beatrix45, on 2014-July-03, 05:28, said:
I am still at a loss. Who wrote the 'booklet'? Names please, if at all possible. Why, for heaven's sake, did the author(s) incorporate a non-standard, non-intuitive, hard to remember, decidedly oddball (imo) treatment for the specific auction 1♠ - P - 2♥ - P - 3♥?
At a normal bridge club, I can settle 95+% of 2/1 issues in a ten minute discussion with a new partner I have never met before. On BBO you don't get those 10 minutes. SAYC is the preferred fallback position. Less to go wrong. Now this miserable 'booklet' is trying to throw a monkey wrench even into that.
Beatrix,
Some members of the forums often feel constrained to be polite in their responses. I've found that this slows things down.
You're very opinionated and very ignorant. This might serve you well in whatever fishbowl you live in.
It don't work so well out in the the big bad world where folks actually know something.
Here's some background that might prove useful.
Back before there was dirt, the ACBL thought that the wide range of conventions that people were using was diminishing the popularity of the game. The ACBL responded by creating a simplified set of agreements that came to be known as SAYC. SAYC served a couple of purposes
1. Two players who met at a convention desk could agree to play SAYC without the need for discussion
2. The ACBL introduced a number of SAYC only events which failed miserably
The SAYC agreements where documented on a pamphlet that the ACBL printed up back in the early 80s.
This is the genesis of the miserable booklet that you are complaining about.
(Note, this is hardly something new. It's been around for several decades)
Like most things created by the ACBL, the SAYC system was badly flawed.
No one used it. It was in the process of being condemned to the dustbin of history.
But then, one fateful day, something horrible happened: Matt Clegg needed a simply bidding system to include with the
BBO OKB client and he stumbled onto the SAYC booklet. Hundreds of thousands of unsuspecting fools were exposed to this system and started to claim that they played it.
I think most everyone on this forum will agree that SAYC sucks.
To the extent that the system has any virtue what-so-ever, its that it defines a standard.
It's a miserable, nigh unplayable standard, but its a standard none-the-less
To the extent that people are pushing back against your new improved definition of SAYC, its probably because having yet another random, ignorant crank hectoring people regarding their own ill conceived notions of what is/is not standard doesn't make things better. Its amusing, in a sad sort of way, but really doesn't add any value.
If you want to create your own new improved bidding system, please do so.
Just don't call it SAYC.
And please feel free to sign it.