nige1, on 2012-September-30, 21:29, said:
I hope Gnasher (or somebody else) can cite a few cases where players have been ruled against for flouting 7HCP opening regulations. That would also provide a welcome practical illustration of what the rules mean. I suspect that most players don't know what the rules mean (ACBL GCC 6 and Orange Book 12.C.1). As is plain from my repeated questions, I'm unsure too. Although I've tried to explain my guesses in my posts here. If my guesses are right as to what the rules mean, then few players comply with them and few directors enforce them. According to my interpretation, the only tentative evidence available to players is an opponent's "deviation".. (Vampyr and I gave examples of apparent rule of 18/19 violations, earlier in this thread but they were slightly easier to pin down). .I write only of the limited experience of myself and acquaintances. I would be relieved to be persuaded by practical evidence to the contrary. from directors with relevant experience.. If a Bridge authority has gathered and published statistics on such matters that would be even more illuminating.
gnasher, on 2012-October-01, 00:33, said:
No, of course I can't. Almost everybody I know plays by the rules, or at least is intelligent enough not to flout them in such an obvious way. So far as I know, I've never seen this rule broken, so it's impossible for me to have seen action being taken against an offender.
You have asserted first that "few players comply with such rules", and second that "breaking such rules is unlikely to result in an adverse ruling". Do you have any evidence to support this assertion, or did it come entirely from your imagination?
TimG, on 2012-October-01, 05:54, said:
For what it's worth, I have cited an example of a pair knowingly violating the rule and not being ruled against, or even told to stop.
If neither the ACBL nor the EBU can supply examples of adverse rulings under these rules, then that confirms my experience. Seven HCP shapely hands, suitable for an opening bid are fairly rare but occur often enough for us to notice that many players do open them. Recently, for example, I failed to open
♠ KJTxx
♥ -
♦ xx
♣ QJ9xxxx, while other players were less inhibited. I can't judge whether any
particular player flouts this rule. Nevertheless, such examples are common enough for me to believe that
many opening-bidders in regular partnerships are breaking the rules -- assuming I've guessed what they mean
- Unfortunately: there is little agreement among posters about interpretation.
- Violations (if any) don't seem to result in adverse rulings.
- These rules handicap only those who try to comply with them.
- So it's hard to understand why such rules exist.