Jump to content

System card LAW


nige1

SC  

23 members have voted

  1. 1. The WBF card should be acceptable

    • Only in WBF events?
    • Only when the Conditions of Contest (COC) specifically allow it?
    • Unless the COC specifically forbid it?
    • Other?
  2. 2. Pairs should have to produce two identical cards

    • Only in WBF events?
      0
    • When the COC insist?
    • Unless the COC specify othewise?
    • Other?
  3. 3. A pair should play a standard card without embellishment

    • If they can't each produce identical cards?
    • If only one of them can produce a card?
      0
    • If neither can produce a card?
    • If the COC insist?
    • Unless the COC specify otherwise?
      0
    • Other?


Recommended Posts

Have you ever actually played bridge outside the UK?
Yes
The WBFLC has limited time and money, and there are many real problems with the existing Laws. I'd like them to use their resources on dealing with these problems, rather than those conjured up by your imagination.
The problem you are trying to solve really doesn't exist
In essence there is not a problem to be solved here. However the solution proposed will alienate almost everyone. This is nonsense.
Are these foreigners a figment of Nigel's imagination? I never see any.
OK message received :)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On that note, I gather that what you would call "2nd and 4th" is what the booklet calls "second from a bad holding, fourth from an honor" rather than their preferred "second best from short, fourth from long". I don't know how "international" the latter is, but I wouldn't know what you meant by "second and fourth" in any case. <shrug>

 

I don't know so much about "fourth from long"; but I do know that "second best from short", ie a doubleton, is what causes most of the problems when this description is used.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On that note, I gather that what you would call "2nd and 4th" is what the booklet calls "second from a bad holding, fourth from an honor" rather than their preferred "second best from short, fourth from long". I don't know how "international" the latter is, but I wouldn't know what you meant by "second and fourth" in any case. <shrug>

In Germany, "2nd and 4th" is a method wherein you may lead the 2nd or the 4th highest card from your holding. In England, "2nd and 4th" is a method wherein you may lead the 1st, 2nd, 3rd or 4th highest card from your holding.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It seems to me that the idea behind the WBF card is to provide as much disclosure as possible in the space of one "standard" (A4 or "Letter") sheet*. In contrast (again, my opinion) cards like the ACBL's are designed to provide a minimum of disclosure, and rely on "actively ethical" players to provide full disclosure verbally, if the opponents don't ask questions. I much prefer the WBF approach in principle, but a compromise somewhere in between (The EBU card?) might be preferable to either extreme.

The homogeneous natural of ACBL bridge means that its system card takes a number of short cuts that work well for the vast majority of ACBL members. I prefer the WBF card but it takes a long time to complete it properly - I think Michael Rosenberg said it was more than 48 hours for the fairly natural system he played with Zia, which in practice meant more than a couple of weeks!

 

The old EBU and current SBU card (which are the same save the logo) do a good job in an environment where there is a variety of systems.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In various places, such as the ACBL Handbook of Regulations, the ACBL has written that clubs are supposed to follow ACBL regulations. If you call the club department at HQ, they'll tell you that clubs can do what they want. but they're supposed to publish whatever regulations are in effect. In practice, clubs do what they want, they don't publish anything, and the ACBL doesn't care. That's been my experience, anyway.

 

BTW a club game is an ACBL event, if it gives ACBL masterpoints. The General CoC is titled "ACBL GENERAL CONDITIONS OF CONTEST FOR ALL EVENTS", and says, at the beginning of paragraph two "These conditions apply to all events".

I don't think that's true. Clubs are not actually part of the ACBL. They're more like franchises -- independent entities that pay fees so their members can earn ACBL masterpoints. And they're given quite a bit of autonomy. Most "ACBL events" are what we generally refer to as tournaments (sectionals, regionals, and NABCs), although there are some that are run by clubs: STACs and NAP/GNT qualifiers.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The ACBL Club Director's Handbook and Handbook of Rules & Regulation, Chapter 4 specifically say that clubs have wide lattitude in allowing/banning conventions and alerting requirements. I don't see any specific mention in either of them to the General Conditions of Contest, but there are a number of places where they distinguish ordinary club games from games that are part of wider events, noting that the latter must conform to the more general CoC. They recommend following regular ACBL guidelines, probably because it's less confusing to players to have different procedures in different levels of play, but don't require it.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

All I can say is that I was told by someone at HQ, I don't remember who, that "clubs are supposed to follow the regs, except they have wider latitude regarding conventions" (paraphrase, not an exact quote, since I didn't write it down). Maybe my informant was mistaken. <shrug>
Link to comment
Share on other sites

[/size]

I also cannot imagine their joy when they discover that the seventy-six (yes, 76!) page guide to completing the WBF card is not searchable despite being a PDF document.

 

Sorry I dont have a link but i am pretty sure there is a searchable version available.

 

Indeed I found a word version on my machine so no doubt google could find one on the web somewhere.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Scotland has its own system cards that look very much like the old English ones, save the logo has been changed. However any system card is permitted as long as they provide reasonable disclosure of your methods: I have even seen people using the ACBL card. As Scotland is a small place and WBF cards are required for national trials, it is common to see them in use in national tournaments and at the bigger clubs. I even use mine at the local small club where few have system cards. Familiarity breeds contempt and I don't think anyone in Scotland is intimidated by the WBF card unless they actually have to complete one.

 

This seems a healthy situation but it would harder for a larger NBO to achieve.

My impression in England is that players are very much intimidated by WBF cards: they do not know their way around one but they never think to call the TD and find out whether they are legal, which they aren't in the vast majority of English events.

 

Are these foreigners a figment of Nigel's imagination? I never see any.

I play around the world, and do not find a lot of difficulty in finding my way around the local cards. But I would expect simple club players to suffer.

 

In Germany, "2nd and 4th" is a method wherein you may lead the 2nd or the 4th highest card from your holding. In England, "2nd and 4th" is a method wherein you may lead the 1st, 2nd, 3rd or 4th highest card from your holding.

In England, 2nd and 4th is a description of small card leads, and never includes the 1st. Since the only normal leads in England all include low from Hxx, the 3rd part of the leads tends not to matter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I played a KO against the Canadian Women's team one regional, and they had just come back from Tunisia. They said they *had* an ACBL card, but their WBF card was there and "so much more useful", so if we wanted it, we could use it.

 

Since I was very used to WBF cards and my partner was a Pure Math student, they were right, and off we went.

 

(We also agreed, given that we were both playing (effectively) K/S, that we didn't have to Announce our NT range).

 

But in general, the WBF card is in fact insanely time-consuming to make (properly - oddly enough, the natural players (and certain Poles) are usually the most incomplete) and very difficult to understand until you're used to it. So for the random club players, yeah.

 

Coming from the ACBL, however, I so miss the "things you should know about our system" section.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

How about from a doubleton?

Humph.

 

Of course, it is the same thing: "everyone" plays top from a doubleton as well as bottom from Hxx, so 2nd and 4th refers to the bits that are likely to change. It is, of course, only a name. Personally, I say 4th and 2nd which seems to give the flavour of it a bit better.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Humph.

 

Of course, it is the same thing: "everyone" plays top from a doubleton as well as bottom from Hxx, so 2nd and 4th refers to the bits that are likely to change. It is, of course, only a name. Personally, I say 4th and 2nd which seems to give the flavour of it a bit better.

 

Everyone?????

 

David you might like to look at a few Polish Convention cards and maybe a few other Eastern Europeans

 

I think you can never assume that others play as you do or indeed will explain as you do. I recall a pair from Luxemburg who had 2nd and 4th written on their (WBF) CC and a very experienced English player who thought this meant Hxxxx or xxxx when it meant xx

 

Mike

  • Upvote 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you read back in the thread you will discover I was talking specifically about England. Of course I know it is different in other countries. Even if I did not I would not be so arrogant as to assume what they do in countries I have neither visited nor had any connection with.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you read back in the thread you will discover I was talking specifically about England. Of course I know it is different in other countries. Even if I did not I would not be so arrogant as to assume what they do in countries I have neither visited nor had any connection with.

 

The discussion of "2nd and 4th" was specifically in relation to how the term is misunderstood by people from different countries.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Of course, it is the same thing: "everyone" plays top from a doubleton as well as bottom from Hxx, so 2nd and 4th refers to the bits that are likely to change.

Right. Except that when I play "2nd and 4th", I lead Hxx and xx, and this is what people in Germany will expect.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ok, if everyone chooses to misunderstand, I can only explain again in further detail.

 

A lot of the use of names is based on localised knowledge, the locality often being a country. As I know, and has been pointed out several times on this thread, and as is well-known to people who have read this thread carefully and to many other people, there are places in the world where people lead low from xx and second from Hxx.

 

The name "second and fourth" in England is based on English usage. Properly it should be "fourth and second" but the name "second and fourth" is in general usage and has appeared on printed System cards. A vast majority of English players, probably over 99%, play one of the following:

 

Fourth and second, called "Second and fourth"

Third and fifth, including fifth from six or seven

Third and lowest, usually called "Third and Fifth" [!!!]

Attitude

 

There are confusions based on English players playing abroad, or non-English players playing here.

 

People like Nigel do not approve of basing things on what people are used to, but wants everything to be American. Actually, he would deny that, but he wants everything to be the same, and the only way to get that is to make everything American.

 

What do I want? I like the way it is, with people being tolerant. People worry too much about minor problems, and want solutions that the majority will hate, or just ignore. To use the old English phrase, some people want "a sledge-hammer to crack a nut".

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ok, if everyone chooses to misunderstand, I can only explain again in further detail.

 

A lot of the use of names is based on localised knowledge, the locality often being a country. As I know, and has been pointed out several times on this thread, and as is well-known to people who have read this thread carefully and to many other people, there are places in the world where people lead low from xx and second from Hxx.

 

The name "second and fourth" in England is based on English usage. Properly it should be "fourth and second" but the name "second and fourth" is in general usage and has appeared on printed System cards. A vast majority of English players, probably over 99%, play one of the following:

 

Fourth and second, called "Second and fourth"

Third and fifth, including fifth from six or seven

Third and lowest, usually called "Third and Fifth" [!!!]

Attitude

 

There are confusions based on English players playing abroad, or non-English players playing here.

 

People like Nigel do not approve of basing things on what people are used to, but wants everything to be American. Actually, he would deny that, but he wants everything to be the same, and the only way to get that is to make everything American.

 

What do I want? I like the way it is, with people being tolerant. People worry too much about minor problems, and want solutions that the majority will hate, or just ignore. To use the old English phrase, some people want "a sledge-hammer to crack a nut".

 

The point is though it's silly to ban describing your leads as 2nd or 4th if you actually lead 2nd and 4th (the Continental style), which is currently banned because the English persist in describing stuff that is 1st, 2nd, 3rd or 4th as 2nd or 4th.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...