Wayne, I will do my best to behave, but this is just going in circles...
Cascade, on Dec 15 2008, 09:01 PM, said:
I really don't get this attitude which seems to me to come predominantly from North America that we are supposed to play methods that will not disadvantage our opponents.
I really don't get this strategy of arguing with arguments that no one made. Your clear implication is that people don't want to play against systems that they think are superior to the ones they are happy to play against. Who has made a claim like that?
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In any combatant game that I have ever played (and I have played a few) or watched or read about taking actions that are relatively bad for my opponent are necessarily good for my side.
That is certainly true. I do not see what it has to do with anything.
- Any number of things that would be good for my side are illegal.
- There is no reason bridge has to be like any other game.
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I don't see your reasoning applied in any other game. Sacking the quarterback is destructive - perhaps I don't know for certain many maybe even a "HUGE majority" quarterbacks would like it if they could make their passes etc without the threat of being sacked. I would be very surprised if indeed this was the case that someone would say lets outlaw the defensive side from manhandling the quarterback behind the scrimmage line. And further I doubt that anyone would say because the "HUGE majority" of quarterbacks don't want to be sacked that this is a good reason to ban defensive contact with the quarterback.
Much to say about this.
- To repeat from above since you repeated the point, there is no reason bridge has to be like any other game.
- It would be advantageous for offensive linemen to be able to hold defensive linemen by wrapping their arms around them. There is no reason inherent to how the game is played that this couldn't be allowed (it's even less violent and dangerous than many actions which are allowed) and yet it's illegal. How do you explain that?
- You are trying to make a comparison with the play of football against the bidding of bridge. Why not compare the play to the play? Sacking the quarterback is much more equivalent to something like ruffing declarer's ace. The bidding would be more equivalent to which formations and plays the offense is allowed to run. And low and behold, many variations are illegal even though the game could easily be played if they were legal, such as lining up with just six players on the line of scrimmage. How do you explain that?
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I doubt that you or anyone really knows how effective the methods you name are. So I doubt that there is any credibility to "... are only effective if the opponents don't have a good defense and some experience ...". Experts cannot even agree on the best 1NT range, or the minimum standard for an opening bid (in a standard system), or the minimum requirement for a strong 2♣.
Are you trying to argue that since experts don't agree about everything, they know nothing about anything? Fred used to play multi but gave it up because he believed it lost a lot of effectiveness when the opponents became better at playing against it. That seems to give the claim plenty of credibility if you ask me.
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This along with your arguments that the majority will prefer not to play these methods are highly speculative. And further unless there is an environment in which these methods are commonly played and the players surveyed we will never know what is preferred by the masses.
She made it quite clear that she doesn't know for sure if most people want to play against those methods or not. But, IF you were to accept that the methods should not be allowed if most people don't want to play against them, then you would have to accept that the powers that be are forced to make a judgment on whether or not that is the case. Sorry if you don't agree with them that it is indeed the case.
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The use of terms and phrases like "destructive" and "extremely difficult to combat" without defining what is meant by those terms makes it very difficult to understand what exactly the opponents of more relaxed system regulations really want. I certainly have absolutely no idea what you mean by "destructive" nor, and more importantly, where you consider the boundary is between "destructive" and not "destructive". That is not to mention that I don't see what is fundamentally wrong with being destructive in a combatant game.
I think you know exactly how it is meant, this thread is quite long and it has been gone over many times. I defined what I believe it means pages ago. If you don't agree with my definition (constructive being helping our side reach a high scoring contract, destructive being trying to get the opponents to reach a low [hopefully negative] scoring contract) then stop focusing on the exact word, and focus on what it is being used to mean instead.
Please let me know about any questions or interest or bug reports about GIB.