KingCovert, on 2020-July-15, 15:15, said:
I was considering talking about this in my initial post, but, does anyone else find it problematic that players are capable of creating irregularities like this? This is always something that has bothered me about the laws of bridge, they're sometimes really low quality. I think it ends up being this way out of a desire to create a positive experience or to correct irregularities, but, I think it could be argued that irregularities during play of the hand should simply never be handled until after the hand. End of story. Even if it completely botches the rest of the play.
Most irregularities are impossible in online bridge. But in live bridge, players should not have to put up with insufficient bids, calls or plays out of turn, etc. And how do you play on after a revoke? Inany case, a volunteer playing director cannot be expected to restore equity for any hand that included an irregularity? And what is equity? Is it the same for the player who can be expected to find the entry-shifting double squeeze as it is for the player who can barely count to 13?
As for the laws being of low quality, well, read the rulings forum
passim.
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You could simply make the law that cards that are faced due to mechanical error must stand out of fairness to the opponents, even if unintended. It is just a game, and, this avoids any issues of malicious intent.
I am not sure what you are trying to say here. A card faced due to mechanical error is a played card, online or in live bridge. Unless it is dropped or two cards are played at once.
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It also prevent situations like this where players can potentially (not trying to accuse anyone) selectively raise the relevant laws when it benefits them, or choose to be "generous" when it benefits them. These acts are irregularities that really shouldn't be possible, perhaps it would be okay if every table had a dedicated director, but, that's not the reality. If the mechanical error is itself an irregularity, then an adjustment after the play would be required as well. It's doubly punishing to the perpetrator, but, such is life. Again, it's just a game, try not to make mechanical errors and you'll be fine.
People should just follow the laws. Trying to be “generous” just causes problems, but if you choose to waive something, like say “just pick it up” for a card played in error, that is your choice — but you cannot later claim damage.
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The reason I bring this up is because this really bugs me in one particular legal occurrence. In the ACBL, defenders are allowed to confirm with partners when they don't follow suit that they are indeed not revoking. "Having none?" is common. The problem is, players are inconsistent at asking this, and often when they're asking this they end up implying things about their holding and declarer's holding in the suit. It's simply UI. It shouldn't ever be legal to ask this question, because you cannot trust players to behave consistently. They're often unaware of the UI implications. And so, in the attempt to prevent an irregularity, you create irregularities.
In the past, this was illegal, but you were allowed to opt out, and the ACBL (and, I think, no one else) did so.In the latest version of the vase, asking became the default and you could opt out and make it illegal. But now there is no penalty, at least not in the Laws, though I imagine an NBO could impose one. I don’t think any NBO has chosen to do that, so the world is now like the ACBL. But in the EBU and in most countries that I play in, defenders do not ask each other.
But anyway the reason for the change in the Laws is inexplicable. The ACBL were already getting their way, and I would guess that most of them do not play bridge in other countries with any frequency.
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I think the biggest justification that the laws are low quality is in the fact that the majority of players don't know the laws. They're too complicated, and convoluted, such that only an expert in them can properly enforce them. But, players ultimately end up having a large influence in when they are enforced, because it's players that call the director. I know it's a pipe dream, but, I'd like it if the laws were calibrated to simply accept
The laws are not particularly complicated or convoluted. The trouble is that they are written in a dialect of Kaplanese known as Grattanese, so no one knows what they are really trying to say. And translations have even worse problems; the lawmakers decided that the laws were a literary rather than a technical work, so they will use a synonym to avoid repeating the same word, will use the passive voice, embedded clauses and more.
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irregularities completely distort the hand, and should not be rectified but instead simply penalized or the result adjusted.
Another change which dismayed and disappointed many of us. I would love to see a volunteer playing director make a correct ruling on a “comparable call”. Or in fact any director who was not a keen student of the system and style of the players in question.
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I'm sure many will have good counter-arguments for why I'm wrong, but, this has been a source of frustration for me in the last year. I'd be interested to hear some counter-arguments and commentary on why it is how it is.
“Why” is probably the fact that the appointed-for-life lawmakers have not played in a bridge club in decades, nor had any contact with directors other than non-playing paid directors at the national/international level. Or it could be that they are just taking the piss.
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