pran, on 2013-December-18, 03:03, said:
(The Laws of Bridge include no provisions for varying your agreements according to who are your opponents unless they have essentially different agreements/understandings.)
It seems that this is a matter of regulation; the EBU permits this.
gnasher, on 2013-December-18, 04:34, said:
The Law says "differs in any way". Either a more specific meaning or a less specific meaning would costitute such a difference. Your suggestion would be better, of course.
Very true.
barmar, on 2013-December-18, 09:32, said:
No it isn't. The law says you must repeat your calls from the original auction, so failing to do so is an infraction.
OK, when I posted I didn't have my Lawbook to hand.
Quote
There's another law that says you're not allowed to violate a law intentionally, even if you're willing to pay the penalty.
Yes, I know, but I thought... well, it's pretty convoluted what I thought, so it is irrelevant.
ArtK78, on 2013-December-18, 10:33, said:
The correct question to ask is not "Are you pair X?" but rather, "What is your pair number?" If you ask "Are you pair X" the opps will almost always say yes even when it is not correct. But if you ask "What is your pair number?" you are much more likely to get the correct answer.
This is true. My regular partner always says "yes". He is making progress, though, with answering "I don't know".
ggwhiz, on 2013-December-18, 12:12, said:
In my experience TD's exercise discretion in the spirit of the game when needed, even when they shouldn't. Any legitimate reason to throw the board out will be considered and in some events I've had a ruling of "shuffle and deal". It would be nice if that kind of discretion was codified in the laws.
Recently on a bridge winners post a Director was called to the table when South opened at North's turn to bid. He rotated the board 180 degrees and left. It was a team match where the board had not been played at the other table yet and everyone laughed and carried on.
But this is a pairs game, and there may well be other sections playing, besides the fact that even in just one section it is a bit unfair on all of the other pairs since this one board will not match the hand records.
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein