fred, on Aug 13 2008, 08:11 PM, said:
blackshoe, on Aug 13 2008, 11:43 PM, said:
Legitimate opportunities to psych are rare. However, they do happen, and in a bridge sense whether to take the opportunity is, and should be, down to the judgement of the player. To make a regulation restricting that judgement is not, IMO, in the spirit of the game.
So on the subject of bridge as opposed to bridge clubs...
I am not trying to be argumentative here. I really don't understand some of the things you are saying and, since you seem to know more about the Laws then just about anyone here, I hope you can explain.
Didn't you say before that a TD can use his (presumably bridge) judgment to decide that a pair is psyching "too much"?
Since you seem to hold a player's right to use his bridge judgment so dearly (I agree), isn't it hard to justify that the TD has the right to effectively nullify a player's bridge judgment with his own?
I mean, if you are the TD you will be bringing your "legitimate opportunities to psych are rare" attitude to the table. But maybe another TD who believes "legitimate opportunities to psych are frequent" or "legitimate opportunities to psych don't exist" will randomly arrive instead.
Can this be a good thing?
From a pure bridge point of view I can buy "no psychs" and I can buy (and very much prefer) "unlimited psychs", but "TD-limited psychs" doesn't feel right to me.
Perhaps needless to say for some of you, my previous posts in this thread have been mostly about marketing as opposed to bridge. I do think psychs are bad for bridge at the lowest levels, but I think they are a necessary part of bridge at the highest levels (and that this is good).
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
Thank you for the compliment. I'll try to explain.
A TD is, at least if he acts in accordance with the laws, constrained to rule within those laws. There is a law that tells him so. A TD who brings "legitimate opportunities to psych don't exist" to the table is not doing that.
Can it be a good thing to for a TD to "replace a player's judgement with his own"? Well, maybe, maybe not. Depends on how good his judgement is, I suppose. And how objectively he applies it. But the fact is that the laws
require him to apply it in many cases, not just for psychs. Some examples: did a player take advantage of UI? Is a contested claim valid? Was a player's call really inadvertent? Some rulings are mechanical (revokes, for example) and don't require much judgement, but there are many rulings that do require judgement. Good TDs — and I grant you not all TDs do this — consult where judgement is required. They ask other TDs, and good players, for opinions. In the end though it's the TD's decision. He may get it wrong — that's why the laws provide an appeals process.
If the lawmakers decide to remove the permission to psych from the laws, I will rule that a player who psychs gets whatever the laws decree. But as long as the laws allow psychs in some circumstances I am required to use my judgement to decide whether a psych was in fact made in allowable circumstances. I will, of course, consult others before deciding, as above.
I agree that psyching at the lowest levels is not good for bridge, and at the highest levels is good for bridge. There is a spectrum in between, though, that requires judgement. You could place that judgement in the hands of the "tournament organizer" (new laws) or "sponsoring organization" (old laws) — the club owner, at that level, but the laws don't do that. They place the judgement, not of whether to ban psychs, but of whether a psych was allowable, in the hands of the TD. yes, I know that in North America they're often one and the same, but I'm talking about a principle here.
The "note for club managers" that jkdood quotes is from "Duplicate Decisions" (DD), which is indeed subtitled "A Club Director's Guide for Ruling at the Table". However, it
is just a guide, and I am told (by Rick Beye, ACBL CTD) that the guidance in there is not always in accordance with the laws or with ACBL policy. In this case, though, I think the principle is good, that a club should have a requilation dealing with psychs, and the TD should enforce it. But the laws themselves say that regulations must not be in conflict with the laws - and the laws don't specify a particular number of psychs as being illegal. Nor should a regulation. Maybe the player happened to pick up five hands in a session where a psych is justified. If you have an lesser arbitrary number (two and three are often cited), then he can't, per that regulation, psych after the first however many. But that's not what the
laws say. Besides, what's he supposed to do, decide early on that maybe he better not psych, because a better opportunity might come up? No, that can't work.
There's also more to the guidance on psychs in DD than was quoted. Most of it is pretty helpful.
We currently have one player in this area who has a reputation for psyching. He does it very rarely - and never against weak players. So even though he has the reputation, there's no intimation of concealed partnership understanding, or of frivolous or unsportsmanlike psyching (all of which are against the laws). If a player did violate a law when psyching, the TD should (and I would) definitely rule accordingly. BTW, I felt pretty good when the aforementioned player psyched against me a few months ago. I felt I'd sort of "arrived".
I know that you were talking about marketing as opposed to bridge earlier. I just don't believe that the former should trump the latter.
I hope this answers at least some of your questions.