nige1, on 2013-July-23, 15:38, said:
If a player adjusts his "style" to prevent partner playing the hand, on a regular basis, then, arguably, he isn't playing the same system as his partner. Anyway, presumably, his partner is oblivious to the details, so cannot disclose them, hence opponents are disadvantaged.
mycroft, on 2013-July-31, 17:38, said:
The issue I have with "asymmetric systems", especially ones where "nobody knows what's going on but me", is that there *are* going to be unavoidable disclosure issues that get good results because of the lack of disclosure.
gnasher, on 2013-August-01, 08:30, said:
Repeated hogging by departing from your declared system is already covered by the disclosure rules. If one player keeps opening 1NT on 14-counts, it's an implicit agreement even if the other partner hasn't noticed.
ggwhiz, on 2013-August-03, 08:19, said:
I see that this motion has been dropped. Too bad, I would like to know who is crazy enough to vote for it.
IMO the motion attempts to address the anomaly to which mycroft, gnasher, and I allude
gordontd, on 2013-August-03, 09:40, said:
When making up the numbers as a playing director, I used to tell my partners that the aim of the early part of the evening was for them to play as many hands as possible, so that I could go and do my administrative duties. Then as soon as became dummy, I would claim the board as a success, regardless of the outcome.
But most directors seem to believe that there's no problem
Suppose rule-makers came to recognise this as a problem. What could be done?
- Players may not even be aware of an opponent's undeclared hogging tactics and are unlikely to report them. Anyway, few directors would accept the evidence of a single board. Hence, to establish a pattern, the director would first have to systematically examine score-records. Traditionally, directors avoid such a pro-active role.
- An alternative would be to legalise asymmetric systems, so that hogs could start to declare the methods that they actually use.