If you had the liberty to........
#1
Posted 2013-June-04, 02:32
2. Change/dump just one GCC regulation, which onw would it be and why?
#2
Posted 2013-June-04, 03:26
#1 is tougher. I guess the IB and COOT laws are prime candidates (see recent thread in Changing Laws). Getting rid of ACs would also be an option, providing that meant that RAs made a strong effort to improve the quality of TDs. Also, I think the change to L40 allowing the regulation of Partnership Understandings added absolutely nothing to the game and was a backwards step, so add that to my list. Which to actually change in practise (only one, right) would probably depend on how well I could draft a replacement.
#3
Posted 2013-June-04, 04:34
2. Personally I think all the ACBL charts need redone, but the main thing would be to have all methods allowed unless specifically disallowed (rather than disallowed unless specifically allowed).
#4
Posted 2013-June-04, 06:42
2. I think that what would be a lot more helpful would be to make sure that other-chart events are available at as many tournaments as possible. But there may be a lot fewer systems designers in the ACBL than one would assume from reading these forums.
Anyway, given that the ACBL Super-Chart is more restrictive than the regulations available all the time in most of the world, tweaking the GCC a little bit is definitely not going to improve things as far as allowing people to play their pet methods, though I suppose that allowing Multi in all-length rounds would bring the ACBL charts a bit closer to the rest of the world.
Again, however, the majority of the ACBL members might be happy with things just as they are.
#5
Posted 2013-June-04, 06:52
Zelandakh, on 2013-June-04, 03:26, said:
I have had shocking experiences with ACs, but I would keep them, because it seems to me that any other mechanism of appealing rulings would be worse.
#6
Posted 2013-June-04, 07:26
Sure, have side events with protections for those who want them. But for main events - no.
-gwnn
#7
Posted 2013-June-04, 08:53
#8
Posted 2013-June-04, 08:58
32519, on 2013-June-04, 02:32, said:
2. Change/dump just one GCC regulation, which onw would it be and why?
This isn't a "Law" per see, but the WBF describes the following as one of its key purposes:
to be in the Olympic Movement, remaining affiliated with International Olympic Committee (IOC) as a recognized International Federation (IF) in conformity with the requirements of the Olympic Charter;
On the GCC front, I'd scrap the GCC altogether and replace it with the EBU's Orange Book...
(That counts as a single change, right?)
#10
Posted 2013-June-04, 11:54
The situation was a wrong EW pair shows up at a NS table and claims to be at the right table. NS then avoid the 4-4 fit to play 3NT and get a top board. Now it comes out that the EW pair is actually in the wrong place and NS can wave their top board bye-bye.
About the GCC: My change would be to actually rephrase it an "Orange Book" kind of way. Instead of disallowing Relay systems or or identifying "all-purpose" bids, just write down what you mean. "I know it when I see it" meanings just lead to people being dependent on the good will of directors and regulators.
See here for a draft: http://www.geocities...rben42/gcc.html
#11
Posted 2013-June-04, 12:20
TylerE, on 2013-June-04, 08:53, said:
This makes a lot of sense, and in fact it seems really strange that it is not permitted.
But maybe not that strange, because the ACBL regulations do not seem to have been formulated in a systematic way.
#12
Posted 2013-June-04, 12:50
Gerben42, on 2013-June-04, 11:54, said:
The situation was a wrong EW pair shows up at a NS table and claims to be at the right table. NS then avoid the 4-4 fit to play 3NT and get a top board. Now it comes out that the EW pair is actually in the wrong place and NS can wave their top board bye-bye.
Law 7D:
Quote
So, NS have forfeited their top by not checking that the right pair have arrived at the table.
However, L15:
Quote
A. Players Have Not Previously Played Board
If players play a board not designated for them to play in the current round (but see C):
1. The Director normally allows the score to stand if none of the four players have previously played the board.
A score that was reached at the table is not usually discarded.
#13
Posted 2013-June-04, 13:07
Gerben42, on 2013-June-04, 11:54, said:
See here for a draft: http://www.geocities...rben42/gcc.html
You have not just clarified the language; you have made changes. For example, I don't think this:
Quote
a. A Natural opening bid in the bid suit
b. A balanced or semibalanced hand
c. A 3-suiter, short in the bid suit
d. A strong hand with at least 13 HCP
is allowed on the GCC.
By the way, do you frequently play in GCC events, or are you just preparing for when nige1 succeeds in getting ACBL regulations exported to the whole world?
#14
Posted 2013-June-04, 13:24
Gerben42, on 2013-June-04, 11:54, said:
The situation was a wrong EW pair shows up at a NS table and claims to be at the right table. NS then avoid the 4-4 fit to play 3NT and get a top board. Now it comes out that the EW pair is actually in the wrong place and NS can wave their top board bye-bye.
My law book says average plus is "at least 60% in pairs [sic]". Seems to me that if NS are in no way at fault (as seems to be the case here), the TD can let them keep their top.
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
#15
Posted 2013-June-04, 13:34
#16
Posted 2013-June-04, 13:35
Vampyr, on 2013-June-04, 12:50, said:
So, NS have forfeited their top by not checking that the right pair have arrived at the table.
However, L15:
A score that was reached at the table is not usually discarded.
The way I read the OP, the director decided that 15B, rather than 15A, applied. I did consider 7D, and one could argue that perhaps North didn't ask enough questions, but again, he was there, and we weren't - or at least I wasn't.
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
#17
Posted 2013-June-04, 18:25
2. I would add the sentence "All natural calls" under "allowed."
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#18
Posted 2013-June-04, 18:34
GCC changes - barring a sweeping rewrite or wholesale replacement, how about allowing all transfer bids? I'd understand if you only want them from responder's first call onward rather than allowing transfer openings. From a wordsmithing standpoint, moving the Midchart item about any call promising length in a known suit would work for me.
#19
Posted 2013-June-04, 19:41
Gerben42, on 2013-June-04, 11:54, said:
The situation was a wrong EW pair shows up at a NS table and claims to be at the right table. NS then avoid the 4-4 fit to play 3NT and get a top board. Now it comes out that the EW pair is actually in the wrong place and NS can wave their top board bye-bye.
About the GCC: My change would be to actually rephrase it an "Orange Book" kind of way. Instead of disallowing Relay systems or or identifying "all-purpose" bids, just write down what you mean. "I know it when I see it" meanings just lead to people being dependent on the good will of directors and regulators.
See here for a draft: http://www.geocities...rben42/gcc.html
Quite a good piece of work, given the design goals of retaining the general tone of the GCC but clearing up the (sometimes nonsensical) language. Not everyone here will agree with these objectives (I don't, maybe Gerben himself doesn't) but this is an improvement that might be achievable. The more far reaching changes that many of us would prefer just aren't going to happen in the ACBL in the near term. (The glacial pace of change in the ACBL in this area suggests something like "near term" = "before 2025".)
Substantively, the only alteration I would offer to Gerben's work is to remove the restrictions on NT defenses (as many areas within the ACBL already do for games in their jurisdiction).
#20
Posted 2013-June-05, 01:32
There are about 90 other Laws that I'd like to either reword or replace entirely.