FrancesHinden, on 2015-August-01, 02:46, said:
The regulation refers to the number of boards pairs are scheduled to play, not the number that they actually play.
That's also an important difference
Well, yes. It means that no movement need fall foul, in actual fact, of the regulation. But then why bother having it?
I think that the magazine is a distraction; the offending movements would only be played rarely, when certain awkward numbers show up to play eg 11 when the club uses two-winner movements. So it is likely that regular players would earn enough magazine points anyway, and very irregular players would not earn them regardless.
As to other services, well, I suspect that this issue mostly applies to rural or small-town clubs where the players are more social than competitive. These players will not benefit from the ability to play in the NICKO, the Garden Cities, other major events or tournaments. And as above, it is unlikely that the few non-qualifying sessions they play will affect their status in this way. For eg Londoners, these things are a lot more important than master points, but for these players I mention it might be the other way around, and masterpoints may be the most tangible benefit they as players receive from the EBU. In any case they are part of the service, so there is at least no justification for charging full price.
in any case, the masterpoints awarded for a club duplicate are not very many at all, so it seems a waste of time to bother about it.
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It seems entirely reasonable to say, first, if you run a duplicate bridge session as part of your affiliated club activities, you pay the P2P charge and, secondly, but we will only give masterpoints if you play a movement we approve of.
Sure. Does it somehow seem less reasonable for a club to say that, as we have run an un-approved movement, we will neither report the session to the EBU nor pay? A club needs to play 26 sessions a year not to be liable to pay a penalty affiliation fee. That leaves, for a weekly club, 26 sessions that they may choose not to pay for. Let us not forget some of the press that preceded the P2P; for some clubs it represents a substantial proportion of their table money. Not paying for some sessions may make a lot of sense for these clubs, but the loss of revenue to the EBU will harm the rest of us.
A number of London clubs are not affiliated to the EBU, and this does not, as far as I can tell, affect their popularity. As a London player several factors affect which club I play at on a particular evening, and EBU affiliation is not one of them. Maybe the EBU should focus on attracting these clubs by offering more benefits to affiliation rather than (even if by a little bit) fewer. Just a thought.
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein