2017 Laws? When due out and with what changes?
#61
Posted 2017-February-02, 17:35
Smart people have been revising the Laws for about a century. Surely if there were some way around this, we wouldn't still have so many laws that necessitate judgement rulings. They just keep tweaking the language, in an attempt to parametrize the judgement calls.
#62
Posted 2017-February-02, 19:53
Vampyr, on 2017-February-02, 17:32, said:
An idea I have had is to augment the Laws with PPs for infractions. This would achieve a "bridge result", but the OS would still suffer consequences.
We already have laws that allow PPs for various infractions. The problem is not lack of availability of PPs, it's lack of will on the part of TDs to impose them.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#63
Posted 2017-February-02, 22:01
blackshoe, on 2017-February-02, 19:53, said:
Well, yes, but this is no solution unless everyone does it, or else the club that awarded PPs for COOT, IB etc would become unpopular and unable to compete. Better if it was mandated or highly recommended in the lawbook.
#64
Posted 2017-February-02, 23:57
I don't particularly like the idea of mandatory PPs. Just as I didn't like "Zero Tolerance" instead of "TDs, you have Law 74A2. Use it!"
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#65
Posted 2017-February-03, 09:44
blackshoe, on 2017-February-02, 23:57, said:
I think the majority of players and directors simply don't take club games seriously, and they don't expect rigid adherence to these laws in games they're playing just for a fun afternoon/night out.
#66
Posted 2017-February-03, 11:10
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#68
Posted 2017-February-03, 14:47
barmar, on 2017-February-03, 09:44, said:
I play in clubs where the players and directors take the bridge pretty seriously. EBU affiliated clubs usually have ladders, team competitions, trophies and the like, plus they send teams to the National Inter-Club Knockout, county and regional events like the Garden Cities, and hold heats for the National Pairs competitions.
The players you are talking about would not get value from any of those things. In England, they play at non-affiliated clubs. Probably in the USA too.
But it is probably best to limit Laws discussions to affiliated clubs, as non-affiliated clubs will not adhere to the national regulations and will probably have their own versions of how to apply the Laws.
#69
Posted 2017-February-03, 17:13
I have issues with that. But I don't think we are going to make the game easy enough for TDs that don't care to successfully rule, unless we go with the Burn Solution - and then there won't be a game of bridge.
As people well know here, my answer is education - worked examples, case studies, discussions on whether X or Y applies in this hand, collated officially and handed out on a regular basis by the relevant NBO Laws Commission. Just like my fellow-TD-the-baseball-umpire gets (along with a test, but he does semi-pro and national level games; not sure the rec league umpires are that hardcore); just like all the lacrosse coaches and referees get (even the age 10-12 coaches); just like M:tG Judges get.
But bridge is the only game that I know of where lack of knowledge of the rules, even at the professional level, is a point of honour; so it will never happen.
#70
Posted 2017-February-03, 19:49
Vampyr, on 2017-February-03, 14:47, said:
Practically all US clubs are affiliated with ACBL, so they can issue masterpoints.
#71
Posted 2017-February-03, 20:06
barmar, on 2017-February-03, 19:49, said:
But do these casual players want masterpoints? In the EBU there is a fee per table for affiliated games. So a game with tthe same entry fee could use the extra money to:
- Increase the prizes
- Provide catering for special events
- Subsidise the club's away weekends, if they have them
- or just reduce the table fees or membership dues
- and of course if the club lacks a duplicating machine or electronic scorers, they can save up more quickly to buy them. I know, that is not very important since all clubs have them by now. But there may be other things like a new computer, refurbishing the premises if they own them, hiring adequate staff to man the bar if they have one. Even hiring directors if the club doesn't have enough willing and able volunteers.
There are a fair number of large non-affiliated clubs in London, and they are thriving.
And anyway, people who want to amass piles of masterpoints can't get enough in club games to achieve that. At least in England.
#72
Posted 2017-February-04, 01:28
Vampyr, on 2017-February-03, 20:06, said:
...
And anyway, people who want to amass piles of masterpoints can't get enough in club games to achieve that. At least in England.
People like winning things, even meaningless things like masterpoints. They're not expecting to get lots of them, but they get a little thrill when they see a number next to their name int the recap every now and then, and it's nice to see the total increase in the masterpoint report on the back page of the bulletin.
From what I've read of the history of bridge, attendance at duplicate bridge clubs really surged when masterpoints were first instituted (I think it was the American Bridge League at the time).
#73
Posted 2017-February-04, 17:41
pran, on 2017-January-11, 02:49, said:
They just couldn't live with this error and the year had changed before they managed to correct it.
My Law Book still contains a "very unfortunate" wording in Law 27. I've had this version for nearly ten years, but I didn't realise that it had been corrected so long ago!
#74
Posted 2017-February-04, 22:42
mycroft, on 2017-February-02, 10:26, said:
Perhaps someone could correct me if I am wrong, but I thought that the English guidance was not to tell them that there is a replacement, rather make them ask exhaustive questions about the opponents' methods and thereby perhaps work it out for themselves.
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Check out Laws 31 and 32. I honestly don't understand the lawmakers' motivation for making it optional to follow legal procedures.