lamford, on 2013-April-11, 07:08, said:
billw55, on 2013-April-11, 08:47, said:
Lamford, most of your constructions are interesting, but IMO this isn't one of them.
Only 36+ replies
Some of us find Lamford's topics challenging and fascinating
helene_t, on 2013-April-12, 08:16, said:
I think this is reasonably straight-forward. If a given hand is a 1-level opening, but changing (say) a jack to a queen would make it a pass, then we are playing a HUM system.
Best to to scrap such regulations but if the EBU want to retain this regulation then Helene_t's formulation seems to work
Trinidad, on 2013-April-12, 10:47, said:
And, for the record, they nicely alerted their opening passes as showing ...
Trinidad is right, The pass may or may not be legal but it is certainly
alertable. The Secretary Bird with an intimate knowldge of opponents' entire system was able to work it out. But most opponents would need to be told
FrancesHinden, on 2013-April-13, 09:22, said:
The WBF regulations (same as the one pran quoted for Norway) make no sense at all read literally. They only 'work' at international events because everyone 'knows' what they are intended to mean. It's easy to pick severe holes in the rest of the WBF system regs as well if you want.
We certainly won't be adopting in the EBU a regulation that says if you systemically open 1S on AJ109xx A109xx x x then you can't also systemically pass on QJxx QJx Qxx Qxx
Bridge law-makers belong to different legislatures and develop sophisticated rules spread over a complex structure of of laws, regulations, conditions and minutes, so it's amazing that they manage to get so much right. Imagine what they could achieve if they amalgamated the rules, dropped those deemed unnecessary, and drastically simplified the rest! Then players might understand and.abide by rules as written, rather than guess at law-makers' intentions.
The above hand was, unsurprisingly, passed out at all tables at a local club last night. However, East, who looks and behaves like SB, was not happy. "I thought you juniors opened every hand with your EHAA system?" he asked. "Well", said South,"we play a 11-13 NT vul and 10-12 non-vul and we open all 0-9s as weak twos which can be a four-card suit even vulnerable, so, yes, we pretty much open every hand". "Pretty much is not good enough", retorted SB. "On this hand, you breached OB 12B1, in that your Pass showed exactly a 10-count, and it is not permitted to play an opening pass to show values."
"I can score it as 60-40 to us if you like", SB continued, quoting WB90.4.2 verbatim, "or would you like the TD to rubber-stamp that?". How would you rule?