Laws of Bridge Answer
Ton Kooijman's interesting thoughts on the Laws is obviously being
read with interest by the people following the Championships via
the internet. Here are the thoughts of one of our Dutch readers.
A continuing discussion in the daily bulletin is 'Laws of bridge'.
In bulletin 10 number 7 Ton asks if it is preferable to make different
sets of rules for different levels of competition. In general I
believe that the rules should be a
unique set, which applies for all players. So I would like the drafting
committee to make a decision whether a player may ask his partner
about a revoke.
But the rules ARE different depending on the level of play. In
the championships (as in the top levels in the Netherlands) the
use of screens is mandatory. But using screens a number of rules
are viewed different from those used in a club. So I would like
to see two sets of rules for bridge, one for play with and one for
play without screens. But those sets should be applied in all games
not depending on the zone or NBO.
In an earlier article Ton asked whether a mis-bid should be dealt
with in the same manner as a mis-explination (not excluding the
psych). My experience is that the most irritation in bridge is the
fact that the rules make it possible to bid whatever you want (as
long as it's not a partnerships understanding). When the level of
play gets higher it's more likely that players can figure out what
happened (or have their bidding instruments so fine they can describe
their hand even with the mis-bid). Personally I would like a mis-bid
to be the same as a mis-explination. Furthermore article 40 should
explicitly forbid the use of psyches if they are made with a bidding
that has more than one (straight forward) meaning (e.g. Ghestem,
multi)
Sincerely,
Marcel Schoof
The Netherlands
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