NickRW, on Aug 15 2008, 04:00 AM, said:
I think this is spot on.
I do not buy the notion that permitting psyches in and of itself acts to empty out clubs through annoyance to the opps. I do buy the notion that people have certain beliefs about what is good/proper bridge and (some) tend to be intolerant of ideas which deviate from that.
I myself learnt bridge while still at school. Being young and, in particular because of having a maverick on the team, psyches other bids that simply seemed to be a bit "on the edge" was part of what I grew up with. As a consequence, if I get taken for a ride by an unexpected bid, or a bid which turned out to be different to what I expected - well I might be a bit miffed if the result is poor for me, but I'm not going to be crying off to the director.
As another illustration of this, I play with my partners (kids) no blackwood or any ace asking convention. It seemed to me that arguments over what is and what is not blackwood just too much trouble to teach to beginners. Instead I taught cue bidding. As a result of this, especially if we maybe have a grand on, cue bidding can occupy sometimes 2.5 whole levels of bidding and go on for lots of rounds. This is not in any way psyching, or indeed doing anything else that others don't do - we just do a lot of it. At the local club opps run out of pass cards. Some of them suffer in silence. Others get really quite rude about what they see as "unconventional" or "time consuming". One even goes into a fit of gleeful giggling. Obviously they don't like it and I am probably doing the club atmosphere a disservice. But where does this problem come from? From the fact that we are wrong in some bridge sense? Well, at the level of that club certainly not - we find more slams than almost any other pair. Are we doing something illegal? Again obviously not. I think it is simply that we do something that is outside of what is expected/taught - or at least that is how I see it.
So - if zero tolerance - or what ever label is used to justify it - includes banning or even frowning on (probably genuine) psyches - then I think the policy itself is to blame. Unfortunately it seems to have become a cultural, ingrained thing in some places.
Nick
I do not buy the notion that permitting psyches in and of itself acts to empty out clubs through annoyance to the opps. I do buy the notion that people have certain beliefs about what is good/proper bridge and (some) tend to be intolerant of ideas which deviate from that.
I myself learnt bridge while still at school. Being young and, in particular because of having a maverick on the team, psyches other bids that simply seemed to be a bit "on the edge" was part of what I grew up with. As a consequence, if I get taken for a ride by an unexpected bid, or a bid which turned out to be different to what I expected - well I might be a bit miffed if the result is poor for me, but I'm not going to be crying off to the director.
As another illustration of this, I play with my partners (kids) no blackwood or any ace asking convention. It seemed to me that arguments over what is and what is not blackwood just too much trouble to teach to beginners. Instead I taught cue bidding. As a result of this, especially if we maybe have a grand on, cue bidding can occupy sometimes 2.5 whole levels of bidding and go on for lots of rounds. This is not in any way psyching, or indeed doing anything else that others don't do - we just do a lot of it. At the local club opps run out of pass cards. Some of them suffer in silence. Others get really quite rude about what they see as "unconventional" or "time consuming". One even goes into a fit of gleeful giggling. Obviously they don't like it and I am probably doing the club atmosphere a disservice. But where does this problem come from? From the fact that we are wrong in some bridge sense? Well, at the level of that club certainly not - we find more slams than almost any other pair. Are we doing something illegal? Again obviously not. I think it is simply that we do something that is outside of what is expected/taught - or at least that is how I see it.
So - if zero tolerance - or what ever label is used to justify it - includes banning or even frowning on (probably genuine) psyches - then I think the policy itself is to blame. Unfortunately it seems to have become a cultural, ingrained thing in some places.
Nick
Good to see that at least someone is teaching the kids right in slam bidding!
I am somewhat confused. According to what I found on ACBL's website: http://www.acbl.org/...oTolerance.html, it does not appear that psychs have anything to do with Zero Tolerance? Is this a case of something being abused/misused? (much like Blackwood?)
Or is everyone talking about some other Zero Tolerance that I am unaware of?