helene_t Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Do you think a 1nt opening w/ a singleton falls into this category of a completely unknown complex system? Yes - If the opps routinely open 1N with a singleton, then almost all hands in their 1N range may be opened with 1N. The opps will use unknown methods for determining which are eligible and which are not. This affects not only the 1N hands, but also the negative implications from the non-1N hands. This affects competitive bidding. It also affects the defense when attempting to reconstruct declarer's hand. I read this as if it should be forbidden not only to play deviating systems but also to play deviating styles. My p fails to preempt in first seat. Nevertheless he makes an overcall in the 2nd round. I can now picture a hand that would bid like that in my partner's style. Opps don't know my p's style as well as I do, even if I do my best to disclose. May I suggest either of these two solutions:- Indys with anonymous partners as in the money bridge tourneys. I can have no prior knowledge about my p's style.- The boards come pre-bid (by a computer, or a single bridge teacher) and the players only have to play them. Oh no this doesn't solve the problem at all, since we will still have discussions about what carding methods should be allowed. A pair playing plains standard carding yet having exotic ideas about when the honest card would be too expensive, should probably be banned. Sarcasm mode off: I can sympatize with the desire to protect beginners against the need of learning generic BSC defense. I understand that there can be discussion about where to draw the line (Gladiator in response to mini-NT, anyone?). I doubt that it's feasible to regulate all this without creating more problems than are solved but I might be wrong. What I cannot sympathize with is xenofobia. It is unacceptable that a method gets banned merely because it is non-standard. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 I don't think anybody plays opening 1NT with 5431/4441 (which are about as notrumpy as 5422 and 6322) because it's difficult to defend against, nor because it confuses people. Neither are systems like playing Drury over 1 diamond. These are all logical extensions that fit nicely in SAYC. Meanwhile, systems like Bergen raises and Forcing NT were allowed not because they didn't confuse the hell out of the populace when they first became GCC, but because some experts wanted to play it with their clients. The idea that American (but not English, Dutch, Austrailian, or most other countries) need to be 'protected' from stuff that's easy to play and understand is what causes the problem in the first place. And nobody plays anything in order to randomize anything. Sorry. 1= I believe we have mathematical evidence that 5431's and 4441's are not "about as notrumpy as 5422's and 6322's":Shape NT Suit Difference4333 6.15 7.76 1.614432 6.10 8.07 1.975332 6.07 8.13 2.065422 6.01 8.40 2.39 6322 6.00 8.50 2.504441 6.09 8.61 2.525431 6.03 8.68 2.656331 6.03 8.77 2.745521 5.94 9.03 3.09 2= Opening 1N w/ most 5422's would be considered abberant (there are 3 that are semi-commonly: =2245, =2425, =2452 of the right texture.). Opening NT with the vast majority of 6322's would be considered highly abberant (6m322 w/o any honors in the 6 card suit is the unlikely hand type most likely to open in NT).Unless playing the NT opening as a preempt rather than as a constructive game probe. 3= What is "Drury over 1 diamond"? I will tell you that Barry Crane tried to get Drury over 1 Major allowed in all seats and the regulating authorities turned him down flat because it was felt to offer too many opportunities to be used as a psychic control. 4= Bergen Raises were not invented by Marty Bergen. They or things very similar had been kicking around various local areas in NA for quite some time before Marty gave one specific version a serious publicity boost.They involve Limit Bids in a Known Suit with a known degree of fit. In short, they are easy to understand and in theory easy to defend against. 5= The Forcing NT is a necessary component of any 2/1 GF system. 2/1 GF simplifies the average player's constructive bidding chores substantially. While I'm sure Al Roth, Edgar Kaplan, etc of the 2/1 GF crowd had some pull, the reality is that overall 2/1 GF makes it easier for most players to a greater degree than the Forcing NT complicates things. 6= In NA, the most usual 2♦ opening is a Weak Two. Anything else is considered alertable. In GB and many parts of Europe, the most usual 2♦ opening is The Multi. ...and a "natural" Weak 2♦ is alertable in many places.A 2N overcall that shows Invitational values in NT is "natural", yet it is not the "usual Unusual NT" and therefore has to be announced or alerted in most jurisdictions!Bottom line: familiarity matters; and =all= SO's put some effort into protecting their paying customers from the alien. 7= Plenty of people play things to take advantage of unfamiliarity or to randomize things. Marty Bergen did it in the 1980's with his preempt style for instance. Caused quite the uproar in official circles. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 If the sole or even main reason you are using method "x" is because you think you will get better results due to the opponents unfamiliarity with it or due to the randomizing effect of it, then at the least you are not being very sportsmanlike. At the worst you are being unethical. Do you know anyone who fits this description? This sounds like a malicious slur to me.Peter Yes. In some cases, the situation was extreme enough that the players involved got jusitifiably in trouble with the officials. That these players did these things and that they were deemed unacceptable behavior by the officials is a statement of fact, and therefore neither malicious nor a slur. ...and I shall avoid names to further avoid being malicious or making a slur :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mycroft Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 ...and why would anyone play 1S=13 cards in opposition to a Precision Club if not to randomize the results? I know none of *you* do, but the ACBL has had to ban it "explicitly" (i.e. it's the poster child for "purely destructive methods"). There are those who play unfamiliar methods because the unfamiliarity gains them an advantage. I've been accused of it a number of times (although most realize that I play the "weird system of the day" because I like playing weird systems, not because of a competitive advantage, especially at the club). I will admit, the unfamiliarity of EHAA in a 2-board round matchpoint pairs game will gain me something, but that's not why I play it - I play it because it's fun, it's very aggressive, and seriously improves my judgement when I bid "normally" (because I don't have all my systemic crutches). And also because I have the special, one-sided convention "Always pass as dealer"; playing EHAA means the times I pass 5 of 8 hands I deal is lessened (though not eliminated!) As far as I am concerned, you can tell the difference by the weird pair's attitude toward full disclosure. If their 1D response to Precision 1C is "waiting", or their multi-meaning 1C is described as "12-21, doesn't promise any clubs", or the EHAA 2D opener is described as "weak", they're trying to take advantage (or they need a good education. If they do it after the education...) But frankly, there's your fair share of standard and 2/1 players who believe that the proper response to questions is the minimum they can get away with, as well. Michael. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtfanclub Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Um, did you look at it? The difference between 4333 and 4432 is .36The difference between 5422 and 5431 is .26, with 4441 and 6322 between these two. Yeah, I'd say that's about the same. Unless you think that 4432 is too suit oriented to play in no-trump. Unless playing the NT opening as a preempt rather than as a constructive game probe. *sigh* 3= What is "Drury over 1 diamond"? Just what it sounds like- 2 clubs over 1 diamond as 3+ diamonds, 10+ hcp. Partner rebids 2 diamonds (to play) with a subminimum opener (which will always include diamond length), bids something else if he had a full opener. I will tell you that Barry Crane tried to get Drury over 1 Major allowed in all seats and the regulating authorities turned him down flat becuase it was felt to offer too many opportunities to be used as a psychic control. There's good logic. Maybe we should ban help suit game tries. They involve Limit Bids in a Known Suit with a known degree of fit. In short, they are easy to understand and in theory easy to defend against. So is opening 1NT with a possible singleton, so is Drury in all seats, so is everything else in this thread. If the restrictions were based on understanding and defense, we wouldn't be having this conversation. If you've never heard of Bergen raises, and the bidding goes (1♥)-P-(3♣) to you, it's impossible to defend against. What does X show? Clubs? General Takeout? Is it a full opener, or lead directing? You have to discuss your defense to it, in order to be able to defend well against it, and it was a Completely Unknown Complex System by SoTired's definition (it modifies all other responses). So it never should have been allowed, if you guys were consistent. 7= Plenty of people play things to take advantage of unfamiliarity or to randomize things. Marty Bergen did it in the 1980's with his preempt style for instance. Caused quite the uproar in official circles. Unfamiliarity? Sure. Randomness?! You really think Marty Bergen, of all people added something in hopes of getting a random result? That's nonsense. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 IOW, doing things based on logic and axioms that we do everything we can to make fair is the best system I can think of and demonstratively much better than the current situation. Got a better idea, I'd be happy to hear it. The current system sucks only because the ACBL refuses to keep up to date and to correct the ambiguities that have been pointed out to them. Other countries regulate conventions in a similar way to the ACBL, but for them it works much better because the authorities actually care about finding ways to improve the regulations. Any system based primarily on the opinions of private individuals is more susceptible to abuse than a system based on publicly posted axioms and logic that is subject to member review. The present unfortunate situation with regards to convention regulation in the ACBL is evidently proof of this. If the system is provably subject to being "gamed", IMHO the proper course is to improve the overall system so it is less so, rather than just cleaning up the symptoms in one SO and then counting on every other SO to be of greater virtue for all eternity such that they never have the same problem. Let's clean up the symptoms +and+ make it less easy for the same problems to occur in the future. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Banning Drury in all seats was indeed a =very= good idea. If I can play Drury in all seats, I can pretty much guarantee that the vast majority of the time We sit before your strong hand, you will not be able to open. Give me a 4cM, in a hand of any strength, and I can open 1M w/o fear in many situations because Drury allows Us to differentiate sub-minimums and psyches from real openings. Under such circumstances, the opposing side's constructive auction is often going to have to start at the 2 level and often a round later. Good luck to their bidding accuracy. (For =real= "fun" We'll combine Drury in All Seats with 1N=10-13. Bye bye the vast majority of constructive auctions by the opponents unless they Deal.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenrexford Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Banning Drury in all seats was indeed a =very= good idea. If I can play Drury in all seats, I can pretty much guarantee that the vast majority of the time We sit before your strong hand, you will not be able to open. Give me a 4cM, in a hand of any strength, and I can open 1M w/o fear in many situations because Drury allows Us to differentiate sub-minimums and psyches from real openings. Under such circumstances, the opposing side's constructive auction is often going to have to start at the 2 level and often a round later. Good luck to their bidding accuracy. (For =real= "fun" We'll combine Drury in All Seats with 1N=10-13. Bye bye the vast majority of constructive auctions by the opponents unless they Deal.) Drury only appears to have been banned -- it really has not. I have actually "played" drury in all seats. It is easy to see how. Suppose, for instance, that Opener must rebid his suit with a minumum. So, after 1♠-P-2♣-P-2♠, Opener has shown a minimum. Is Responder forced to bid? Of course not. What is the minimum for a GCC opening? 8 HCP. What is the minimum length for a 2/1? Natural means three. You can tactically lie. So, if you have an agreement like this, can you not bid 2♣ with a tweener hand, checking to see if Opener is light (he will rebid his suit), passing if he does? Can't you even do that with "problem" big constructives with a fit? Of course. The only difference is that Drury says nothing about the club suit. So, you use 2♣ and 2♦ as "Drury," in effect, and thereby have that tool available. Simple. This, of course, illustrates the nonsense of the GCC rule. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Banning Drury in all seats was indeed a =very= good idea. If I can play Drury in all seats, I can pretty much guarantee that the vast majority of the time We sit before your strong hand, you will not be able to open. Give me a 4cM, in a hand of any strength, and I can open 1M w/o fear in many situations because Drury allows Us to differentiate sub-minimums and psyches from real openings. Under such circumstances, the opposing side's constructive auction is often going to have to start at the 2 level and often a round later. Good luck to their bidding accuracy. (For =real= "fun" We'll combine Drury in All Seats with 1N=10-13. Bye bye the vast majority of constructive auctions by the opponents unless they Deal.) I love the way that both this thread and the one on Light Opening and 2/1 GF force have degenerated in Foo whining that his methods are unsound and therefore deserve protection against all those bad people who open light.... This was particularly amusing in the case of the 2/1 thread where Foo started out lecturing us all on the virtues of sound of opening bids and making claims that opening light was technically flawed. By the end of the thread, he had completely reversed his position and started explaining how light openings needed to be crippled so he could enjoy the full benefits of his superior methods. What a load of *****... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 If the restrictions were based on understanding and defense, we wouldn't be having this conversation. If you've never heard of Bergen raises, and the bidding goes (1♥)-P-(3♣) to you, it's impossible to defend against. What does X show? Clubs? General Takeout? Is it a full opener, or lead directing? You have to discuss your defense to it, in order to be able to defend well against it, and it was a Completely Unknown Complex System by SoTired's definition (it modifies all other responses). So it never should have been allowed, if you guys were consistent...and w/o a pre-published defense that restores equity, Bergen Raises should not be allowed IMHO. OTOH, defending against something where I know exactly how many cards in a suit to assume between the two hands and what the values are around the table is a darn sight easier than most of the other stuff that has regulating authorities concerned. To answer your specific questions, if I had to decide "on the fly" w/o further opportunity for thought, I'd be thinking along these lines:1= This sequence shows a 9 card fit and a Limit Raise by Responder.Therefore any bidding by Us is most likely to sacrifice or direct the defense, not constructive. 2= Therefore, (1M)-pa-(3♣)-?? is a very dangeroous auction to dive into.X here should suggest a lead and a suit that would not mind taking the sac if pd has a suitable hand. ...now I =do= have the advantage of "knowing the right answers", but I still think any advanced+ player could figure the above out faster than it could be typed.Even if not optimal (The above isn't. On purpose. I wanted to demonstrate figuring out a defense on the fly.), this is a reasonable defense to this Bergen sequence. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 I love the way that both this thread and the one on Light Opening and 2/1 GF force have degenerated in Foo whining that his methods are unsound and therefore deserve protection against all those bad people who open light.... This was particularly amusing in the case of the 2/1 thread where Foo started out lecturing us all on the virtues of sound of opening bids and making claims that opening light was technically flawed. By the end of the thread, he had completely reversed his position and started explaining how light openings needed to be crippled so he could enjoy the full benefits of his superior methods. What a load of *****... What =are= you talking about? And why do you feel it necessary to curse while doing it? Within the context of 2/1 GF, one's opening bids have to be reasonably limited or bidding accuracy suffers. That was the POV I gave and that you agreed with. Since the GF 2/1 has a minimum "floor", that puts a minimum reasonable "floor" on 1bids within 2/1 GF unless you want serious bidding problems. I never changed my position, and I =certainly= never claimed I needed some sort of special protection against a 2/1 GF pair opening 1 with very wide ranging hands.Their punishment is in their methods. :) I have no idea where you drew the conclusions quoted above. They certainly are not representative of any statements I made in that thread. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenrexford Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 This "pre-published defense" stuff that keeps coming up is complete nonesense to me. I understand that I must explain my methods to the opponents. I also understand that perhaps my methods must be known well in advance for some purposes or in some events. However, I do not understand why I must give to the opponents the benefit of my own ability to understand theory just because they are lazy. Take, for instance, the ACBL concerns about Mid-Chart stuff. You must create a pre-approved defense that is published. Why? If the bid and meaning is published, then anyone interested in actually learning a defense to the bid can sit down and figure one out. Why are they entitled to my thoughts on this? Furthermore, it seems silly anyway. If I want to play the Bizarro Convention, I must have a suggested defense. So, I figure out the least effective defense that will sneak past the reviewers. Which brings up another point. If my opponent plays the Bizarro Convention, I get to sit back and have the defense he creates (gain from his theory skills), plus I get a panel to review his thoughts and approve or disapprove them. Why not do that with carding? I like that idea. We allow Jim and Bob to use encrypted signals. At trick four, an encrypted signal is used by Bob. So, we ask Jim for a suggestion as to how I play the hand now that I have this information. Jim suggests that I go for the diamond-club squeeze. So, I conslut three directors. They look over the hand and consider the recommendation of a diamond-club squeeze. If that line looks good, I go for it. If the three-drector panel has some doubts about this squeeze working, they refer it back to Jim. Jim now ponders some more and suggests the heart-club squeeze instead. The panel agrees. So, I try that line. It works! I was definitely protected from that encrypted signal. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Drury only appears to have been banned -- it really has not. I have actually "played" drury in all seats. It is easy to see how. Suppose, for instance, that Opener must rebid his suit with a minumum. So, after 1♠-P-2♣-P-2♠, Opener has shown a minimum. Is Responder forced to bid? Of course not. What is the minimum for a GCC opening? 8 HCP. What is the minimum length for a 2/1? Natural means three. You can tactically lie. So, if you have an agreement like this, can you not bid 2♣ with a tweener hand, checking to see if Opener is light (he will rebid his suit), passing if he does? Can't you even do that with "problem" big constructives with a fit? Of course. The only difference is that Drury says nothing about the club suit. So, you use 2♣ and 2♦ as "Drury," in effect, and thereby have that tool available. Simple. This, of course, illustrates the nonsense of the GCC rule. As usual, this is quite clever Ken :) However,1= Any 2/1 by an unpassed hand that does not promise a rebid is non-standard enough that I think you are going to come under official scrutiny. 2= The 8 HCP GCC floor is rather higher than one would like if one wants to freely psyche tactically. 3= While this comes close to offering the benefits of Drury, you still have make a bid that says something about the minor bid. Which means you give up such useful things as being able to clarify the degree of support you have. Which means either You gamble more often or this sequence comes up less often.Either way, it's less effective than actually playing 2way Reverse Drury. I'm not sure you've made a convincing presentation of your case counselor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtfanclub Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 ...and why would anyone play 1S=13 cards in opposition to a Precision Club if not to randomize the results? I know none of *you* do, but the ACBL has had to ban it "explicitly" (i.e. it's the poster child for "purely destructive methods"). 1♠=13 cards isn't random at all. It's based on the Scramble premise- that with 17 or fewer HCP, anything (even without a fit) at the 1 level undoubled is a good result. Scramble doesn't give you random results, it gives you very good ones. It simply starts with a 'random' bid, the same way a 2 club opener is a 'random strong' bid. *MY* problem with the 1 spade bid is that it almost never actually promises only 13 cards. The other calls, such as pass and 1 diamond, actually have a use. If 1 spade was accurately described (usually 0-11 and balanced or 3 suited), I wouldn't have a problem with it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 I love the way that both this thread and the one on Light Opening and 2/1 GF force have degenerated in Foo whining that his methods are unsound and therefore deserve protection against all those bad people who open light.... This was particularly amusing in the case of the 2/1 thread where Foo started out lecturing us all on the virtues of sound of opening bids and making claims that opening light was technically flawed. By the end of the thread, he had completely reversed his position and started explaining how light openings needed to be crippled so he could enjoy the full benefits of his superior methods. What a load of *****... What =are= you talking about? And why do you feel it necessary to curse while doing it? Within the context of 2/1 GF, one's opening bids have to be reasonably limited or bidding accuracy suffers. That was the POV I gave and that you agreed with. Since the GF 2/1 has a minimum "floor", that puts a minimum reasonable "floor" on 1bids within 2/1 GF unless you want serious bidding problems. I never changed my position, and I =certainly= never claimed I needed some sort of special protection against a 2/1 GF pair opening 1 with very wide ranging hands.Their punishment is in their methods. :) I have no idea where you drew the conclusions quoted above. They certainly are not representative of any statements I made in that thread.Comment 1: Cursing is a mechanism to emphasize strong feelings. It normally means that you are acting more stupid than usual. Comment 2: I agree with you that Light / Wide ranging openings are difficult to handle. I feel that many of the problems associated with this style are acerbated by using a response structure based on 2/1 game forcing responses. Comment 3: You have made a number statements that suggest that you disapprove of light openings in general. For example, we have the following quotes: 4= Sometimes Our best chance for a good score is to *gasp!* Defend! What a shock! If We are disciplined, We give Them as little information as possible and occasionally We even get to *shock!* =X= Them.Lot's of reasons: 1= pd can't X as confidently or as often if they can't trust your openings to have "starch" to them. 2= pd can get over excited and put Us in a hopeless spot. 3= 5m needs more tricks. Therefore hand that are highly likely to not end up in 4M need to be sounder in case we can't play 3N. 4= When We don't play the hand, any bidding We have done helps Declarer play the hand more DD.If We open real trash, We =will= get X'd more frequently and more successfully. Or help Declarer. Or end in the wrong level. Or end up taking more phantom saves. etc. These are all critiques of a light opening style, NOT light openings in the context of the 2/1 game force system. However, by the end of the thread you are stating the following: I'm firmly with Arclight on this. IMHO Bridge should be as much as possible a game of skill and logic and as little as possible a game of luck and random circumstance. Some methods introduce such a large random component to the game that it is effectively no longer Bridge because bridge skills and logic are no longer the primary determining factor of who wins. Just in case anyone has forgotten, Arclight's central thesis was the following >Players aren't allowed to use any of the constructive response structures that >are necessary to support a 9 - 14 HCP opening range. Good. I don't enjoy "poker" bridge where the emphasis is on destructive bididng. It detracts from the deductive reasoning and card play. Simply put, at one point in the thread you are claiming that your sound opening style is technically superior. Later in the thread, you are claiming that your sound opening needs to be protected against light opening methods. There seems to be a contradiction. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 This "pre-published defense" stuff that keeps coming up is complete nonesense to me. I understand that I must explain my methods to the opponents. I also understand that perhaps my methods must be known well in advance for some purposes or in some events. However, I do not understand why I must give to the opponents the benefit of my own ability to understand theory just because they are lazy. Take, for instance, the ACBL concerns about Mid-Chart stuff. You must create a pre-approved defense that is published. Why? If the bid and meaning is published, then anyone interested in actually learning a defense to the bid can sit down and figure one out. Why are they entitled to my thoughts on this? Furthermore, it seems silly anyway. If I want to play the Bizarro Convention, I must have a suggested defense. So, I figure out the least effective defense that will sneak past the reviewers. Which brings up another point. If my opponent plays the Bizarro Convention, I get to sit back and have the defense he creates (gain from his theory skills), plus I get a panel to review his thoughts and approve or disapprove them. 1= The vast majority of players do not have the time, money, or expertise like Eric Kokish on staff to figure out how to defend against various bidding treatments.Without reviewed and published defenses, there would be =less= bidding innovation since the only way to prtotect the equity of the average player would be to out and out ban new and unusual bidding treatments.(...or people would start quitting Organized Bridge in droves. Those that were left would be those that do not mind such a situation. What's that? 1% of the membership? 10%? Surely not enough to keep Organized Bridge alive.) 2= Presumably, the panel is there to make sure that any and all alllowed methods present challenges while still being equitable. Thus you are not supposed to get approval to play Bizarro w/o there being a known and adequate defense against it designed beforehand. ...and of course, the panel is responsible for seeing that you =do= provide an adequate defense vs Bizarro rather than "sneaking the least effective defense possible through".However, as others have rightly noted, there is evidence that at least within the ACBL this process has broken; causing other problems. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Do you think a 1nt opening w/ a singleton falls into this category of a completely unknown complex system? Yes - If the opps routinely open 1N with a singleton, then almost all hands in their 1N range may be opened with 1N. The opps will use unknown methods for determining which are eligible and which are not. This affects not only the 1N hands, but also the negative implications from the non-1N hands. This affects competitive bidding. It also affects the defense when attempting to reconstruct declarer's hand. If you're talking about opening 1NT with any singleton, that's one thing. I thought we were talking about opening 1NT with a 4441, or maybe just possibly 5431. That's a different thing. In my preferred methods, we might treat a 4441 with a stiff ace or king as balanced. If we do, our response and rebid structure also treats it as balanced. IOW, nothing after the 1NT is likely to be unfamiliar to duplicate players, except those to whom everything is unfamiliar. If you want to call that a completely unknown complex system, you go right ahead. :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Comment 1: Cursing is a mechanism to emphasize strong feelings. It normally means that you are acting more stupid than usual.Implied apology accepted. :) Please just try to avoid "acting more stupid than usual" in this fashion a bit more in the future? As Fred says, this =is= a teaching site and Bridge doesn't come off looking very good when the most frequent posters and givers of advice resort to cursing... Comment 3: You have made a number statements that suggest that you disapprove of light openings in general. For example, we have the following quotes: <snip> These are all critiques of a light opening style, NOT light openings in the context of the 2/1 game force system.Since those quotes all occured within the context of a thread on light openings within a 2/1 GF system context, that's a generalization =you've= made. TBF, I =do= believe that there are reasonable requirements for opening the bidding. I also have been quite explicit that they have little to do with "light" or "sound" in terms of HCP. Does that make me an advocate or an opponent of either style given that I'm saying the basic premise of the discussion (HCP) is flawed? However, by the end of the thread you are stating the following: IMHO Bridge should be as much as possible a game of skill and logic and as little as possible a game of luck and random circumstance. Some methods introduce such a large random component to the game that it is effectively no longer Bridge because bridge skills and logic are no longer the primary determining factor of who wins. Just in case anyone has forgotten, Arclight's central thesis was the following I don't enjoy "poker" bridge where the emphasis is on destructive bididng. It detracts from the deductive reasoning and card play. Simply put, at one point in the thread you are claiming that your sound opening style is technically superior. Later in the thread, you are claiming that your sound opening needs to be protected against light opening methods.Ummm, no. I said that agreed with Arclight's stance vs =destructive= and random bidding methods. And I never claimed it was for =my= sake. I never claimed any need for "protection" against anything. My opponents can play whatever they want as long as they Fully Disclose and I have the opportunity to compete equitably. However, most players are not going to be as comfortable with as many situations as I am. The average player who makes up the bulk of the membership and the revenue is who I'm trying to protect. OTOH, if you are saying that your definition of "light" is equivalent to the definition of Destructive or random... There seems to be a contradiction.Yes. You've drawn some specious conclusions based a fallacious reasoning on your part. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pbleighton Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 What an ignorant, unthinking, arrogant, insulting and condescending comment. Besides the obvious and direct insults, it is wrong on so many levels, I hesitate to even respond. First, it makes the conclusion that players that want system restrictions are poor players. Second, it makes the conclusion that players that play unusual conventions are good players. Neither of which are necessarily true. I hesitate to even respond. But I will :) You obviously are incapable of recognizing sarcasm when you read it. Too bad :P Peter Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pbleighton Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Yes. In some cases, the situation was extreme enough that the players involved got jusitifiably in trouble with the officials. That these players did these things and that they were deemed unacceptable behavior by the officials is a statement of fact, and therefore neither malicious nor a slur. ...and I shall avoid names to further avoid being malicious or making a slur So you can't back it up. Peter Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 Yes. In some cases, the situation was extreme enough that the players involved got jusitifiably in trouble with the officials. That these players did these things and that they were deemed unacceptable behavior by the officials is a statement of fact, and therefore neither malicious nor a slur. ...and I shall avoid names to further avoid being malicious or making a slur So you can't back it up. Peter Yes, I can back it up. I will not in a public forum. Nor will I do it simply to satisfy your curiousity. The parties in question were punished and that's supposed to be the end of it. If you are an official that the likes of Rick Bye and David Stephenson will recognize as having a germane and/or professional reason for wanting details as to various Conduct & Ethics decisions, send a PM to me and I'll talk to them about how much in the way of further details would be appropriate to go into in =private= conversation with you. Tossing people's names about in public and in a unflattering light, no matter how true, =would= be malicious. ("slur" would require said statements to be lies.) Such public approbation is reserved within bridge for "capital" crimes on the order of being banned from play for systemic cheating. Less serious violations of ethics or law are considered best dealt with quietly. There are reasons for such restraint. IMHO they are fair and just reasons. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 OTOH, if you are saying that your definition of "light" is equivalent to the definition of Destructive or random... As you are no doubt aware, I claim that expressions like "Destructive" and "Random" are useless. They are too imprecise to be used in drafting regulations. They (essentially) mean "Whatever I don't like" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
foo Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 OTOH, if you are saying that your definition of "light" is equivalent to the definition of Destructive or random... As you are no doubt aware, I claim that expressions like "Destructive" and "Random" are useless. They are too imprecise to be used in drafting regulations. They (essentially) mean "Whatever I don't like" Actually, I was not aware of this POV on your part. Interesting. My POV is that we do need precise language for dealing with legal and regulatory situations. If we do not yet have such "jargon", it should be developed post-haste. OTOH, If we do have precise terms and they are being twisted or misused, that's a different issue. I'd be curious to hear more about why you believe "Destructive" and "Random" as used in an official Bridge Laws and Regulations sense are ill-defined or too loosely defined. Again, I'd consider that to be an independent issue vs. those terms being misused or abused (or ignored). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoTired Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 (edited) Deleted Edited June 29, 2007 by SoTired Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtfanclub Posted June 29, 2007 Report Share Posted June 29, 2007 As you are no doubt aware, I claim that expressions like "Destructive" and "Random" are useless. They are too imprecise to be used in drafting regulations. They (essentially) mean "Whatever I don't like" Speaking of which, I was trying to think of what bid/system truly makes for the most random results. I settled on Gambling 3NT. In an MPs game, it's almost never going to be flat with the rest of the field. Not only is it less revealing, and more likely to be in the wrong place, than the 1 of a minor openers, but it 'wrong-sides' the contract, playing it from the opposite side of where most people will be playing 3NT. The end result, compared to the slow bidders, seems to me to be completely random. My definition of 'destructive' is a bid designed to interfere with the opponent's auction while revealing next to nothing about your hand, generally in the hopes of taking up bidding space rather than of taking the contract. The opposite of destructive is constructive, a bid designed to reveal as much of your hand as possible in order to allow your side to take and place the contract. So, for example, fert 1 spade over Precision 1 club is destructive. A 2NT overcall showning the minors is not destructive, because you expect to play the contract. Oddly enough, I feel the 2♦ multi (EDIT: a better example is the 2♦ unknown 1 suiter) is destructive if partner is expected to pass without game interest across the weak possibilities, but constructive if there's a pass-or-correct. No solid line here, I'm afraid. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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