Thank you for a thoughtful and clear post. I'll try to respond in order and without cutting out too much.
DinDIP, on Dec 13 2008, 05:20 AM, said:
Destructive vs constructive methods
Jan Martel (it’s good to have people in such positions as hers participating in discussions like this)
Just as devising systems appeals to some, devising defenses has always been interesting to me. Guess that's why I was a good tax lawyer
. I do want to be clear though, that I'm not really a "regulator" - I may be better able than some of the forum regulars to get regulators to listen to me, but I don't make the rules.
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argued that “Destructive methods are sort of like pornography - we all know them when we see them.” (Digression: In Australia there has been a heated debate this year about whether exhibited photos of a nude, pubescent, teenage girl are art or pornography.)
All right, perhaps that was too flip. We've all been down this road so many times that we tend to get tired of repeating the same things over and over. But even you and other proponents of a strong pass system (and I am deliberately saying that and not "weak opening" - I don't have a problem with a system where opening bids are defined as 8-12 HCPs, it's the openings that are defined as 0-7, maybe 8, any shape that for me make strong pass so unusual and difficult to deal with), admit that the Fert bid, whatever it is, is not a constructive bid - it's there to allow you to have other bids, specifically pass, that don't include those hands, and as such you'll say it's constructive because it allows the other things. But as someone pointed out earlier, the reason to use 1
♠ or 2
♣ instead of P or 1
♣ for the fert is to cause the opponents problems. There isn't any constructive reason to open 1
♠ on hands in the 0-7 HCP range that aren't suitable for other bids. Similarly, a 2
♥ opening that shows a weak 2 in either hearts or spades is a REALLY terrible bid for constructive bidding (I suspect that is the main reason that its proponents gave up on it). But it's also a terrible bid for the opponents to deal with (more about that later).
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I think that reflects a bias about how one should play “a good game of bridge” ...
Neither the bridge scoring table nor the rules of bridge place a premium on one method beating absolute par over the other. So, to claim that so-called constructive bidding (aiming to reach our best contract) is intrinsically better than so-called destructive bidding (aiming to disrupt the opponents from reaching their best contract) is a non-bridge judgement. However, it is a widely held view and has been a critical factor influencing regulators.
As I said, I'm not a regulator, but I suspect you're right. Maybe it would be possible to have a parallel universe where this wasn't the prevailing view, but we live in this universe, and you're not likely to change that view.
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Why are some things prohibited?
Jan also wrote “Forcing pass is barred because to play a forcing pass, you have to play some fert and ferts just cannot be defined adequately and therefore aren't allowed.”
Ferts can be clearly defined: when I play one we explain it to the opponents as “0-7HCP, excludes hands suitable for openings of 2M+, might be bad 8HCP BAL, excludes shapely 7 HCP hands with good suits or good controls”. What that does not do is provide the opponents with the familiar things they are used to having as a basis for defensive bidding (a known suit or, after a natural notrump opening, sufficient high cards in opener’s hand so as to make bidding game or slam by the non-notrumpers relatively unlikely). If that’s what regulators mean then let them be explicit as to the reason for the decision.
The problem is that most players who use these bids aren't going to be able to explain when they will choose to open one and when they will choose to open an alternative. Of course, that's worst when they have the option of passing, but it arises when they have 2 or more 0-7 bids available also. If you are going to be completely honest, you know that in choosing between, say, 1
♦ showing 0-7 with 4 or more spades, and 1
♠ showing 0-7 any, you'll sometimes open 1
♠ even with a hand that has 4 spades. When? It will depend on lots of things - vulnerability, seat, state of the match, your judgment about how likely these particular opponents are to try to "get" you, where your few honors are located, who knows what else. It's those sorts of things that you aren't going to be able to define adequately. Or at least, that never are adequately defined when people submit descriptions of "destructive" bids.
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Impossible to devise defences?
Jan also wrote “The other major thing that is disallowed is a weak bid that might or might not contain length in the suit opened. That type of method is impossible to develop a defense to, so it is explicitly barred.”
Here in Australia lots of LOLs use such methods (e.g. 2H/2S/2N as 55 two suiters rank-colour-odd) and defend against them regularly. I agree that there is no really good defence but the same is true of lots of bids that take away space. (Simple example: I’m happy to compete on shape alone over their strong NT but I do so knowing that it makes it very difficult for us to bid games with much confidence if my 2S bid can be Qxxxxx x Qxxx xx or two aces stronger.)
The problem is that when the opening bid might contain the suit opened, you can't safely Pass on some of the hands you want to bid with. And of course, you don't have a cue bid. Sure, I have a defense to CRASH openings. But it's long, complicated and not terribly good. I certainly wouldn't try to memorize it.
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What is harder to defend against is 2H showing a weak two in hearts or in spades (or analogous openings) but, again, a reasonable defence is available: assume they have the suit they bid.
The problem with that is that they may (I say may, because this particular bid is one that the opponents NEVER adequately describe) be more likely to have spades than hearts when they open 2
♥. That's because if the responder tends to bid 2
♠ with hands with no preference between the majors, they're going to have to play in 3
♥ when opener has hearts, but can play in 2
♠ when opener has spades, so opener may want to have something that looks more like a 3
♥ bid to open 2
♥, but be willing to have a 2
♠ bid. On the other hand, if responder is going to tend to pass with hands with no preference, opener is more likely to have hearts. When this bid was actually played in the Bermuda Bowl, the proponents were unable to tell us what responding hands would pass and what responding hands would bid 2
♠ - that's what I mean by the bid isn't adequately described. And although I have a defense for this bid, it's one that is completely inadequate, despite the fact that we spent a lot of time on it. (Surprisingly, the bid came up only once in the Bermuda Bowl final, and resulted in a big pick up for the US for a strange reason - after 2
♥-P-P, the US player had a balanced hand with okay stoppers in both Majors but better in one than the other (sorry, I don't remember exactly what the hand was) and bid 2NT, his partner raised to 3 which made easily. At the other table, after 2 of opener's real Major-P-P, balancer didn't think his stopper was good enough, so they missed the game).
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Is having a defence to unusual bidding an integral part of the game?
I think this is probably the core of the whole argument we have over this. I may find it fun to play with figuring out defenses, just as I actually enjoyed parsing the Internal Revenue Code. But I know that most people don't enjoy that. And I don't think we should require things that most people don't enjoy.
Jan Martel, who should probably state that she is not speaking on behalf of the USBF, the ACBL, the WBF Systems Committee, or any member of any Systems Committee or Laws Commission.