mikeh, on Jun 7 2007, 10:43 AM, said:
I have been appalled at some of the posts made by Ken... I agree that he appears to be a 'rules lawyer'... and he is also a real life lawyer.. but that is (I trust) a coincidence.
I just cannot understand this hostility.
Let's try this once again. After all, my integrity is being challenged for something that seems nonsensical.
First, I'll preface this by noting that I play a completely recognizable 2/1 GF system most of the time, basically SAYC the rest. So, I do no actual "Rules Lawyering" in any actual practice.
However, years ago, I played a canape style. Canape is allowed, under the GCC. However, some bids from some recognized canape structures are not. So, what did I actually do to deal with this? Resign from the ACBL? No. Petition for change? Yes, with no effect. "Rules Lawyer" things? Maybe -- let's play it out.
With one canape structure that I used in Washington, D.C., taught to me by a friend and partner from Croatia who did not know about the GCC problems, 2M showed 5+M/4+minor (minor unknown), 11-15 with exactly six losers. With five losers, you would open the minor and then jump in the major. With seven losers, you treated it as a one-suited major hand. The whole structure of the system required this bid.
So, I approached the old (pre-Flader) national TD who wrote articles in the Bulletin (Brian something I think) about the problem. We pulled out the GCC. We also pulled out some weird source I'd never heard of -- written decisions of a sort from prior inquiries and prior rulings. No one I knew had known that this resource existed. Anyway, we decided that there was no specific "loophole" to cover this problem.
I then discussed this more with the TD. We both realized that limiting the range of LTC to exactly six losers, with only 5-6 cards in the major allowed, sort of forced the hand tro be unbalanced, if the HCP range was right. Because 2
♦ showed major two-suiter with six losers, we could inference out that type of unbalanced hands. So, simply defining HCP's and Losing Trick Count and major-suit length accomplished limitation of the call to only hands where a minor of 4-card length happened to be present. This convinced the TD that the call would be GCC legal if defined under those allowable criteria. The ACBL confirmed this, and the call was allowed.
So, what is the problem here? I wanted to play a recognized system (apparently called "Rosso e Merro," similar to Leghorn/Livorno). That system was not entirely allowed. So, I need to tweak some aspects of the system. Other aspects were actually "allowed" if the definition of the bid was changed. So, I consulted the TD's and the ACBL and was told that the changes made the system OK. (Some aspects could not be fixed.) Am I "Rules Lawyering" and slimy because I actually researched the Rules, found ways to change aspects of the system to fit the Rules, and then sought approval from the Powers-that-be for those changes? If so, why is that a bad thing? Is it somehow good form to guess what the Rules really mean, never ask, never try to adapt your idea to fit the Rules, and just play Standard American because the Rules errantly seem to restrict my idea?
Consider the LIA 1
♦ opening. Good bridge theory suggests to some that a Kamikazee 1NT (8-10) might be a great preemptive move. But, it is impossible to use effectively when no systems are allowed. So, you want to do something similar anyway. 1
♦ can be 8-10 if you have at least three diamonds, and systems are allowed. This is not as effective as 1NT, but it works OK. So, you take an idea (LIA), look at the Rules, find a method that is allowed, think through whether it would be a satisfactory substitute, theoretically, develop a response structure, and start using that technique. Again, where is the problem? Am I not supposed to play 1
♦ as possibly a balanced 8-10 with three diamonds because a Kamikazee 1NT with 8-10 is disallowed and this new idea is trying to accomplish the same goals?
Why on earth this would be unethical is beyond me. Or, why this would be juvenile and immature is beyond me. I'll even go so far as to say that I am proud that, apparently unlike others, I was able to develop working systemic approaches that were GCC legal and that delved into strange LIA approaches and advanced canape approaches. That took some work, both at understanding the GCC and in grasping bridge theory. Not many theoreticians can develop a working system where a 1
♦ opening shows 8-22 HCP's, with a constructive response structure that does not randomize results but that actually leads to consistently good results. Not many could grasp the problem exceptions to the light opening, the tweaking of 1
♣ and its responses to accommodate the strange 1
♦, and the necessary additions at the two-level openings to blend all of this together. Not many would use their head and contact the right people at the ACBL, research and find the existence of policy statements and prior rulings and minutes of the GCC forming committes, and otherwise prepare themselves adequately to develop a GCC-compliant, highly innovative systemic structure.
Who is the immature child? The one who reads and understands the Rules of the Game, or the one who takes his ball home and refuses to play anymore?
BTW -- One last point may be worthwhile. Why do I play 2/1 GF now, instead of canape or LIA or relay or Moscito or Livorno or the like? No matter how talented you are at the game, the masses and the powers that be view "those people" as freaks, poor players who use weird and untested theories to gain advantage over others because the others cannot handle on-the-spot guesses under weird circumstances. I disagree, somewhat, with that assessment. But, I got tired of everyone I knew who played weird stuff being terrible bridge players.
I wonder, sometimes, whether the frustration of the weird-system folks is displaced. I also believe that the ACBL is less concerned about development of theory as they are about stopping terrible players from using bizarre approaches to gain a non-theory advantage.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.