>To me this seems a really weird idea.
>I can't think of any other sport where when one side thinks up a new offensive play that they have to tell their opponents what a good defense would be - that is the opponents' job.
It is different from other sports (though I don't consider bridge a sport - a sport is something you work up a sweat doing, or at least involes some thinge more strenuous that playing cards
Where the is "fun" (for most people) in devising defenses?
I find the fun in the card play and the judgment.
Learning conventions (and defenses) is not so interesting to me.
Learning conventions that frequently come up are a necessary evil.
Learing defenses for a match is really tedious and for me takes a lot of the fun out of it.
Put it another way, a lesser team can spend a huge amount of time fidding with different systems to force their opponents to also spend a huge amount of time studying their system. Yuck - this doesn't sound like my idea of fun.
And I doubt it does to 90% of Bridge palyers.
I dont think yound players are more/less enticed to the game becaus eof more/less complex conventions.
I would rather play the same system all the time, and focus on the inferences from the bidding and card play.
I think its a great idea of making it manadtory that you provide a defense to a system/convention. You still get to use the convention you wnat, and the opps wont knwo it well enough to use it themselves. But you don't get to win something through study/memorization as opposed to card play judgement.
I would not be interested in playing in an anything goes environment.
Rather than say the ACBL will die without the 10% who want that, I say it will die if you force out the 90% who dont wnat the complexity.
I think deep down quite a few of the people here are unethical. They want to win not through better play/judgment, but because they spent a lot of time studying and feel entitled to a good result. They want to win at any cost, regarless of how enjoyable (or not) it makes the game.
Bridge is a game most people play for fun, why ruin it for the vast majority, and cater to the minority?
I'll bet if you asked a large number of experts if they like all the complexity, I think most do not.
I like the idea of the Buffet Cup.
I just want to play against good players who use the same system.