mycroft, on 2025-March-06, 11:59, said:
Really, bridge is the only thing close to a sport where not knowing the rules you play under, even at the top level, is a badge of honour, never mind *possible*.
I can believe this in North America. I would like to know if this is true Globally?
akwoo, on 2025-March-06, 17:52, said:
The problem is that bridge rules are completely unworkable for weaker players.
A couple months ago, I called the director on myself because it was possible I had taken advantage of UI from partner's hesitation. (I wasn't sure if my bid had any logical alternatives, so I made it and then called the director after the hand.) I explained what I was doing to my beginner opponents. (Actually - it was more complicated - the director was playing, so I polled him after he played the hand and agreed on a ruling based on that.)
One of my opponents pointed out that she hesitated on every hand, since she rarely had any idea what she was doing. Her beginner partners were also hesitating on every hand, and she had no idea if she was in fact subconsciously taking into account the hesitation in deciding her next action. She doesn't know enough to have a logical thought process and, once out of the rules for opening bids and responses, just bids based on intuition which certainly might be subconsciously influenced. It's even worse during the play.
I told her that she should just try her best to maintain an even tempo and make sure not to consciously take partner's tempo into account. (Forget what the rules say - there is no way she could handle the mental gymnastics of figuring out what was and was not demonstrably suggested and deciding what was and was not a logical alternative.)
However - her point stands - if we go strictly by the rules, the director would be making a ruling on her on every hand, and the result on every hand would be not what happened at the table but rather whatever the director rules. At that point, she isn't playing anymore.
Both weekly games within 130km have majorities of social players who are also beginners. If we tried to play according to the rules, it would basically be the director playing against himself or herself.
This argument has been used as rationale for not teaching or enforcing the Laws, because by doing so we would scare the newbies away.
Just as often, it has been pointed out the enforcement of the Laws at the 0-50, 50-200, 200-500, 500+ levels can be tailored and tamed appropriately.
Perhaps too, there are players who simply couldn't follow the Laws, even at the basic level and perhaps Sanctioned, Duplicate Bridge isn't the right game for them.
Social Duplicate Bridge is. Unfortunately, the draw of Master Points is so great that the best attendance at the Regionals is for the Gold Rush Pairs.
"And no matter what methods you play, it is essential, for anyone aspiring to learn to be a good player, to learn the importance of bidding shape properly." MikeH
“Let me put it in words you might understand,” he said. “Mr. Trump, f–k off!” Anders Vistisen