Some questions regarding psyches Using 1H (P) 1S as an example
#21
Posted 2009-June-20, 01:43
#22
Posted 2009-June-20, 04:19
EricK, on Jun 20 2009, 09:43 AM, said:
Yes, sure you can. Just read the law and understand it, and you'll see that's the case.
But that's not the crux of it. The point is that if you have been in the situation before, and know partner's tendencies, you have to disclose themit. If not, you don't disclose your partnership understandings; explicit or implicit; which your opponents are entitled to.
Harald
#23
Posted 2009-June-20, 04:24
#24
Posted 2009-June-20, 06:59
EricK, on Jun 20 2009, 12:24 PM, said:
If you disclose your partnership tendencies, thus giving the opps both your explicit and implicit agreements, everything is fine, yes. Provided these implicit agreements are legal in the event you're playing. An implicit agreement isn't a psyche, by definition.
Harald
#25
Posted 2009-June-20, 07:49
Since most psyches would be systemically illegal, it seems one is never be able to disclose partner's psyching tendencies, since the very fact that you know enough to disclose them, means he his no longer able to bid those psyches.
#26
Posted 2009-June-20, 11:04
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#27
Posted 2009-June-20, 11:10
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#28
Posted 2009-June-20, 13:09
EricK, on Jun 20 2009, 08:49 AM, said:
Since most psyches would be systemically illegal, it seems one is never be able to disclose partner's psyching tendencies, since the very fact that you know enough to disclose them, means he his no longer able to bid those psyches.
You are approaching this from the wrong point of view. The most important principle is full disclosure. You may not have more knowledge about the meaning of your partner's bid than the opponents.
We can argue about psychs all night long. Full disclosure is 100 times as important, and the rules dealing with psychs (and your handling of them) may not violate full disclosure.
If you think there is something wrong with the rules, then you should lobby for more permissive regulation of agreements. You shouldn't try to weaken full disclosure.
I think I have posted "full disclosure" often enough for now, but I am happy to explain the importance of the concept further if you think it may be necessary.
#29
Posted 2009-June-21, 02:07
awm, on Jun 20 2009, 05:10 PM, said:
But there are two frequencies at play - the relative frequency of the two hand types (e.g. how often does one hold a weak hand with short spades and hearts support, compared to how often one holds a responding hand with a spade suit), and the frequency with which one psyches when holding a suitable hand.
Depending on these frequencies, it can easily be the case that one can psyche very frequently on a particular hand type and yet psyche very rarely in that auction
#30
Posted 2009-June-21, 02:10
cherdanno, on Jun 20 2009, 07:09 PM, said:
EricK, on Jun 20 2009, 08:49 AM, said:
Since most psyches would be systemically illegal, it seems one is never be able to disclose partner's psyching tendencies, since the very fact that you know enough to disclose them, means he his no longer able to bid those psyches.
You are approaching this from the wrong point of view. The most important principle is full disclosure. You may not have more knowledge about the meaning of your partner's bid than the opponents.
We can argue about psychs all night long. Full disclosure is 100 times as important, and the rules dealing with psychs (and your handling of them) may not violate full disclosure.
If you think there is something wrong with the rules, then you should lobby for more permissive regulation of agreements. You shouldn't try to weaken full disclosure.
I think I have posted "full disclosure" often enough for now, but I am happy to explain the importance of the concept further if you think it may be necessary.
But I thought this was the point of view I was approaching it from! I have never suggested people shouldn't disclose their partner's psyching tendencies. On the contrary I am claiming that as long as they disclose it, and as long as they continue not to allow for their partner having psyched, then partner should be able to psyche as much as he wants.
Anything else seems unworkable.
#31
Posted 2009-June-21, 08:14
EricK, on Jun 21 2009, 03:10 AM, said:
cherdanno, on Jun 20 2009, 07:09 PM, said:
EricK, on Jun 20 2009, 08:49 AM, said:
Since most psyches would be systemically illegal, it seems one is never be able to disclose partner's psyching tendencies, since the very fact that you know enough to disclose them, means he his no longer able to bid those psyches.
You are approaching this from the wrong point of view. The most important principle is full disclosure. You may not have more knowledge about the meaning of your partner's bid than the opponents.
We can argue about psychs all night long. Full disclosure is 100 times as important, and the rules dealing with psychs (and your handling of them) may not violate full disclosure.
If you think there is something wrong with the rules, then you should lobby for more permissive regulation of agreements. You shouldn't try to weaken full disclosure.
I think I have posted "full disclosure" often enough for now, but I am happy to explain the importance of the concept further if you think it may be necessary.
But I thought this was the point of view I was approaching it from! I have never suggested people shouldn't disclose their partner's psyching tendencies. On the contrary I am claiming that as long as they disclose it, and as long as they continue not to allow for their partner having psyched, then partner should be able to psyche as much as he wants.
Anything else seems unworkable.
However; "as much as he wants" has regulated limits. Even if a psych were a different psych each time the player makes it, frequent psyching that could be considered as "frivolous" is not allowed, at least in ACBL. I seem to remember something like 'twice a session' is too much, but maybe someone could actually link the regulation/advice from ACBL.
#32
Posted 2009-June-21, 08:37
EricK, on Jun 21 2009, 09:10 AM, said:
You may think that the rules should say that, but they don't. The Laws say that:
- If your partner makes a given category of psyche too often, it becomes an implicit agreement.
- Once such an agreement exists, it must be disclosed.
- The Regulating Organisation has the right to regulate such agreements. That includes the right to forbid your having a particular implicit agreement.
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It seems perfectly workable to me. Tell your partner to stop psyching so much, or make sure that your agreements, whether explicit or implicit, are allowed.
#33
Posted 2009-June-21, 09:11
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2. Frequent or excessive psychs are illegal. If it is reported to the director that a pair has psyched three times in a session, the director should proceed under the assumption that this is the case.
3. Frivolous or unsportsmanlike psychs are also illegal. Apair deemed to be psyching in the hopes of creating a favorable swing on the last round of an event against the leaders when the offending pair is out of contention is deemed to be doing this. The same applies to a pair who attempts to help friends by “taking a flyer.” Players must attempt to win even if their position is hopeless. The penalty for doing this could be as severe as an appearance before a conduct and ethics committee with possible probation or suspension for the offenders.
Advice on how to handle psychs at the club level was offered in the next day's bulletin.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#34
Posted 2009-June-21, 10:11
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• Require that all psychs be reported – twice. Once by the victims and once by the offenders. A notice to this effect should be posted in the club’s playing area. All directors in the club should be aware of the policy and its purpose – to increase everyone’s enjoyment of the game.
And the following statements touch on an issue raised in a different thread:
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I wonder how many clubs have implemented these suggestions, particularly the double reporting of psyches.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#35
Posted 2009-June-21, 10:53
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to me those are incompatible statements...
#36
Posted 2009-June-21, 12:18
matmat, on Jun 21 2009, 11:53 AM, said:
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to me those are incompatible statements...
They certainly seem to be.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#37
Posted 2009-June-21, 13:42
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suggests an agreement
Thus an ACBL-land partnership that has an implicit agreement to psych is doing something illegal. We can decide later what exactly is meant by "pattern of frequent psychs"
It seems that psychs within regular partnerships ( in ACBL-land ) should eventually cross some threshold (thus generating an implicit agreement) and become illegal implicit agreements. Can we think of any partnership that has curtailed its psyching on this basis ? Any at all?
#38
Posted 2009-June-21, 13:53
uday, on Jun 21 2009, 02:42 PM, said:
I feel like it really shouldn't be the psyches that are regulated, since they are legal, but rather much stringent rules and penalties should be placed on fielding them. A good and ethical player will be aware of the possibility that their partner may have psyched, but will not act on this knowledge until the psych is revealed.
An approach like that may strain partnerships, since, imo, it is quite difficult to ignore p's likely psych.
#39
Posted 2009-June-21, 15:54
uday, on Jun 21 2009, 02:42 PM, said:
It seems that psychs within regular partnerships ( in ACBL-land ) should eventually cross some threshold (thus generating an implicit agreement) and become illegal implicit agreements. Can we think of any partnership that has curtailed its psyching on this basis ? Any at all?
This is a Law, not a regulation, so it applies everywhere, not just in the ACBL. As to your two questions, I have no idea.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#40
Posted 2009-June-21, 16:06
matmat, on Jun 21 2009, 08:53 PM, said:
Is that really the lawful thing to do?
It seems to me that if I can infer that my p is likely to have psyched without the psych have being "revealed" it means that we have an implicit agreement to psyche. Which is an oxymoron.
The ethical (lawful) thing to do would be to disclose our agreements. If this means that our agreements become illegal (for example (1♣)-1♠ meaning either a normal overcall or on rare occasions a weak hand with three little spades would be a BSC if 1♣ was a natural bid), we will have to psyche less.
Maybe if I can infer p is likely to have psyched because I can count 55 HCPs in the deck and opps' calls are unlikely to be psychs it doesn't count as "revealed" (since the information may not be available to opps), but in that case I think I should be allowed to field the psych. The litmus test being: if I could field this psych with an unknown p I am allowed to field it with my regular p also.