Meckstroth and Rodwell ACBL Convention Card
#1
Posted 2010-March-18, 13:12
Meckstroth and Rodwell tend to do whatever they can "get away with" under the laws to help themselves win. In some cases this includes poor disclosure (for example, they play major suit jump raises as "mixed" but it's marked on their card as weak; of course the regulation ACBL card has no checkbox for "mixed"),
I have to say that this sounds as if Meckwell are taking the piss. A series of checkboxes on a convention card is sub-optimal for a variety of reasons, but is it really the condoned practice, if none of the checkboxes fits your agreements, to tick a box that is closer than any of the others, instead of ignoring the boxes and writing in your actual agreement?
#2
Posted 2010-March-18, 13:16
bed
#3
Posted 2010-March-18, 13:19
I have no personal knowledge of what Meckwell do or don't do. But if a pair was playing mixed jump raises over their one of a major opening bids, it is easy enough to print the word MIXED on top of the check boxes.
Stop blaming the convention cards and the alert procedure. Full disclosure is every player's responsibility.
#6
Posted 2010-March-18, 13:30
jjbrr, on Mar 18 2010, 08:16 PM, said:
I am sure you are correct but I do not see the relationship between your statement and the question I posed.
#7
Posted 2010-March-18, 13:42
Vampyr, on Mar 18 2010, 02:30 PM, said:
jjbrr, on Mar 18 2010, 08:16 PM, said:
I am sure you are correct but I do not see the relationship between your statement and the question I posed.
Well, you've identified an issue that you seem to be concerned about. I was merely suggesting there is nothing anyone can do about it to satisfy everyone, so it probably isn't worth worrying about.
I personally don't want jibberish scribbled all over a CC with things crossed out and printed in margins and everything else.
Basically I was echoing the "wtp" camp.
But since you didn't see the relationship, I wonder what exactly you're saying in your OP. I interpreted it to mean "If there is no convenient place on your CC to put an agreement, what do you do?" My answer was "The best you can with what you've got."
bed
#8
Posted 2010-March-18, 13:44
bed
#9
Posted 2010-March-18, 13:49
jjbrr, on Mar 18 2010, 08:42 PM, said:
Perhaps I should have guessed that that was your answer, rather than what you wrote!
What I am asking is what is the correct procedure, sanctioned by the ACBL, since Meckwell's approach (if in fact it was reported correctly) seems not to be best.
I am accepting the fact that the ACBL is not giong to introduce significant improvements, such as switching to the WBF CC, anytime soon.
#10
Posted 2010-March-18, 13:58
(This doesn't mean that I agree that there are any inaccuracies on Meckwell's convention card - I'm merely commenting on the difference in attitude apparent in this thread.)
#11
Posted 2010-March-18, 14:25
Wouldn't you like to be able to read the other pairs cc, instead of looking at some pencil-smeared mess that looks like it was dragged out of a player's back pants pocket along with the claim check from the valet?
Either you make full disclosure or you don't.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#13
Posted 2010-March-18, 14:45
jjbrr, on Mar 18 2010, 02:42 PM, said:
Vampyr, on Mar 18 2010, 02:30 PM, said:
jjbrr, on Mar 18 2010, 08:16 PM, said:
I am sure you are correct but I do not see the relationship between your statement and the question I posed.
Well, you've identified an issue that you seem to be concerned about. I was merely suggesting there is nothing anyone can do about it to satisfy everyone, so it probably isn't worth worrying about.
I personally don't want jibberish scribbled all over a CC with things crossed out and printed in margins and everything else.
Basically I was echoing the "wtp" camp.
But since you didn't see the relationship, I wonder what exactly you're saying in your OP. I interpreted it to mean "If there is no convenient place on your CC to put an agreement, what do you do?" My answer was "The best you can with what you've got."
It appears to me that Vampyr asked a Yes/No question:
Is it condoned practice to check the least-wrong box rather than write a correct explanation?
It's hard to tell whether she's been told "yes" or "no" by these responses. (I haven't been at an actual tournament in long enough that I no longer know what is condoned practice, so I'm not answering either, just trying to clarify the question.)
#14
Posted 2010-March-18, 16:06
Bbradley62, on Mar 18 2010, 03:45 PM, said:
jjbrr, on Mar 18 2010, 02:42 PM, said:
Vampyr, on Mar 18 2010, 02:30 PM, said:
jjbrr, on Mar 18 2010, 08:16 PM, said:
I am sure you are correct but I do not see the relationship between your statement and the question I posed.
Well, you've identified an issue that you seem to be concerned about. I was merely suggesting there is nothing anyone can do about it to satisfy everyone, so it probably isn't worth worrying about.
I personally don't want jibberish scribbled all over a CC with things crossed out and printed in margins and everything else.
Basically I was echoing the "wtp" camp.
But since you didn't see the relationship, I wonder what exactly you're saying in your OP. I interpreted it to mean "If there is no convenient place on your CC to put an agreement, what do you do?" My answer was "The best you can with what you've got."
It appears to me that Vampyr asked a Yes/No question:
Is it condoned practice to check the least-wrong box rather than write a correct explanation?
It's hard to tell whether she's been told "yes" or "no" by these responses. (I haven't been at an actual tournament in long enough that I no longer know what is condoned practice, so I'm not answering either, just trying to clarify the question.)
I'm sorry for being so contentious, but do you interpret her question to be seeking the legal answer or the opinions of the masses, as misguided and uninformed as those answers might be?
If the former, we have a place for questions of that nature.
If the latter, my own misguided and uninformed answer is that afaik the practice isn't not condoned, so my answer of "do the best you can" is the practical solution. There are other similar examples besides the Meckwell one, which maybe isn't the best example of the problem because in the context of a system with limited openings, a mixed raise is pretty weak to be jumping with in the auction. A weak hand (0-6?) opposite another weak hand (10-15) is easier to double if they go jumping around with it. So the relative term "weak" in this context could be applied to what a mixed raise is in a different context.
Another example is if you play invitational or better fit jumps after the opponents make a takeout double, where do you mark that? None of the boxes are adequate, and I suspect that someday that will be changed. For reference, here is a here is a link to an ACBL CC . The box I refer to is the second column on the left, third box down.
But to answer "yes" or "no", my answer is that I personally have never heard anyone say no, and I personally have marked boxes that are the least untrue but not in hopes of being misleading or trying to get away with anything, as the OP seems to indicate Meckwell's intent might be.
bed
#15
Posted 2010-March-18, 16:41
Any time opponents couldn't say anything nice about our play they would say something nice about our CC.

Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#16
Posted 2010-March-18, 20:06
There may or may not be a more general problem with check boxes on the ACBL card.
What is ironic, however, is that Meckwell are not guilty of the accusation specifically made. Their ACBL card can be seen on the USBF site:
http://usbf.org/docs/2009usbc/acblcards/Me...rothRodwell.jpg
In the section for Major Suit Jump Raises, they have crossed out "Weak" and written "Mixed" instead.
#17
Posted 2010-March-18, 20:30
-P.J. Painter.
#18
Posted 2010-March-19, 01:29
Bbradley62, on Mar 18 2010, 03:45 PM, said:
jjbrr, on Mar 18 2010, 02:42 PM, said:
Vampyr, on Mar 18 2010, 02:30 PM, said:
jjbrr, on Mar 18 2010, 08:16 PM, said:
I am sure you are correct but I do not see the relationship between your statement and the question I posed.
Well, you've identified an issue that you seem to be concerned about. I was merely suggesting there is nothing anyone can do about it to satisfy everyone, so it probably isn't worth worrying about.
I personally don't want jibberish scribbled all over a CC with things crossed out and printed in margins and everything else.
Basically I was echoing the "wtp" camp.
But since you didn't see the relationship, I wonder what exactly you're saying in your OP. I interpreted it to mean "If there is no convenient place on your CC to put an agreement, what do you do?" My answer was "The best you can with what you've got."
It appears to me that Vampyr asked a Yes/No question:
Is it condoned practice to check the least-wrong box rather than write a correct explanation?
It's hard to tell whether she's been told "yes" or "no" by these responses. (I haven't been at an actual tournament in long enough that I no longer know what is condoned practice, so I'm not answering either, just trying to clarify the question.)
None of the posters here are qualified to answer Vampyr's question. Ask ACBL.
My unqualified answer to the question "Which box to tick if there is no box that matches my agreement?" is to write it by hand over one of the boxes. It is unfortunate that there is not enough space, and also unfortunate that a pair with several unusual agreements cannot produce a fully typed card and must finetune it with handwritten scribblings all over the place to each copy printed out.
All in all, switching over to a WBF card is not an improvement, IMO!!!! The ACBL card has obvious flaws but it is still easy to read at a glance.
#19
Posted 2010-March-19, 04:03
http://usbf.org/docs/2009usbc/acblcards/Me...rothRodwell.jpg
clearly says MIXED. Not weak.
I wonder if the "accusation" in the other Meckwell thread was similarly inaccurate.
#20
Posted 2010-March-19, 09:32
(Btw, I would never assume that 1H (P) 3H=alert is weak without asking. Why would anyone? Anyone sensible knows mixed is superior, after all...)