an opponent quietly passed holding a 22 count.The results was that both Opener and Responder thought the other was the strong hand and the auction went to very high levels... and then got very profitably whacked. I'll see if I can find the board. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted June 6, 2007 Report Share Posted June 6, 2007 Foo. I repeat my earlier question. Are you xxxxxxxx? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gerry Posted June 6, 2007 Report Share Posted June 6, 2007 No one I know of in New Zealand has played a two way 1c in many, many years. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
the hog Posted June 6, 2007 Report Share Posted June 6, 2007 "NZ Symmetirc Relay has one hand opening a 2way 1C to show a weak or strong hand and Responder bidding 1D as a similar 2way bid." No it does NOT!! Where are you getting this from? Btw I have the original notes, have played it and have played against Roy Kerr, Marston et al. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 "NZ Symmetirc Relay has one hand opening a 2way 1C to show a weak or strong hand and Responder bidding 1D as a similar 2way bid." No it does NOT!! Where are you getting this from? Btw I have the original notes, have played it and have played against Roy Kerr, Marston et al. I recommend checking out the greatest "hits" of xxxxxxxx on rec.games.bridge Foo's posting style and ridiculous claims closely mirror xxxxxxxx. (I should have noticed the similarities earlier). A quick perusal of the rec.games.bridge archives will quickly show that zzzzzz is fond of making ridiculous claims. He left rec.games.bridge after getting called out a few too many times... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 "NZ Symmetirc Relay has one hand opening a 2way 1C to show a weak or strong hand and Responder bidding 1D as a similar 2way bid." No it does NOT!! Where are you getting this from? Btw I have the original notes, have played it and have played against Roy Kerr, Marston et al. If I have the system name wrong, I apologize. As I said, I'll try and find the board in question. (Tougher if I've forgotten what the name of the system was being played.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 No one I know of in New Zealand has played a two way 1c in many, many years. Yes, this was some time ago. ~20 years if memory serves. As I've noted elsewhere, I may have not gotten the name of the system correct and may have mistakenly called it NZSR. If so, I apologize. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pbleighton Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 Here is a xxxxxxxxxxx rgb quote from June 2003, regarding light opening bids: Your judgement should not violate the consensus of your peers or the logic of Bridge by such an amount as to make your opponents have to play a special card just because you're ATT. That's =destructive= (you've destroyed their ability to play their card. The must play a card for you. Effectively, your card). AQT98x,JT98x,x,x may be a 6 loser hand, but you certainly don't have 1/2 the tricks needed for Game in 1st or 2nd. By any standard I know you are "more than a K less than a normal opening" and thus are violating the underlying expert consensus that drives the rules. 3rd or 4th, life is different because CHO is a passed hand. The ACBL even allows the use of Drury here to control the potential carnage. Why? 4th chair is not likely to be misled into passing. Whereas both opps could be easily misled by a garbage 1st or 2nd opening. Add a Drury type inquiry, and all the pieces for a controlled psyche system designed to steal from the opponents would be in place. Which is why Barry Crane was told "No" about using Drury in 1st and 2nd. Without the range inquiry, justice will in the long run be meted out if you insist on opening garbage. Even shapely garbage. Your bidding accuracy will stink. Unfortunately, you will also destroy the enjoyment of other paying customers while justice is being handed to you by the cards. That could cost Bridge players, and that can't be allowed. Maybe we should let these super weak openers be used but promise the non offending side that any contracts that are declared and fail by a pair that opens routinely on hands like AQT98x,JT98x,x,x when they do open with such a hand will automaticly be adjusted to down the same amount XX? Now the opponents can just sit back and enjoy the "fun". Note =destructive= very similar to =definitely= a separate issue; and =definitely= infuriatingly unjust if you are relaying events correctly earlier in this thread. And, of course, the attitude towards light openers. Peter Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenrexford Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 My point is either being missed or ignored. In case of the former, I'll try again. From the standpoint of mathematicians versus lawyers (the original post idea), I do not care if the ACBL bans Stayman because some old lady burned Machstroth using Stayman. The rules, rational or irrational, political or neutral, justified by old money interests or not, are the rules. A mathematician and a lawyer are both capable of innovation within the constructs of the rules. Mind you, I was for years frustrated by the Rules banning many things I also wanted to try. But, so what? I then learned options within the Rules, and I update myself on Rules changes. I have found incredible ability to innovate, albeit perhaps restrained by some of the less understandable of the Rules, but sometimes also protected by the Rules. I am "protected" by the Rules because I know that I can risk certain actions, like passing, because certain parameters will block opposition action unless those parameters are met. Thus, I can cater my pass to their possible future actions. I can tailor my definition of a 1NT opening by the limitations on defenses. Were limitations not present, I might decide that it would be better to ditch two-level and three-level preempts for, say, two-suited openings and intermediates. I might need to protect against contingencies that do not now exist. All that being said, I believe that the lawyer is especially good at making use of the GCC language effectively. A few examples follow: 1. The GCC bans two-suited major openings at the two-level unless 10+ and unless the second suit is known. Many give up there when thinking about using 2M for 5+M/4+minor. As a lawyer, I "got around" that problem through a GCC-based innovation, one that might not be technically as sound but one that worked well enough. 2M showed 5+ in the major and 11-15. However, 5332's were opened 1NT if 13-16, or 1M if 11-12. So, the inference was that 2M showed an unbalanced hand. We then added a LTC of 5-6 losers and required that the major length be only 5-card or 6-card. When we, finally, defined 1M-2OM well, the 2M inferentially could not be opened without a side minor. That was not part of the definition of the bid; it was required logically to meet the acceptable definitions. Then, a 2NT response asked for a four-card minor "if Opener happened to have one." Problem solved. (Plus, using my tricky lawyer talk, I convinced the TD's and the ACBL that this was acceptable.) 2. The GCC requires 3+ in a suit for an opening to be "natural." As part of the world-famous Kitcerex System, we decided to use a Kamikazee 1♦ opening. This showed 8+ with at least three diamonds. There were many possible hand types. However, it was completely legal because (1) 3+ is deemed natural, (2) you only need 10+ if the bid is not natural, (3) 8+ is OK for "natural," and, perhaps key, (4) canape is allowed. Not many play 1♦ this was, but it later ended up in the exact same form in a completely different system. In both systems, the auction could go 1♦(8-22 HCP, 3+ diamonds, many shapes)-P-1M(3-16 HCP, 4+ in major, many different shapes possible)-P-P-P, with the opening side in a non-forcing auction at the one-level despite a combined range of 11-24 possible HCP's. This worked havoc on the opponents, but GCC legal. Lawyer 3. R.U.N.T./Son-of-RUNT. A 1NT overcall may show a three-suited hand. "Three-suited" means 3+ in three suits. There are no HCP restrictions. Similar definitions and limitations for doubles. You can imagine the highly complicated mess you can create and that was created here. 1NT as 0-10 or 17-19 takeout, with at least three cards in each suit. Wild advancer options, like 2NT as a middlish preempt (preemptive opposite 0-10 but useful opposite 17-19) but 3-bids as total bust preemptive, wild escapes after doubles, S&G cuebids, and the like. The more complexity to the Advancer actions, the more obvious this is a constructive bid (LOL). 4. Interference over a strong club can be just about anything. The lawyer can better explain how and why what most would seem to be utter foolishness and purely destructive tactics is actually a well-justified solution for a bidding compaction problem generated by the nuances of the Precision auction. Whereas you might view 1♣-2♥(heart one-suiter or three-suited with short hearts)-X-2♠(3+ hearts, and a preference for spades as favored amoung the three other suits, with ability to play at at least the two-level in spades or the three-level in hearts) as a destructive approach, this solves the problem of space limitations, by compounding multiple but divergent meanings within single bids (toss around well-known terms like the "useful space principle" and make sure to SAY the word "constructive" as much as possible). Mathematicians will devise the most effective defense to a strong club, using statistics and such. Then, they will check to see if it is allowed. Lawyers will look to see what is allowed, devise the most diabolical idea allowed within the Rules, tweak it so that it looks like it is actually a tad outside the Rules, then devise a master argument to explain why it actually is allowed. This, of course, is only the bidding aspect of things, and only as to system. Much more develops in bidding tactics (bluffs, gambles, misdirection) and in play. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
the hog Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 Richard, I looked at rgb. This may well be xxxxxxxx. I well remember you and he having some blarneys. Foo, are you xxxxxxxx? I notice you are not answering this question. Ken, I can't make out whether you are serious or joking in the above post. I suspect you are half serious. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 All that being said, I believe that the lawyer is especially good at making use of the GCC language effectively. A few examples follow: 1. The GCC bans two-suited major openings at the two-level unless 10+ and unless the second suit is known. Many give up there when thinking about using 2M for 5+M/4+minor. As a lawyer, I "got around" that problem through a GCC-based innovation, one that might not be technically as sound but one that worked well enough. 2M showed 5+ in the major and 11-15. However, 5332's were opened 1NT if 13-16, or 1M if 11-12. So, the inference was that 2M showed an unbalanced hand. We then added a LTC of 5-6 losers and required that the major length be only 5-card or 6-card. When we, finally, defined 1M-2OM well, the 2M inferentially could not be opened without a side minor. That was not part of the definition of the bid; it was required logically to meet the acceptable definitions. Then, a 2NT response asked for a four-card minor "if Opener happened to have one." Problem solved. (Plus, using my tricky lawyer talk, I convinced the TD's and the ACBL that this was acceptable.) The game is (essentially) unplayable if the rules set rewards players who practice incomplete disclosure. As I've argued before, regulations need to be based on the set the of hands shown by a given bid, not player's creativity in hiding their actual agreements. Ken, you might get off playing stupid games like this one, however, most people out grow this sort of behavior in 10th or 11th grade. If I were ever running a tournament and I found out that you were pulling this kind of ***** I'd have you thrown out for cheating and I'd make damn sure that this happened in a very public manner. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtfanclub Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 My point is either being missed or ignored. In case of the former, I'll try again. I think you missed the counter-example. If you make something that's legal, very different from Standard, and successful, the ACBL will find a way to ban it. Both Moscito and strong Namyats 2s should be legal. They're not. If I went through all the crap they went through making Precision a living hell until the pros all started playing it... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Trinidad Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 My point is either being missed or ignored. In case of the former, I'll try again. From the standpoint of mathematicians versus lawyers (the original post idea), I do not care if the ACBL bans Stayman because some old lady burned Machstroth using Stayman. The rules, rational or irrational, political or neutral, justified by old money interests or not, are the rules. A mathematician and a lawyer are both capable of innovation within the constructs of the rules.This is a false description of what is going on. ACBL does not decide on the rules of bridge. In bridge there are two kinds of "rules". There are the rules of bridge (as described in the bridge laws) and we have the regulations that the individual SO's (such as the ACBL) come up with. The rules of bridge do not ban any systems and I cannot believe that they ever will. (To make things absolutely clear: The ACBL doesn't decide on the rules. It can only decide on the regulations.) So, the "mathematician" comes up with an improved system that he wants to use. After that, ACBL "lawyers" ban it and come up with a regulation for that ban. One half of the mathematicians try to fight the new regulation. They will loose this battle loose since fighting over regulations is something lawyers are much better at. The other have of the mathematicians adapt their system to fall within the new regulations. The lawyers come up with a new regulation to ban the adaptation. Either way, the mathematicians loose. This is not because of the rules of the game. It is because of the regulations in the ACBL, set up by ACBL "lawyers". So your comparison about the speed of light is not correct. The speed of light is universal (just like the bridge laws). What is happening is that mathematicians from around the world come up with a new type of glasses to use the properties of light. This gives them an advantage over the lawyers. The lawyers in the ACBL will ban these glasses in all ACBL events. Then ACBL will put all its weight in the WBF to get them banned in WBF events. Now, mathematicians from e.g. Australia or Sweden can use their glasses over there where they beat the lawyers, but they cannot use them in the Bermuda Bowl. Who do you think the Swedish captain will send to the Bermuda Bowl? The mathematician who cannot use his glasses in the event or the lawyer who is allowed to use all his skills? What do you think the mathematicians in Sweden will do when they want to compete in the Bermuda Bowl? They will not put their time in the development of new glasses, despite the fact that the laws of physics specifically give them that possibility. In short, US lawyers manage to overpower all mathematicians in the world before a single card has been played by banning systems that according to the bridge laws are perfectly legal. Rik Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike777 Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 "The ACBL doesn't decide on the rules. It can only decide on the regulations.)" You are kidding I hope. If you expect the membership and the leaders we elect to understand what the heck you are talking about.... 1) If the leaders do have zero input into the rules.....what the hell?2) If you expect most of us to speak of rules and regulations as seperate you do not understand leadership. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Quantumcat Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 In a couple of years when I get to be a decent player, remind me to never, ever, play any tournaments in the US! Sounds like an absolute nightmare. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fluffy Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 Peter, or Richard, please, I am so curious, who is this xxxxxxxxxxxxx guy you are talking about? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Finch Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 Now, mathematicians from e.g. Australia or Sweden can use their glasses over there where they beat the lawyers, but they cannot use them in the Bermuda Bowl. Yes they can. Last I heard the ACBL did not write the system regulations for the Bermuda Bowl. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 (edited) Peter, or Richard, please, I am so curious, who is this [EDIT] guy you are talking about? Foo [EDIT] is a fairly serious bridge player from the Boston area. I knew him back before I gave up on organized bridge in ACBL land. I used to play against him at the MIT club and local tournaments. I briefly made the mistake of partnering him for a few weeks back at MIT. (I thought that if he actually got some experience playing a non-standard system he might get a clue) Foo is (perhaps) best noted for getting involved in a large number of very heated arguments in various electronic bridge forums. He used to be an active participant in the MIT Bridge discussion list until abruptly exiting [sNIP] I should note (up front) that I was on the other side in quite a number of these little discussions. From my perspective, Foo has a fairly distinctive posting side. He is prone to make very definitive, almost grandiose, claims about bidding and bidding theory. Upon inspective, many of these turn out to be factually challenged. He is extremely opinionated about "constructive versus destructive" bidding and makes a lot of assertions about the the nature of strong systems, kamikaze NTs, and the like. He has been making the same mistakes for the better part of a decade... (When Foo first started posting, I found him incredibly annoying but couldn't quite figure out why. I think my subconscious figured out what was going on almost immediately. I didn't consciously guess that Foo is Foo until he made some comments that the Assumed Fit Preempts that I was using were rejected by the ACBL Conventions Committee based on the range that the opening showed. This was a classic Fooism from years past) In any case, foo left quite the paper trail back on rec.games.bridge. You can track down any number of threads that he participated in. I recommend starting with one entitled "1NT Restrictions". You see strong echos of his BBF postings about the destructive nature of mini-NTs. [sNIP] [some slightly heavyhanded editing in here, Privacy issues, flame-baiting rules, and the like. -- inquiry] Edited June 8, 2007 by inquiry Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenrexford Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 Ken, you might get off playing stupid games like this one, however, most people out grow this sort of behavior in 10th or 11th grade. If I were ever running a tournament and I found out that you were pulling this kind of ***** I'd have you thrown out for cheating and I'd make damn sure that this happened in a very public manner. Wow. Very atypical of most, but right up your alley. Hostile to the point of insanity. A few responses are probably worthwhile. First, I cannot remember how long ago I must travel back in time to find a single partner who has not at least once commented that they thought my explanations to the opponents were "too much." I literally drive my partners nuts because I, in their uniform opinion, over-describe the bids, by giving every conceivable nuance. And yet, you read me for a non-disclosing cheater? That's laughable. Second, finding means of defining the bids that are GCC legal but that efectively enable bids that you want to play has nothing to do with disclosure. If I say that 2♠ shows 11-15 with 5-6 spades and 4-6 of a minor, the director is called and the bid is disallowed. If I state that the bid shows 5-6 spades, will not feature 4+ in the other major because that's handled a different wat, and has 5-6 losers, which almost always means a source of tricks in a minor suit, that's OK by the GCC and it is also OK descriptively. Third, I have not played any of these conventions for MANY years, now preferring a 2/1 GF style. The point was that lawyers can find parts of the GCC to take advantage of that are not just theory-based but that are also rule-tweaking based. Fourth, and finally, SO WHAT IF THE LAWYERS BAN SYSTEMS THEY HATE? What does this have to do with ability to play the game? Many lawyers hate the Rules that society establishes. I, personally, hate that drug use is even a crime. I hate some aspects of sentencing law. I hate the way the Rules tilt in the favor of the prosecution, and insanely so, in some respects. Apparently, the mathematician would figure out how criminal justice should best be handled, would view the criminal justice system as unfair, and would quit. The lawyer knows all of this but studies the system for its weaknesses, finds alternatives within the system, and lobbies to change the system where practical. You like to think that mathematicians would beat lawyers if only the system allowed more of the science you want. If you cannot master the system that the lawyers apparently have controlled, what makes you so sure that these lawyers could not master you in the opened-up regime? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 Ken, you might get off playing stupid games like this one, however, most people out grow this sort of behavior in 10th or 11th grade. If I were ever running a tournament and I found out that you were pulling this kind of ***** I'd have you thrown out for cheating and I'd make damn sure that this happened in a very public manner. Wow. Very atypical of most, but right up your alley. Hostile to the point of insanity. A few responses are probably worthwhile. First, I cannot remember how long ago I must travel back in time to find a single partner who has not at least once commented that they thought my explanations to the opponents were "too much." I literally drive my partners nuts because I, in their uniform opinion, over-describe the bids, by giving every conceivable nuance. And yet, you read me for a non-disclosing cheater? That's laughable. Second, finding means of defining the bids that are GCC legal but that efectively enable bids that you want to play has nothing to do with disclosure. If I say that 2♠ shows 11-15 with 5-6 spades and 4-6 of a minor, the director is called and the bid is disallowed. If I state that the bid shows 5-6 spades, will not feature 4+ in the other major because that's handled a different wat, and has 5-6 losers, which almost always means a source of tricks in a minor suit, that's OK by the GCC and it is also OK descriptively. Third, I have not played any of these conventions for MANY years, now preferring a 2/1 GF style. The point was that lawyers can find parts of the GCC to take advantage of that are not just theory-based but that are also rule-tweaking based. The war gaming / role playing community has a word for the type of behavior that you are describing: "Rules Lawyering". Its not considered an admirable trait. People aren't perfect, nor are the regulatory structures that they create. Any sufficiently complex set of regulations is going to contain a variety of flaws (contradictions, exceptions, logical inconsistencies, etc.) You have clearly pointed out a well known problem with the rules set used by the ACBL. If I use one set of verbiage to describe a set of hands, my agreement is legal at the GCC level. If I use a different set of verbiage to describe the exact same set of hands, my agreement is not legal at the GCC level. At this point in time, one should ask "What is the appropriate behavior to deal with this problem" Option 1: Work to solve the problem and eliminate the inconsistencyOption 2: Exploit the loop holeOption 3: Withdraw in digust I consider option 1 the best course of action. Work with the regulators to improve the rules set. I consider option 2 extremely unethical. You violate the spirit of the law and severely degrade the playing environment. Option 3 is actually the course of action that I ended up choosing. Over time, I became more and more disgusted with the regulatory environment in North American bridge. In part, this reflected these types of long standing inconsistencies in the rules set. However, the straw that broke the camel's back was when the regulatory authorities started "gaming the system". I am well capable of responding in kind. I know ALL sorts of ways to tie the system regulations into knots. However, at the end of the day, I made a decision that I didn't want to be the type of person who engaged in that type of behavior so I stopped playing tournament bridge. However, I am still some what touchy on the whole subject. Accordingly, when I see some idiot bragging about what a great rules lawyer he is, I tend to respond with disgust. As I said originally, 10th graders think that this type of behavior is exciting and admirable. At a certain point in time, most people outgrow this. When you find adults who haven't, it just becomes sad. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bid_em_up Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 Accordingly, when I see some idiot bragging about what a great rules lawyer he is, I tend to respond with disgust. As I said originally, 10th graders think that this type of behavior is exciting and admirable. At a certain point in time, most people outgrow this. When you find adults who haven't, it just becomes sad. Richard, While I can somewhat understand your feelings of disgust and how you think that playing this way is unethical/childish/disgusting, the bottom line is, thats what lawyers are skilled at. In their profession, they attempt to work within a given set of rules/laws and manipulate them to their best advantage. If they can find a loophole in the laws (as written) that gets their client off, they use it, no matter how despicable it may be or appear to be. Why should a lawyer playing bridge be any different when defining a system? After all, you, yourself, called it rules "lawyering". Of course it is, but this is what a lawyer is supposed to be skilled at. They are still within the outlined definitions of the rules/laws, and they are still perfectly legal. They have simply found a loophole or technicality within the laws that allows them to design what they wish to play legally. I really don't think there is anything particularly sad about this. It is what they have been trained/taught to do (amongst other things, of course). Finding a weakness and then exploiting it to their best advantage. Do I like it? No. Is it slimy, childish, disgusting, etc.? Somewhat. But this is one of the reasons lawyers have the reputations they do. :blink: I also think that a lawyer will make for a better bridge player than a mathematician since the lawyer will tend to be more ruthless whenever possible. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtfanclub Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 In a couple of years when I get to be a decent player, remind me to never, ever, play any tournaments in the US! Sounds like an absolute nightmare. It's not. For General Convention Chart: you have to play SA, 2/1, Precision, or certain Canape systems. Starting with Opener's second bid, most things are legal, and starting with Responder's second bid, everything is legal, as long as you're using one of the basic four systems I listed (ie., not Relay). For Midchart, now you can start using Wilkosz and Multi 2 diamonds, so with very few changes you can play just about anything popular in Europe (Moscito being a notable exception). Midchart is only for Regional and National unlimited events, but in fact a large number of clubs use it as well (clubs get to set their own rules). So in terms of PLAYING in the U.S., it's not a problem. It's easy, fun, and you won't even notice these rules we've been discussing. In terms of PLAYING YOUR OWN SYSTEM in the U.S., it's a nightmare. Outside of slight variants of the big boys, it's impossible. For example, somebody explain to me why, if partner opens a natural 1 diamond bid third hand, it's legal to play 2 clubs as artificial game forcing but not as Drury. For another, when partner opens 1 heart, you can use 1NT as an artificial non-game forcing inquiry denying spades, but not 1 spade or two clubs. As a mathematics kind of guy, I deeply resent their weird and twisted rules. And yes, it does get frustrating to play a system where you know something else would work better but you don't get to use it...especially when you know that the rules lawyers get THEIR "improvements" approved and you can't get yours done. But in terms of sitting down and playing? I don't have any difficulty doing that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 For Midchart, now you can start using Wilkosz and Multi 2 diamonds, so with very few changes you can play just about anything popular in Europe (Moscito being a notable exception). Midchart is only for Regional and National unlimited events, but in fact a large number of clubs use it as well (clubs get to set their own rules). Comment 1: The number of Midchart events is minuscule. Case in point: The Flight A Grand National Teams is a GCC event. While the MidChart / Supercharts exist in theory, in practice they are hardly ever available. Comment 2: I can point to a wide number of different methods that are legal in Europe that can't be played in Midchart level events. Comment 3: Wilkosz is most certainly NOT legal at the Midchart level Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 It is unfortunate that people give in to silly stereotypes.. whether it be about lawyers being slimy, accountants being boring, or members of certain ethnicities being muggers, etc. Some lawyers may be 'rules lawyers', but the rules lawyers I have encountered in bridge have NOT been lawyers at all. Some lawyers undoubtedly fit the stereotype... but so do carpenters, accountants, advertising executives, bridge pros, teachers... you name the occupation and the odds are I have dealt with an untrustworthy member of it.. as a trial lawyer for 30 years, my experience is that the great majority of people are basically honest, but a minority of humans are not.... The vast majority of lawyers with whom I deal are scrupulously honest. Any lawyer with a reputation for cutting ethical corners will have a difficult time in the courts and in dealing with other lawyers...it takes years to earn a good reputation and mere seconds to lose it. Television and other media (full of legal illiterates who do not understand the system on which they are commentating) have created a mythical but widely accepted image of lawyers. I find it disapppointing that so many members of what should be a reasonably intelligent, thoughtful group (the members of this forum) buy into that image. Is it really your personal experience, if and when you hired a lawyer, that you were being slimed? If so, get another lawyer! Remember.. the typical reporter knows no more about the legal system than the average liberal-arts major.. and perhaps less. Plus, the point of the media is to sell advertising.. or to advance the political agenda of the owner of the media outlet.. it is not to educate or inform the public. This is true of news programs as much as it is of entertainment. As for my own experience, while I have dealt with a few lawyers I found ethically-challenged, as a group, lawyers are the most honest and trustworthy people I deal with. One qualifying note: I practice in Canada, but I would include the few US lawyers I know in that same category. I also had the pleasure of dealing with some lawyers in Amsterdam and found them to be truly good people. I have been appalled at some of the posts made by Ken... I agree that he appears to be a 'rules lawyer'... and he is also a real life lawyer.. but that is (I trust) a coincidence. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Trinidad Posted June 7, 2007 Report Share Posted June 7, 2007 Now, mathematicians from e.g. Australia or Sweden can use their glasses over there where they beat the lawyers, but they cannot use them in the Bermuda Bowl. Yes they can. Last I heard the ACBL did not write the system regulations for the Bermuda Bowl. No, ACBL doesn't. The WBF "lawyers" do, under the strong influence of the ACBL "lawyers". (I posted because Ken didn't seem to realize the difference between Laws and regulations which is a common misunderstanding in the USA. I didn't realize this difference when I lived there either. :blink: ) Nevertheless, as far as I know, HUM systems are still banned from the round robin of the Bermuda Bowl. The same goes for encrypted signals. So if a Swedish mathematicians glasses are labeled HUM, he cannot use them at the round robin of the BB. And as I explained to Ken, HUM systems are not banned by Law. (My bridge club allows them and that is perfectly legal.) They are banned by regulations. And I am of the opinion that these regulations shouldn't be there in the highest level bridge event in the world. Rik Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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