paulg, on 2012-September-03, 12:44, said:
A sectional is equivalent to a county event.
In Scotland, the regulations state "At the start of each round, you should exchange convention cards with your opponents and inform them of your basic system, notrump range, the meaning of your two-level opening bids and any unusual aspects of your system".
In England, the EBU believes that the exchange of convention cards is sufficient and there is no need for an announcement.
The Scottish approach seems friendlier.
Hmmm. You are beginning to sound like someone else we know.
But you are wrong, you know. Whether an approach is friendlier or not depends on how people talk to each other, greet each other and so on, not whether they tell you their system. What is certain is that the Scottish approach is far, far less efficient, because people do not tell you what you want to hear, they tell you what they think you want to hear.
The English used to have a similar regulation, but found it worked better not to have it, but to redesign the SC.
Vampyr, on 2012-September-04, 03:22, said:
Why does the ACBL seem to have a general culture of ignoring regulations (Stop card, convention cards, maybe others) when other NBOs don't seem to have the problem?
Too many Americans?
blackshoe, on 2012-September-05, 17:55, said:
And
that would drive most players in North America absolutely bonkers.
How could you tell the difference?
semeai, on 2012-September-05, 18:26, said:
People keep their scores on the reverse side, so they write in it after every hand and thus like to have it close. If you just filled out the convention card anew, you might just have the sheet of paper out, folded in half, with the scores inside, or conceivably folded in quarters in your pocket or under your leg. Otherwise people put it in a plastic sleeve that has flaps to hold onto more on the other side, where you add in blank ones with the scoresheet side showing (some then fold it, some lay it flat).
Are convention cards and scoresheets separate in England, or do people just take it back between hands to write scores on?
Separate in general. Clubs often use combined ones, and more experienced players bring their own SCs.
When I play in the ACBL [sadly not going to this year
] I bring laminated SCs for GCC, MC2 and MC6, also pre-alert cards and required defences. About two people a day look at them.