ArtK78, on Dec 17 2008, 06:20 AM, said:
I found the football analogy interesting.
But it was misapplied.
A quarterback sack is not destructive. It accomplishes one of the main goals of the defense - preventing the offense from advancing the ball. In that sense, it is highly constructive. And it is entirely within the rules to tackle any player who is holding the football.
Similarly bidding before the opponents with a weak hand is a well established tactic of disrupting the opponent's offense from bidding accurately to their best contract.
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A better analogy would be a personal foul - such as tackling the quarterback well after he has passed the ball to a receiver. In a sense, tackling the quarterback in this situation will accomplish a goal of the defense - winning the game - in that the tackle may cause the quarterback to be injured as he is not expecting to be attacked after the play is over (at least the play is over as far as he is concerned). Injuring the quarterback will likely result in his being replaced by someone with less ability. But hitting the quarterback when he does not have the ball and is not otherwise involved in the play is considered to be destructive, as it does not improve the outcome of the particular play for the defense and it causes harm to the quarterback. So it is against the rules and is subject to a penalty.
We are not discussing deliberately (or otherwise) breaking the rules we are discussing changing the rules. I agree that breaking the rules - turning up to play forcing pass in an game where this is not allowed is bad. I don't agree though that not allowing forcing pass is a sensible rule.
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This is analogous to the use of a fert. A fert has no true constructive meaning - it is really defined by what it is not - it is not 8 or more HCP and it is not a hand which can be described by another bid (a higher preemptive call) which is used for other hands of less than 8 HCP. Whether it actually promises some length in a particular suit may be coincidental. The use of the fert is dictated by the fact that all other calls have some constructive meaning (unless the partnership is using more than one fert). But defining a call negatively - it isn't this and it isn't that, etc. - makes it extremely difficult to defend. In and of itself, a fert is a destructive call - it serves no constructive purpose. In the overall context of a bidding system, it does serve a useful purpose - it fills a hole, "describing" a hand that fits the meaning of no other call. But that does not solve the problems for the opponents created by using the fert.
Pretty much the same as a PASS in a standard bidding system it too is defined by what it is not. We all happily defend against a "standard" PASS. There are some advantages and some disadvantages that come from defending against a FERT rather than a PASS. An advantage is that the FERT is better defined than a PASS. A disadvantage is that over most FERTs you have to start your defense at a higher level than over a "standard" PASS.
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In the sense of filling a hole that is not covered by any other call, it is similar to the Precision 1♦ opening as some play it - 11-15 HCP but not promising any diamonds. That bid is also defined by what it is not - it is not a 1NT opening, it is not a 1♣ opening, etc. But the fact that it does show opening values and usually shows diamonds makes it recognizable and defensible - and, more importantly, constructive.
A FERT is defensible and it is recognizable (at worst you will recognize it the second time you see it).
To suggest it is not is just fear-mongering.
The entire argument against unrestricted system regulations seems to me to be based on fear-mongering.
These methods are:
"destructive" - without even defining the term;
"difficult" - when mostly they are not, they are just different;
"unpopular" - without hard evidence or any experience of those they claim will think these methods are unpopular actually playing against these methods;
"poorly disclosed" - when this is hardly the sole domain of players playing unusual methods.