joshs, on Aug 10 2007, 11:17 AM, said:
Cascade, on Aug 9 2007, 01:27 PM, said:
officeglen, on Aug 10 2007, 06:22 AM, said:
Cascade, on Aug 9 2007, 01:13 PM, said:
There is no law on defining natural. Anyone can do that.
There is a law allowing regulation of conventional bids and light openings at the one level. Sponsoring organizations are limited in their regulations to regulating only conventional bids (as defined in the laws of bridge) and light one-level openings.
This is nice in theory. In reality it is not legal in the ACBL since you can't offer any method of getting them to agree with your view.
Its not a theory its what the laws of the game require.
I read in another thread a view that online bridge is not bridge.
If the SO is not willing to play according to the rules then I guess the game cannot be called bridge.
We rightly don't have much respect for players that deliberately break rules. The rules also constrain SO. I don't think it is too much to expect them to follow the rules.
Exactly where, from the laws of bridge (or from principals of logic), do you get that a 3 card suit is natural?
In most of the world, a 4 card suit is natural (every hand has to have at least 1 4+ card suit). Since 5 card majors are popular, and some hands have no 5 card major or 4 card minor, bridge organizations, in order to not require any special sanction for 5 card majors "Defined" 3 card minors to also be natural.
I didn't get that anywhere.
Anyone can call anything they like natural. Yes even the ACBL. They can have their own definition of natural which can be similar or different than anyone elses definition.
What the laws of bridge give them the power to do though is to regulate conventional bids - they have no power to regulate non-conventional bids (except for light openings at the one-level). Conventional is a defined term. According to that definition a bid that shows length (3 or more cards) in the suit named is not conventional unless it also has some other meaning. My understanding is that the other meaning needs to be not a negative inference.
Logically I don't see any difference between opening your longest suit or opening your 2nd longest suit etc. Therefore I can't see that the fact that we don't open our longest suit makes a bid conventional any more than that we do open our longest suit makes it conventional.
Bridge is a game that has laws. Sponsoring Organizations have an obligation, just as players do, to comply with the laws. Unfortunately many Sponsoring Organizations have a long history of ignoring the laws when they see fit. I wrote to the powers that be sometime in the past concerning what I considered an illegal regulation and received a reply that stated that "Law 40D was
NEVER intended to constrain" sponsoring organizations. (Their emphasis not mine). Law 40D states clearly that a bid needs to be conventional or light at the one-level for the sponsoring organization to regulate. If this is not intended to constrain sponsoring organizations who is it intended to constrain.
I completely don't understand the whole approach to system regulations and why organizations want to restrict methods while allowing similar methods. The arguments put forward by advocates of strict system regulations (usually regulations that allow their favourite methods) often get emotive rather than objective. As an example in this thread we have the word "crazy" used to describe methods that the author did not agree with. In another thread recently the writer described these methods as "weird". To me (and others) innovative ideas are interesting and worth considering. I might not want to adopt them but I might learn something useful by considering the merits and disadvantages of such methods.
How's this for "crazy":
1. Open your shortest suit
2. Bid the suit below the suit you really have
3. Bid a suit you don't have just to force the bidding
4. Pass with strong hands, bid with weaker hands
5. Bid the next step up as a relay
6. Bid one suit when you have a longer undisclosed suit
"Crazy" you think?
All of these are features of a 'Standard' American System
1. a 1
♣ opening when playing five-card majors and four-card diamond suit
2. Jacoby Transfers
3. Drury, Strong 2
♣, 4th suit forcing, NMF etc etc
4. Forcing pass in competitive situations at the game level
5. Stayman, NMF (or Checkback Stayman more precisely)
6. Standard one-level response to 1
♦ or 1
♥ with four spades and five or six clubs etc and not enough strength to bid at the two-level